Ch. 4 - Population Dynamics (Excluding AP Content) Flashcards
What is an adaptation?
- A structure, behaviour, or physiological process that helps an organism survive
- An inherited trait (or set of traits) that improve the chances of survival and reproduction of an organism
How do changes come about?
Sexual reproduction and inherited mutations.
What are the three categories of adaptations? Explain each.
- Structural - Structures that improve a species’s ability to survive and reproduce.
Ex: Modification of limbs in mammals, camouflage, warning colours - Behavioural - Things an organism does.
Ex: Migration, hibernation, phototropism - Physiological - Based on chemicals and internal processes.
Ex: Venom production, pheromones (chemicals that influence behaviours of other organisms: attract mates, alarm)
How do adaptations develop? (2)
Adaptations are the result of gradual changes in the characteristics of members of a population over time.
1. Variation
2. Mutations
What are variations?
Difference, visible or otherwise, among members of a population.
These differences are created by inheriting different combinations of genetic information from parents.
What are mutations?
Random, spontaneous changes in genetic material that can be passed from parents to offspring.
Are mutations good? How is it passed?
A mutation casuing a new characteristic can be passed on to offspring only if it occurs in a new sex cell, NOT if it occurs in a body cell. In this case, a new trait is passed along and variation has occured.
- A mutation may provide an individual with an advantage or a disadvantage, or neither (neutral).
- It can happen that a mutation first offers no advantage, or even a disadvantage, and becomes favourable for oranism over time.
This more commonly happen when an organism’s environment is changing.
What is selective advatage?
Mutations that help an individual survive.
What is natural selection? What are the five distinct ideas in which it can occur?
The process by which populations change over time. Consists of several distinct ideas:
- Struggle for existence (Competition)
- Overproduction
- Variations
- Environmental changes
- Survival of the fittest
How does overproduction tie in to the Theory of Natural Selection?
More offspring is produced than can possibly survive.
Ex: Herring spawn off Alaska
How does struggle for existence (competition) tie in to the Theory of Natural Selection?
Organisms compete within and between species for limited resources because of overproduction.
How does variations tie in to the Theory of Natural Selection?
Inherited fifferences in traits occur among members of the same species.
Variation exists in all populations and the genetic differences are passed on to the next generation.
How does survival of the fittest tie in to the Theory of Natural Selection?
Surviving organisms are ones better able to compete, survive, and reproduce.
The others die without leaving offspring (natural selection).
Only those that live long enough to reproduce will pass their DNA for “desirable” traits to offspring. Less suited to die before reproducing. Population becomes more “fit’ over time.
Ex: Giraffes…short necks -> long necks
Stronger (to outrun), more food, better fighters = babies.
What is the impact of the enviornment on natural selection?
Define Survival of the Fittest and Selective Pressure.
The environment is constantly changing.
Those individuals that possess variations that allow them to tolerate, or thrive, in the environmental change, will survive and reproduce. (Survival of the Fittest)
In this way, the environment exerts selective pressure on a population.
As time passes, individuals that are selected for, continue reproducing and pass along the mutation. After time, many of the offpsring in the next generation will have this new trait, or adaptation.
What is artificial selection?
Human intervention in the breeding of plants and animals to ensure that desirable traits (like seed size, taste, coloration, etc.) are represented or magnified in successive generations.
Adaptation is usually a slow process, but…
If the species is particularly quick to reproducing, a new trait can become part of the general population very quickly, as in the case of bacteria, viruses, and insects.
Natural selection does not describe changes happening to individuals. Explain.
Individuals do not change during their lifetimes.
Species change over several generations.
How do new traits appear? (2)
Mutation
- in trait in DNA copying
- can be good or bad
Sexual reproduction produces new combinations (variation)
How did “the ancients” develop a theory to explain change?
- Greek philosphers, like Plato and Aritstotle, over 2000 years ago believed that all life existed in a perfect and unchanging form.
- Very conviniently fits with Judeo-Christian philosophy of creation and the Great Chain of Being
How did Comte de Buffon develop a theory to explain change?
(1749 Histoire Naturelle)
- The first to challenge the belief that species are unchanging (French naturalist)
- In 1789, published Histoire Naturelle, in which he noted to similarities between humans and apes and speculated that they may have a common ancestor
- He also went on to suggest that the Earth was much older than the 6000 years it was believed in the bible
How did Georges Cuvier develop a theory to explain change?
(Early 1800s)
- French nautralist developed the science of paleontology, using fossils to study ancient life
- Was the first to establish extinction as fact
- Identified a particular fossil tooth as a mastedon, not elephant
What did Cuvier examine? What theory did he propose as a result?
As he examined layers of rock, or strata, he noted several important things:
- Each stratum has a unique of fossil species
- The deeper he looked, the more dissimilar the species were from current life forms
- As he worked from one layer to the next, found that new species would appear, others disappear and become extinct
Proposed catastrophism: that over the course of history, many destructive natural events such as floods or volcanic eruptions (which he called revolutions) may have killed numerous species each time.
Ex: KT extinction
How did Thomas Malthus develop a theory to explain change?
(1798, “Essay on the Principles of Population”)
- Malthus lived around the same time as Cuvier, but is traditionally known as an economist, not a biologist
- Wrote an essay, that Charles Darwin studied. Argued that populations produce more offspring than their environments (food supply) could support and were reduced by starvation (competition).
How did Charles Lyell develop a theory to explain change?
- Scottish geologist that countered Cuvier’s Theory of Revolutions
- Proposed gradualism: that geological events are slow and continuous and can result in substantial changes over time
- Concluded this meant the Earth wasn’t just older than 6000 years, it was ancient.
Between the geological theories, which idea is used today?
Catastrophism: the idea that the Earth ahs been subject to sudden, violent events that have been large enough to have worldwide effects (asteroid, volcano).
Gradualism/Uniformitarianism: slow/gradual/consistent processes are what have shaped the Earth’s surface (erosion). All proccesses have been occuring as they are. Requiring long periods of time.
These ideas are now combined.
What is the transmutation of species, and which scientists argued for and against?
Species were not fixed as they are, but could change over time.
Buffon and Lamarack believed the transmutation of species.
Cuvier and Lyell believed that species were unchangeable, don’t evolve, and die
How did Jean-Baptiste Lamarck develop a theory to explain change?
- Compared current species with fossil forms and believed in a line of descent where each progressive ancient life form was more complex and closer to perfection than the last and they eventually led to the modern species.
- Manking was at the top of the evolutionary ladder, and every less complex species was on its way to becoming a more complex species (eventually man).
- Believed that every creature possesed “the universal creative principle” which was the will to evolve into man.