Download presentation
Published byNevaeh Hornsby Modified over 10 years ago
1
Chapter 18 Organizing Information About Species
2
18.1 Bye Bye Birdie Over millions of years, unique forms and behaviors evolved in many different lineages of Hawaiian finches – the Hawaiian honeycreepers Variations in traits allowed the birds to exploit special opportunities presented by their island habitats Polynesians arrived on the Hawaiian Islands around 1000 A.D. – followed by Europeans in 1778
3
The Hawaiian Honeycreepers
By 1778 at least 43 honeycreeper species that had thrived on the Hawaiian islands before humans arrived were extinct Conservation efforts began in the 1960s, but 26 more species have since disappeared – today, 35 of the remaining 68 species are endangered They are pressured by invasive, non-native species of plants and animals, and by rising global temperatures that allow disease-bearing mosquitoes to invade higher-altitude habitats
4
Endangered: The Palila
The palila (Loxioides bailleui) has an adaptation that allows it to feed mainly on the seeds of the mamane plant. The seeds are toxic to most other birds. The one remaining palila population is declining because mamane plants are being trampled by cows and gnawed to death by goats and sheep. Only about 1,200 palila remained in 2010.
5
Endangered: The Akekee
The unusual lower bill of the akekee (Loxops caeruleirostris) points to one side, allowing this bird to pry open buds that harbor insects. Avian malaria carried by mosquitoes to higher altitudes is decimating the last population of this species. Between 2000 and 2007, the number of akekee plummeted from 7,839 birds to 3,536.
6
Extinct: The Poouli This male poouli (Melamprosops phaeosoma)—
rare, old, and missing an eye—died in 2004 from avian malaria. There were two other poouli alive at the time, but neither has been seen since then.
7
18.2 Phylogeny Evolutionary history can be reconstructed by studying shared, heritable traits Phylogeny is the evolutionary history of a species or a group of species – a kind of genealogy that follows a lineage’s evolutionary relationships through time
8
Characters Each species bears evidence of its own unique evolutionary history in its characters A character is any heritable physical, behavioral, or biochemical feature that can be measured or quantified Examples: Number of segments in a backbone, the nucleotide sequence of ribosomal RNA
9
Table 18-1 p296
10
Traditional Classification
Traditional classification groups organisms based on shared characters, such as feathers in birds Traditional classification does not always reflect phylogeny – species that appear very similar are not necessarily closely related
11
Evolutionary Classification
Evolutionary biologists try to pinpoint the source of shared characters: a common ancestor Common ancestry is determined by derived traits – characters present in a group, but not in that group’s ancestors A group whose members share one or more defining derived traits is called a clade – a monophyletic group consisting of an ancestor with a derived trait, and all of its descendants
12
Cladistics Making hypotheses about evolutionary relationships among clades is called cladistics Parsimony analysis is used to find the simplest and most likely evolutionary pathway – the one in which defining derived traits evolved the fewest number of times
13
Parsimony Analysis Figure 18.2 A simple example of parsimony analysis, using the data in Table There are three possible evolutionary relationships among a bird, bat, and dolphin. The scenario that is most likely to be correct is the one in which the derived traits (in red) would have arisen the fewest number of times.
14
Parsimony Analysis Figure 18.2 A simple example of parsimony analysis, using the data in Table There are three possible evolutionary relationships among a bird, bat, and dolphin. The scenario that is most likely to be correct is the one in which the derived traits (in red) would have arisen the fewest number of times.
15
Parsimony Analysis Figure 18.2 A simple example of parsimony analysis, using the data in Table There are three possible evolutionary relationships among a bird, bat, and dolphin. The scenario that is most likely to be correct is the one in which the derived traits (in red) would have arisen the fewest number of times.
