Evolution of the niche in protozoan Communities William Bartram, ~1780.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Patterns of Evolution Objectives:
Advertisements

“Each species here today represents a long chain of evolution and plays a unique ecological role (niche) in the earth’s communities and ecosystems.”
Functional traits, trade-offs and community structure in phytoplankton and other microbes Elena Litchman, Christopher Klausmeier and Kyle Edwards Michigan.
Chapter 53 Reading Quiz 1.A bunch of populations living close together and possibly interacting is called a ____. 2.Which type of interspecific interaction.
Competition – Chapter 12. Competition Resource competition – occurs when a number of organisms utilize common resources that are in short supply. Interference.
Size Ratios. The analysis of size ratios has been of interest to ecologists and evolutionary biologists Dyar (1890) described a constant increment of.
Rezende et al Science. Rezende et al Nature.
Explain why variations in a population are seen as a bell shaped curve. Agenda for Friday Feb 20 th 1.Patterns and Mechanism notes 2.Go over variation.
Populations, Communities, and Species Interaction Chapter 3.
Levels of Ecological Organization in Freshwater Systems Population Community Ecosystem.
Chapter #16 – Community Structure
Chapter 5 Ecosystems and Living Organisms Lake Victoria, East Africa.
Welcome to: Foundations of Ecology Biology 356 J. Ruesink Lecture 1 Introduction/ Adaptation.
The Mechanisms of Evolution Essential Question: How does evolution occur beyond Natural Selection?
OUR Ecological Footprint …. Ch 20 Community Ecology: Species Abundance + Diversity.
Unit 1: The Language of Science  communicate and apply scientific information extracted from various sources (3.B)  evaluate models according to their.
18 Species Diversity in Communities. 18 Species Diversity in Communities Resource Partitioning Nonequilibrium Theories The Consequences of Diversity Case.
Patterns of Evolution. Sequential Evolution Changes in the gene pool from one generation to the next. Populations evolve gradually as they become adapted.
BIODIVERSITY + EVOLUTION Chapter 4. BRIDGING THE GAP  Biodiversity is all of the differences amongst the living world.  So how do topics already covered.
Compare and contrast prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.[BIO.4A] October 2014Secondary Science - Biology.
An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere. The Scope of Ecology 1. What environmental factors determine the geographic distribution of gray whales?
Section 2: Applying Darwin’s Ideas
Announcements Next week: THANKSGIVING, NO CLASS! Work on Group Project Presentation (p170—checklist p ) In 2 weeks, Functional Response Lab.
Interactions in the Ecosystem
Copyright © 2005 Brooks/Cole — Thomson Learning Biology, Seventh Edition Solomon Berg Martin Chapter 52 Community Ecology.
Biology EOC Review Evolution. Evolution Explain biological evolution as the consequence of the interaction of population growth, inherited variability.
Coevolution in mutualistic communities Plants Animals Network structure for a plant-frugivore community in southeastern Spain. Bascompte and Jordano, 2007.
On the Origin of Species Charles Darwin’s book Charles Darwin’s book Published December, 1859 Published December, 1859 Sold out in one day Sold out in.
Evolution of Plant Size in the Common Morning Glory, Ipomoea purpurea Rick E. Miller Southeastern Louisiana Univ and Mark D. Rausher Duke University Ipomoea.
1 Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Week of Nov. 24 No lab – Thanksgiving No lecture Week of Dec. 1 Independent project presentations Exam 3 Week of Dec. 8 Final.
Interactions in the Ecosystem Habitats & Niches Evolution.
