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Human Variation and Adaptation

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Chapter 12 Human Variation and Adaptation How do you define race and do you think it s a useful concept in understanding variation in our species? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Variation and Adaptation


1
Chapter 12
  • Human Variation and Adaptation

2
  • How do you define race and do you think its a
    useful concept in understanding variation in our
    species?
  • Are observable characteristics (i.e. skin color
    and color of eyes) as important as the
    fundamental differences among humans that are
    defined by evolutionary processes?

3
Historical Views of Human Variation
  • Biological determinism - cultural and biological
    variations are inherited in the same way.
  • Eugenics - "race improvement" through forced
    sterilization of members of some groups and
    encouraged reproduction among others.

4
Traditional Concept of Race
  • Since the 1600s, race has been used to refer to
    culturally defined groups.
  • Race is used as a biological term, but has
    enormous social significance.
  • In any racial group, there will be individuals
    who fall into the normal range of variation for
    another group for one or several characteristics.
  • Polytypic species

5
Intelligence
  • Genetic and environmental factors contribute to
    intelligence.
  • IQ scores change during a persons lifetime
  • Cognitive abilities are polygenic -- measured by
    many genes
  • Nature and Nurture!

6
Human Polymorphisms
  • Genetic traits with different phenotypic
    expressions
  • A cline is a gradual change in the frequency of a
    trait or allele in populations dispersed over
    geographical space.
  • Clinal distributions are thought to reflect
    natural selection and/or gene flow.

7
Polymorphisms at the DNA Level
  • Scattered through the human genome are
    microsatellites, sites where DNA segments are
    repeated.
  • Each person has a unique arrangement that defines
    their distinctive DNA fingerprint.

8
Human Biocultural Evolution
  • Humans live in cultural environments that are
    continually modified by their activities.
  • Evolutionary processes can be understood only
    within this cultural context.
  • Lactose intolerance

9
Lactose Intolerance
  • In all human populations, infants and young
    children are able to digest milk.
  • In most mammals, including humans, the gene that
    codes for lactase production switches off in
    adolescence.
  • The geographical distribution of lactose
    tolerance is related to a history of cultural
    dependence on fresh milk products.

10
Frequencies of Lactose Intolerance
Population Group Percent
U.S. whites 219
Finnish 48
Swiss 12
Swedish 4
11
Frequencies ofLactose Intolerance
Population Group Percent
U.S. blacks 7077
Ibos 99
Bantu 90
Fulani 22
Thais 99
Asian Americans 95100
Native Americans 85
12
Population Genetics
  • The study of the frequency of alleles, genotypes,
    and phenotypes in populations from a
    microevolutionary perspective.
  • A gene pool is the total complement of genes
    shared by the reproductive members of a
    population.
  • Breeding isolates are populations that are
    isolated geographically and/or socially from
    other breeding groups.

13
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
  • The mathematical relationship expressing the
    predicted distribution of alleles in populations
    the central theorem of population genetics.
  • Provides a tool to establish whether allele
    frequencies in a human population are changing.
  • New variation (i.e., mutation)
  • Redistributed variation (i.e., gene flow or
    genetic drift)
  • Selection of advantageous allele combinations
    that promote reproductive success (i.e., natural
    selection).

14
Adaptive Significance of Human Variation
  • Human variation is the result of adaptations to
    environmental conditions. Acclimatization
  • Physiological response to the environment
    operates at two levels
  • Long-term evolutionary changes characterize all
    individuals within a population or species.
  • Short-term, temporary physiological response is
    called acclimatization.

15
Skin Color
16
Ultraviolet Rays
  • Ultraviolet Rays penetrate the skin and can
    eventually damage DNA within skin cells.
  • The three major types of cells that can be
    affected are squamous cells, basal cells, and
    melanocytes.

17
UV Radiation
  • Early hominids lived in the tropics, where solar
    radiation is more intense than in temperate areas
    to the north and south.
  • Unlike modern city dwellers, early hominids spent
    their days outdoors.
  • Early hominids didnt wear clothing that would
    have protected them from the sun.
  • Since this is how we evolved, when dont get
    enough sun, we may develop

18
Rickets
  • Insufficient amounts of vitamin D during
    childhood result in rickets, a condition that
    often leads to bowing of the long bones of the
    legs and deformation of the pelvis.

19
Thermal Environment
  • Mammals and birds have evolved complex
    physiological mechanisms to maintain a constant
    body temperature.
  • Humans are found in a wide variety of thermal
    environments, ranging from 120 F to -60 F.
  • This is due to both Culture.and Biology!
  • Biology part (next slide)

20
Human Response to Heat
  • Long-term adaptations to heat evolved in our
    ancestors
  • Sweat Glands
  • Vasodilation capillaries near skins surface
    widen

21
Human Response to Cold
  • Short-term responses to cold
  • Metabolic rate and shivering
  • Vasoconstriction to reduce blood flow to the
    skin

22
High Altitude
  • Multiple factors produce stress on the human body
    at higher altitudes
  • Hypoxia (reduced available oxygen)
  • Intense solar radiation
  • Cold
  • Low humidity
  • Wind (which amplifies cold stress)
  • Bergmanns and Allens rules...

23
Bergmanns Rule
  • Body size tends to be greater in populations that
    live in cold environments.
  • As mass increases, the relative amount of surface
    area decreases proportionately.
  • Because heat is lost at the surface, it follows
    that increased mass allows for greater heat
    retention and reduced heat loss.

24
Allens Rule
  • In colder climates, shorter appendages, with
    increased mass-to-surface ratios, are adaptive
    because they are more effective at preventing
    heat loss.
  • Conversely, longer appendages, with increased
    surface area relative to mass, are more adaptive
    in warmer climates because they promote heat loss.
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