16
Cladograms Cladistic analysis produces a cladogram – an evolutionary tree that diagrams evolutionary trends and patterns Data from an outgroup (a species not closely related to any member of the group) may be included to “root” the tree Each line represents a lineage, which may branch into two lineages at a node – a common ancestor of two lineages Every branch on a cladogram is a clade; the two lineages that emerge from a node are sister groups
17
multicellular with a backbone
earthworm tuna lizard mouse human earthworm multicellular tuna multicellular with a backbone lizard multicellular with a backbone and legs Figure 18.3 Animated An example of a cladogram. mouse multicellular with a backbone, legs, and hair human Figure 18-3 p297
18
ANIMATED FIGURE: Interpreting a cladogram
To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE
19
Take-Home Message: How do evolutionary biologists study life’s diversity?
Evolutionary biologists study phylogeny to understand how all species are connected by shared ancestry A clade is a monophyletic group whose members share one or more derived traits; cladistics is a method of making hypotheses about evolutionary relationships among clades Cladograms and other evolutionary tree diagrams are hypotheses based on our best understanding of the evolutionary history of a group of organisms
20
18.3 Comparing Form and Function
Physical similarities are often evidence of shared ancestry, but sometimes a trait evolves independently in two groups In many cases, comparative morphology can be used to unravel evolutionary relationships
21
Morphological Divergence
Homologous structures are similar body parts in separate lineages that evolved in a common ancestor Homologous structures may be used for different purposes, but the same genes direct their development Change from the body form of a common ancestor is an evolutionary pattern called morphological divergence Example: Vertebrate forelimbs vary in size, shape, and function, but are alike in structure
22
1 2 3 pterosaur 1 2 chicken 3 2 3 penguin 1 2 3 1 4 5 stem reptile porpoise 2 3 4 5 1 2 Figure 18.4 Morphological divergence among vertebrate forelimbs, starting with the bones of a stem reptile. The number and position of many skeletal elements were preserved when these diverse forms evolved; notice the bones of the fore-arms. Certain bones were lost over time in some of the lineages (compare the digits numbered 1 through 5). Drawings are not to scale. bat 3 4 1 5 2 3 4 5 human 1 2 3 4 5 elephant Figure 18-4 p298
23
Morphological Convergence
Analogous structures are body parts that look alike but did not evolve in a shared ancestor – they evolved independently in lineages subject to the same environmental pressures The independent evolution of similar body parts in different lineages is called morphological convergence Example: Bird, bat, and insect wings all perform the same function, but are derived from different structures
24
Morphological Convergence
25
Take-Home Message: What does comparative morphology reveal about phylogeny?
In morphological divergence, a body part inherited from a common ancestor becomes modified differently in different lines of descent (homologous structures) In morphological convergence, body parts that appear alike evolved independently in different lineages, not in a common ancestor (analogous structures)
26
18.4 Comparing Biochemistry
The kind and number of biochemical similarities among species are clues about evolutionary relationships
27
Molecular Clocks A molecular clock is used to estimate how long ago two lineages diverged by comparing DNA or protein sequences Over time, neutral mutations that have no effect on survival or reproduction accumulate at a constant rate The accumulation of neutral mutations in the DNA of a lineage act as a molecular clock The number of differences between genomes can be used to estimate the relative times of divergence
28
DNA and Protein Sequence Comparisons
Some essential genes are highly conserved (their DNA sequences have changed very little over evolutionary time) – other genes are not conserved at all Comparing the nucleotide sequence of a gene or the amino acid sequence of a protein can provide evidence of an evolutionary relationship Generally, two species with many identical proteins are likely to be close relatives – the number of amino acid differences give us an idea of evolutionary relationships
29
Comparison of an Amino Acid Sequence
30
DNA Comparisons DNA from nuclei, mitochondria, and chloroplasts can be used in nucleotide comparisons Mitochondria are inherited intact from a single parent, usually the mother – any differences in mitochondrial DNA sequences between maternally related individuals are due to mutations, not genetic recombination during fertilization
31
Comparison of a DNA Sequence
32
Cladogram Based On DNA Sequence
33
Take-Home Message: How does biochemistry reflect evolutionary history?
