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The components of fitness Adults Females Males Gametes Survival (viability selection) Sexual selection (mating success) Fecundity selection Gametic selection Compatibility selection from Futuyma, p. 369 Zygotes Parents
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When the components of fitness are in conflict... sexual selection: female túngara frogs prefer male calls with more “chucks” natural selection: bats locate chucking males better than non-chucking males sexual selection is stronger— most males chuck from D.J. Futuyma, Evolutionary Biology, p. 346
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The Nature of Natural Selection natural selection “acts” on individuals, but its consequences are felt in populations
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None of the finches were altered by the drought, they simply survived it or not, based on beak depth
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The Nature of Natural Selection natural selection “acts” on phenotypes, but evolution requires these phenotypes to be genetically determined
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Selection: yes. Evolution: no.
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The Nature of Natural Selection natural selection is not “forward looking”
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Natural selection does not “act” for the good of the species valid cases of true altruism are not known to exist
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Belding’s ground squirrels make “alarm calls” to warn of attack by weasels,badgers, coyotes, hawks. This behavior puts the caller at risk, and may benefit unrelated individuals. Is it altruistic?
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If this were a true “altruistic” act, all individuals should call equally. But instead, females call most often. from Sherman (1977)
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Why? Kin selection. Since females remain close to the natal burrow, females are surrounded by sisters: they call to benefit close relatives. Males disperse more and call infrequently, because they are unlikely to be genetically related to others nearby. from Sherman (1977)
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Not so good for the species...
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Natural selection “acts” on existing variation—how can it create new traits? Mutation provides a constant source of variation for selection to act on Selection on “preadaptations” can produce novel traits
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Figure 3.18. Artificial selection on corn kernel oil content (from Moose et al. 2004). Continuous selection yielded a range of variation not present in the original plants. Mutation and recombination supply new variation for selection to act upon, continuously.
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Selection produces new traits by modifying existing traits The Panda’s “thumb”: a modified wrist bone (sesamoid) that varies in the bear family from Futuyma (2005)
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Preadaptations (or exaptations) Wings in common murre (Uria aalge) are exaptations for diving Wings are preadaptations in penguins—modified for swimming. So much that they no longer allow flight!
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Selection cannot (usually) replace traits, once lost History constrains natural selection
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Cretaceous Hesperornis, a marine bird with teeth to grip fish Modern birds have lost teeth—this fish-eating anhinga makes do without them from Futuyma (2005)
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Bill serrations serve the same function in the fish- eating merganser duck from Futuyma (2005)
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Problems with the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection
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The Argument from Design Irreducible complexity
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Graded complexity of multicellular eyes (a) pigment spot or (b) pigment cup – flatworms, polychaetes, crabs and shrimp, "lower" vertebrates – detecting light for orientation and monitoring day length
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Optic cup narrow aperture (like a “pinhole camera”) probably creates poorly-developed images nemerteans, annelids, copepods, archaeogastropods (abalone) and nautiloids (Nautilus)
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Lensed eyes form complex images graded complexity in molluscs: immovable lens in some gastropods the eye of the pulmonate land snail Helix
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through "camera- like" lens in octopus, squids and cuttlefish
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Through the lensed eye of "higher" vertebrates. These form the most complex, high resolution images, in part because the lens can rapidly change shape — it is compressible and served by a fine musculature
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The Argument from Design Irreducible complexity in biochemical systems
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An argument for intelligent design Michael Behe, author of Darwin’s Black Box (1996): the cilium is a “molecular machine” (1998) –without all its tiny intricate parts, would not function “irreducibly complex” evolution of this structure by natural selection, bit by bit, is impossible
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Chlamydomonas flagellum (© 1998 Gwen Childs, Univ. TX) Human respiratory tract cilia (© Visuals Unlimited) Typical cilia and flagella outer and inner dynein arms bridging peripheral microtubule pairs, a central pair of microtubules, spokes joining central to peripheral pairs
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Yet, outer dynein arms, spokes, and central microtubules are missing in the eel sperm flagellum (arrow marks one of the missing dynein arms), still the structure is fully functional. From: Woolley (1997). – Many other exceptions exist (Miller 1997) – pf14 mutants of Chlamydomonas lack flagella spokes, but can swim
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