Evolution Primers Isn't Evolution Just a Theory??? How Does Evolution Really Work? How Do We Know Evolution Happens?
ABSTRACT Species in natural communities are linked together by the transfer of energy and nutrients. We investigated the effects of top predators on nutrient.
Ecology Post- Test Review. Q14 - Ecology Definition  The study of the interaction of organisms with one another and their physical environment.
Understanding PopulationsSection 2 DAY ONE Chapter 8 Understanding Populations Section 2: How Species Interact With Each Other.
Ecology 8310 Population (and Community) Ecology Coexistence in a competitive guild Hutchinson Resource heterogeneity Patch dynamics / IDH Interference.
Biodiversity and Evolution Review. Biodiversity includes these components: – Functional diversity – Ecological diversity – Species diversity - Genetic.
Natural Selection. Evolution by Natural Selection.
BODY SIZE.
Examining the role of competition in ectomycorrhizal interactions Peter Kennedy NPER post-doctoral fellow - UC Berkeley
Chapter 5: Experimental Evolutionary Domestication Pedro Semōes, Josiane Santos, Margarida Matos Presentation by Priya Singha, UC, Irvine.
V. Evolution by Natural Selection ▪ Biological Evolution: the process whereby earth’s life changes over time through changes in genetic characteristics.
5 Evolution and Community Ecology CHAPTER. Black and White, and Spread All Over Zebra mussels and quagga mussels were accidentally introduced into Lake.
The Problem of Pattern and Scale in Ecology - Summary What did this paper do that made it a citation classic? 1.It summarized a large body of work on spatial.
EVOLUTION TERMS & PICTURES. LAMARKISM If an organism changes during life in order to adapt to its environment, those changes are passed on to its offspring.
Warm-Up: 5 minutes 1.What is the difference between convergent and divergent evolution? 2.There are 3 types of selection (stabilizing, directional, disruptive).
14.1 Habitat And Niche TEKS 7E, 11B, 12A The student is expected to: 7E analyze and evaluate the relationship of natural selection to adaptation and to.
OUR Ecological Footprint …. Fall 2008 IB Workshop Series sponsored by IB academic advisors Study Abroad for IB Majors Thursday, October 30 4:00-5:00PM.
SCI 230 Entire Course FOR MORE CLASSES VISIT SCI 230 Week 1 Assignment Levels of Life SCI 230 Week 1 Assignment The Scientific Method.
Chapter 6 – Ecological Communities. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. 6.1 Competition for Shared Resources Resources are limited Species within ecological.
Evolution and Biodiversity G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 14 th Edition Chapter 5 Part 1 G. Tyler Miller’s Living in the Environment 14 th.
II. Evolution in Ecosystems A. Evolving to a niche 1. Evolution is the changes in the frequency of a trait in a population due to environmental pressure.
Chapter 7 Biological Diversity.
Chapter #16 – Community Structure
XX Lecture – December 8, The 2nd Seminar report is due Monday, December 12 by 5:00. Last talks! -- Please give feedback on the course evaluations.
Genetic Equilibrium Allele frequency in a gene pool is not changing
Resource Availability Gives Structure to a Community
Day one Chapter 8 Understanding Populations
Understanding Populations
Ecological Relationships and Species Interactions
Day one Chapter 8 Understanding Populations
Day one Chapter 8 Understanding Populations
Notepack 19.
Day one Chapter 8 Understanding Populations
Day one Chapter 8 Understanding Populations
Chapter 10-3 Notes: Natural Selection in Action
Chapter 8.2.
Ch Community Ecology pp
List everything that could impact the growth of this flower
Ecological Relationships and Species Interactions
Presentation transcript:

