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LF263 Evolution L10-12


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LF263 Evolution L10-12 - Details

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How to deconstruct public arguments
1 Sentience 2 Sexism and Hierarchies
TrpA1
Essential channel for nociceptor (pain receptor) in vertebrates TrpA1+ TrpC1 = pain receptors, part of common opisthokont heritage, universal existence among all metazoans
TrpC1
Shared across drosophila, arthropod and vertebrrates
Cnidarians
Earliest animals, with bona fide, neuronal networks - no brains, with nociceptive avoidance behaviour, they make neuronal nets, they have a shared Depression along the DV axis of the larval cnidarian and embryonic vertebrate.
Shared sentience
Between all cnidaria and bilateria
Bilaterian brain genes
Pax6 gets coopted in brain of vertebrates - big eyes
Novelty in bilaterians
Pax6 gets first coopted into the CNS in bilaterians, no sheet formation yet. Pax6 dependent cell types are the serotonergic neurons of the ventral brain of all bilaterian
Dominance
Vertebrates: dopaminergic or serotonergic system of the hypothalamus detects dominance and status. It can be modulated
Stag beetle fight
1 territorial behaviour 2 significant sexual dimorphism 3 ritualized fight behaviour 4 dominance isnt hierarchy 5 hierarchy requires stable social groups 6 dominance can be encoded by pheromones and not expressed
Species concept
Phenetic species, Ecological species concept, Evolutionary species, Biological species and Recognition Species Concept.
Phenetic Species
A set of organisms resembling each other and distinct from other sets.
Ecological Species Concept
Distinct phenetic clusters parasites are a good example
Evolutionary Species
All individuals that share a common evolutionary history
Biological Species
Groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations, reproductively isolated from other groups
Recognition Species Concept
Difficulties in describing sexual isolating mechanisms
Anagenesis vs Cladogenesis
Anagenesis: descent with modification within a single lineage Cladogenesis: evolutionary division of lineages, giving a proliferation of species
Tempos and mode of speciation
Punctuated equilibrium and Phyletic gradualism
Punctuated equilibrium
The idea that evolution occurs in spurts instead of following the slow, but steady path that Darwin suggested
Speciation mechanisms
Prezygotic and Postzygotic isolation by Dobzhansky
Prezygotic isolation
Compatible individuals do not mate. Genetic, ecological and Dobzhansky-Muller theory.
Postzygotic isolation
Hybrids between members of some groups are less fertile to unfertile.
Dobzhansky-Muller theory
If speciation involves incompatibility of alleles and genes, then more than 1 genes are involved.
Modes of speciation
Hybridisation, Instantaneous speciation: single point mutation, chromosomal mutation and polyploidy, Gradual speciation: allopatric, sympatric (driven by co-evolution and lead to character displacement) and parapatric.
Batesian mimicry
Similarity of edible species to non-edible ones. Tends to be more precise and restricted to one sex. There is a limit to the freq of mimics that can be carried. Crosses between them produce one or the other morph
Linkage disequilibrium
When he genes do not recombine. It decays over time and chromosomal distance
Haplotype
A combination of alleles inherited together. Decay depends on the recombination rate (r) which can be 0 to 0.5. a’ = a – r (ad – bc)
Pin and thrum
2 morphotypes, increase outbreeding. Pin is recessive to Thrum. G controls the style and female parts and A controls the anthers.
Dioecy
Has evolved many times. Allows the partitioning of resources, ensures outbreeding. Involves a non recombining region involved in sex determination.
The mutation theory of the origin of sex
Organisms that have frequent deleterious mutations have a problem. Sex allows the recombination of two degen chromosomes, which can re-establish a good one.
Upper vs Lower jaw
Premaxilla and Maxilla carried teeth. Only dentary carried teeth.
2 different forms of bone in skull formation
1 Dermal bone formation – bone sheet formation directly from mesenchyme 2 Endochondral ossification: Cartilage first and then replaced by bone.
Head of jawed vertebrates
Chondrocranium: 1st cartilage then replaced by endochondral ossification or bone Viscerocranium or splanchnocranium: cartilaginous and dermal bone
Key embryological components
Hindbrain, Branchial arches Mesodermal Limb buds and Mesodermal somites
Conserved neural crest modules
Discrete cell populations act as developmental modules They come from specific places and go to specific places And are instructed in specific ways before migration Each cell group is one genetic module, and Migrates into one place: A branchial arch.
Neural Crest
Matching between hindbrain Segment (rhombomere), Neural crest in branchial arch And its innervation by hindbrain segment – a gnathostome invention!
Fish Tetrapod transition
A significant paedomorphic event happened: Late adult forms retain features from early larval forms of ancestors Best indicator: eye/head relationship
Teeth as developmental modules
1 Serial repetition, early similarity/odontodes 2. Redeployment of programme from outside to Inside/jaw region in placoderms 3. Differences of teeth – heterodonty/homodonty. 4. Loss of teeth – gradual and complete
Odontode
Common gnathostome stock –Formation of enameloid. 3 tissues: 1 ectodermal enamel, 2 dentine bone
Transition
From heterodonty to homodonty. Amniote heterodonty and thecodonty. Primitive condition of Amniotes: teeth along One tooth row.
Tooth loss
Happened many times independently. Retrograde tooth loss. Lead to new morphologies