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Evolution and Life Histories II

Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

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Page 1: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Evolution and Life Histories II

Page 2: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

• LH example: Thrip egg mites

LS: 4 days

Page 3: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Life History Principles

• Generally begin with birds

• Reproductive output is accessible.

• Reproductive output can be easily manipulated and adjusted.

• Individuals can be marked for identification.

Page 4: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

The evolution of clutch size

• Optimal clutch size

• ? How much energy should an individual allocate to an episode of reproduction; e.g., how many eggs?

• Trade-off: The more offspring produced, the fewer resources available for each individual.

• Lack’s prediction: Selection should favor a clutch size that maximizes the number of surviving offspring.

• Clutch size should be a reproductive strategy.

Page 5: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Tradeoff:Probability of individual survival< with > clutch size

Prediction: Number of survivingoffspring = clutch sizex probability of individual survival

Optimal clutchsize = 5

Assumptions: 1. eggs are all thesame size2. current reproductive effort does notaffect subsequentperformance

Starting hypotheses

Page 6: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

A test of the prediction: 1960-1982

Number ofClutchesN = 4489

Numbersurvivingas a functionof clutch size

Parental lifetime fitness can decrease from care necessitated by large broods.

Page 7: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Future effects of clutch size on daughters’ performance

Collared Flycatchers

Page 8: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Effect of age at first reproduction on size of subsequent clutches

• e.g. Collared Flycatchers

Begin atdifferent ages

Begin with extra eggs

Page 9: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

How large should offspring be?

• Trade-off between number and size of offspring.

• Produce many small OR few large?

• Can be dictated by environmental context; i.e., the reproductive strategy may include phenotypic plasticity

• e.g. Stator limbatus (a seed beetle)

Page 10: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Seed beetle: Stator limbatus

Blue palo verde seedPoor host: < 1/2 larvae survive

Cat-claw acacia seedGood host: most larvae survive

Page 11: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Optimal offspringsize for parent islarger on poor host

Minimum size atwhich offspringsurvive is smalleron good host

The model: Size decreases with anincreased number ofsibs

Offspringsurvival

Parentalfitness

Prediction: largereggs on poorer host

Stator limbatus

Page 12: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

1st egg onon host -then switched

Restricted to one host

Page 13: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

• A phylogenetic constraint on clutch size.

• A fitness enigma?

Page 14: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

A. tesselata (24.2 mL)

A. neotesselata (17.0 mL)

A. sexlineata (7.1 mL)

Page 15: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Karyotype of Aspidoscelis neotesselata

Page 16: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days
Page 17: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days
Page 18: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

• Intraspecific divergence in life histories in A. tesselata (a parthenogenetic species)

Page 19: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Fort Sumner

Page 20: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

Aspidoscelis tesselataPattern class E Pattern class C

Page 21: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days
Page 22: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days
Page 23: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

53 59 65 71 77 83 89 95 101

0

2

4

6

8

Num

be

r

GravidNongravid

53 59 65 71 77 83 89 95 101SVL (mm)

0

2

4

6

8

Num

be

r

GravidNongravid

Sumner C

Sumner E

Page 24: Evolution and Life Histories II. LH example: Thrip egg mites LS: 4 days

• Assignment: Sunday March 21• Watch “Life”: Cable TV, Discovery Channel • Making the series, 6 P.M.• Reptiles and Amphibians, 7 P.M.