Evolution of the niche in protozoan Communities William Bartram, ~1780

Outline 1.Who am I? 1.What QUESTIONS am I interested in? 2.What TECHNOLOGY do I use? 3.Example of a project 4.Motivation: Why I use (or want to use) the individual-based approach? 5.Challenges: What prevents me from (or makes it difficult to) use the individual-based approach? 6.Opportunities: What (else) the individual-based approach could be used for?

Ecology and Evolution of Species Patterns using Pitcher Plants

Food web within Pitcher Plants Studied by: Addicot, Istock, Bradshaw, Ellison and Gotelli, Kneitel and Miller, Hoekman, many others Bacterivores

Dominant Bacterivores Species in Sarracenia Colpoda (CA) Eimeriidae (BFC) Bodo (BO) Poterioochromonas (CH) flagellates ciliates Mosquito larvae bacteriovores bacteria dead bugs Habrotrochus Sarraceniopus gibsonii

Evolution in ecological time scale What role does past or current evolution play in determining species patterns? In this system, we can quantify evolution over successional time scales because of the fast generations times.

Competitive Hierarchy in Protozoa in Two Week-old Community Mosquito larvae protozoa bacteria dead bugs CH < BO < BFC = CA competitive ability rank CHBOBFCCA CH -1.00* BO *-0.14* BFC CA0.13* Effect of Effect on

CHBOBFCCA CH -1.00* BO *-0.14* BFC CA0.13* WEEK 2WEEK 7 WEEK 12 CHBOBFCCA CH *-0.50* BO *-0.10* BFC CA CHBOBFCCA CH -0.36* BO *-0.02 BFC-0.14* * CA *-0.16* Evolution of Interaction Strengths less competitive effect increased competitive effect

Conclusions There is no evidence for pairwise niche convergence or divergence among competitors in this community. Our fundamental view of species’ niche overlap driving evolution of competitors may need revision. What is really evolving? While we measure interaction traits, we have no knowledge of the mechanisms involved. NIMBioS Question 1: At the level of individual cells, what traits or characters are actually evolving?

species Resource-use matrixPer-capita interaction matrix Population growth resources A model of evolution with substitutable resources

species Resource-use matrixPer-capita interaction matrix Population growth.1 resources A model of evolution with substitutable resources

resources species Resource-use matrixPer-capita interaction matrix Population growth.1

terHorst, Miller, and Power model One species diverges to specialize on Resource 1 Two species converge to specialize on Resource 1 terHorst, Miller, and Powers Evol. Ecol. Res. 12:

Convergence is an evolutionary outcome of competition of >2 species Convergence or divergence can occur when there is sufficient selection and genetic variation to converge before extinction occurs. terHorst, Miller, and Power model terHorst, Miller, and Powers Evol. Ecol. Res. 12:

terHorst, Miller, and Power model A problem is that the model essentially acts through group selection. It creates variation in resource use among populations, then selections the population that has the highest growth rate. This form of modeling competitors has been shown to be inaccurate. NIMBioS Question 2: What is the best way to model the simultaneous evolution of competitors, based on selection on individuals?

Outline 1.Who am I? 1.What QUESTIONS am I interested in? 2.What TECHNOLOGY do I use? 3.Example of a project 4.Motivation: Why I use (or want to use) the individual-based approach? 5.Challenges: What prevents me from (or makes it difficult to) use the individual-based approach? 6.Opportunities: What (else) the individual-based approach could be used for?

This work has been significantly supported by the National Science Foundation Thanks to the many students that either marked leaves and sucked up pitcher plants out in the miserable heat or counted protozoa in the very cold Miller lab, including Amber Roman, Casie Reed, Fani Gruber, John Mola, and Heather Wells.

CHBOBFCCAPred CH -1.00* -0.48* BO *-0.14*-0.24* BFC CA0.13* WEEK 2WEEK 7 WEEK 12 CHBOBFCCAPred CH *-0.50*-0.15 BO *-0.10*-0.14 BFC * CA CHBOBFCCAPred CH -0.36* * BO * BFC-0.14* *-0.29* CA *-0.16* -0.37* Evolution of Predation Tolerance Less effect Increased effect

Biogeography detail on community

Buckley, et al Community Patterns within a Field

WEEKS High Predation Low Competition Low Predation High Competition Mosquito larvae protozoa bacteria dead bugs Succession in Sarracenia leaves

terHorst selection experiments in the laboratory show that Colpoda evolve faster growth rates and smaller size when in competition. Evolution of Colpoda in competition terHorst, J. Evol. Biol. 24:36-46

terHorst selection experiments in the laboratory show that Colpoda evolve when in predation. Evolution of Colpoda with predation by Wyeomyia terHorst, Miller and Levitan, Ecology 91:

Poorer get rich and rich get poorer

Results, again Poorer competitors evolve to be better competitors (effect and response) Better competitors evolve to be poorer competitors (effect and response) All the species are converging on an intermediate competitive ability But, NOT convergence as described before, driven by reciprocally increased competitive interactions No evidence of a competition/predation trade-off.