Mutations change the nucleotide sequence of a lineage’s DNA over time Lineages that diverged long ago have more differences between their DNA and amino acid sequences than do lineages that diverged more recently
34
18.5 Comparing Patterns of Development
Similar patterns of embryonic development are an outcome of highly conserved master genes A mutation in a master gene typically halts development
35
Similar Forms in Plants
Homeotic genes encode transcription factors that determine details of body form during embryonic development Example: A floral identity gene, Apetala1, affects petal formation across many different lineages – it is likely that this gene evolved in a shared ancestor
36
Developmental Comparisons in Animals
The embryos of many vertebrate species develop in similar ways – directed by the very same genes Differences are brought about by variations in expression patterns of master genes that govern development Example: All vertebrates go through a stage in which they have four limb buds, a tail, and a series of somites – divisions of the body that give rise to a backbone
37
Comparison of Vertebrate Embryos
38
Hox Genes Hox genes are homeotic genes of animals
The pattern of expression of Hox genes determines the identity of particular zones along the body axis Hox genes occur in clusters on a chromosome, in the order in which they are expressed in a developing embryo Example: Legs develop wherever the antennapedia gene is expressed in an embryo
39
Expression of the Antennapedia Gene
40
Vertebrate Hox Genes In vertebrates, expression of the Hoxc6 gene causes ribs to develop on vertebrae of the back – not the neck or tail The Dlx gene encodes a transcription factor that signals embryonic cells to form buds that give rise to appendages Hox genes suppress Dlx expression in all parts of an embryo that will not have appendages
41
Expression of the Hoxc6 Gene
42
Persistent Juvenile Features
A chimpanzee skull and a human skull appear quite similar an early stage As development continues, both skulls change shape as different parts grow at different rates A human adult skull is proportioned more like the skull of an infant chimpanzee than the skull of an adult chimpanzee Human evolution involved changes that caused traits typical of juvenile stages to persist into adulthood
43
Proportional Changes During Skull Development: Chimpanzee
adult proportions in infant
44
Proportional Changes During Skull Development: Human
proportions in infant adult
45
Persistent Juvenile Traits in Salamanders
In axolotls, external gills and other larval traits persist into adulthood
46
Take-Home Message: Why are similarities in development indicative of shared ancestry?
Similarities in patterns of development are the result of master genes that have been conserved over evolutionary time Some differences between closely related species are a result of master gene mutations that change the rate or onset of development
47
ANIMATED FIGURE: Mutation and proportional changes
To play movie you must be in Slide Show Mode PC Users: Please wait for content to load, then click to play Mac Users: CLICK HERE
48
18.6 Applications of Phylogeny Research
Studies of phylogeny reveal how species relate to one another and to species that are now extinct We use information about phylogeny to understand how to preserve the species that exist today
49
Conservation Biology The reservoir of genetic diversity among Hawaiian honeycreepers is diminishing along with its numbers Lowered diversity means the group as a whole is less resilient to change, and more likely to suffer species losses Deciphering honeycreeper phylogeny can tell us which ones are most valuable in terms of preserving genetic diversity
50
Diversity of Hawaiian Honeycreepers
51
Evolutionary Relationships Among Honeycreepers
52
Conservation Biology (cont.)
Cladistics analyses are also used to correlate past evolutionary divergences with behavior and dispersal patterns of existing populations Example: A cladistic analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences suggests that blue wildebeest populations are genetically less similar than they should be Using a combination of data, conservation biologists can recommend measures to improve gene flow
53
Medical Applications Researchers study the evolution of infectious agents by grouping their biochemical characters into clades Example: A phylogenetic analysis of H5N1 influenza virus isolated from pigs showed that the virus “jumped” from birds to pigs at least three times since 2005, and that one group had acquired the potential to be transmitted among humans
54
Take-Home Message: How is studying phylogeny useful?
Phylogeny research is yielding an ever more specific and accurate picture of how all life is related by shared ancestry Among other applications, phylogeny research can help us preserve species in danger of becoming extinct, and to understand the spread of infectious diseases
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.