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An example of natural selection The premises 1. Phenotypic variation in a population. 2. Phenotypic variation has a genetic component 3. Differential reproductive success Survival and reproduction is, on-average, nonrandom 4. Phenotypic variation shifts between generations in response to a changing environment.
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Medium ground finch Geospiza fortis generation time: 4.5 years life span c. 16 years
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120 m N = c. 1,200 Research of Peter and Rosemary Grant: 1973 - present Hot spot 7 cm/yr 4-5 my 2-3 my 1 my
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Adaptive radiation Galapagos finches
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1: Is the population phenotypically variable? Geospiza fortis
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2: Is the variation heritable? (heritability: proportion of phenotypic variation due to genetic variation; c. 65%) Evolution!
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1977: drought 130 to 24 mm precipitation A natural selector Was there differential survival? Effect of natural selection
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1. 2. 3. The interplay Seed abundance Number of finches Seed characteristics of surviving plants
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Had evolution taken place? Significant difference in beak size. Note: natural selection is always one generation behind the expression of modified phenotypes
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Natural selection cannot anticipate future “needs” of a population Evolutionary changes is based selection in the previous generation. 1. Parental population + environment (natural selectors) 2. Part of population selected to reproduce 3. Transmission of heritable characteristics to the new generation (e.g., size of the beak). – But the change was based on phenotypic variation among their parents.
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: species originate by divergence from common ancestors Cladistic evolution vs. anagenesis or phyletic evolution
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Darwin’s 1859 illustration ( On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection )
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