BIOL10005 Lecture Notes - Lecture 16: Invasive Species, Overfishing, Commensalism

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29 Jun 2018
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Lecture 16: Ecology, Natural and sexual selection
EVOLUTION:
Change of inherited traits found in populations of individuals overtime
A genetic change
Not designed or predetermined by organism
Natural selection favours individuals that have traits that give them an advantage, meaning
they are more likely to survive and reproduce
Adaptions are then inherited by their offspring
ECOLOGY
Way in which organisms interact w/ their environment (including other organisms)
Processes DRIVE evolution by natural selection
Three levels:
oEcosystem:
Entire environment, physical properties + all the organisms/communities
found there
oCommunity
Any group of species that live in the same place + could interact w/ each
other
oPopulation
Group of individuals of same species
SYMBIOSIS
Two species interact closely together in a way which benefit one or both
Interaction can either be essential to existence of one or both species
oObligate: have to happen or else one would die
oFacultative: can happy but not necessary
Mutualism: BOTH species in the relationship benefit from the association
Obligate: corals have symbiotic algae --> without algae, coral dies
Facultative: feed off ticks on skin of buffalo
oNot essential for existence but hugely beneficial
Commensalism: one species benefit, other UNHARMED
i.e. barnacles on whales
Parasitism: one benefit, other is HARMED
Endoparasite & ectoparasite
PREDATORS:
Another form of interaction where on species benefit at the expense of the other
Prey evolve traits to avoid being caught
oRun faster, develop defences (i.e. shell), better at hiding, deception
oThese are adaptations: characteristics of an organism that have evolved because
Counter adaptations: predator will evolve to overcome prey defences
oi.e. run faster
oAnd then prey evolve more strategies
oBoth species continue to evolve in response to each others' adaptations
NATURAL SELECTION
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Document Summary

Change of inherited traits found in populations of individuals overtime. Natural selection favours individuals that have traits that give them an advantage, meaning they are more likely to survive and reproduce. Adaptions are then inherited by their offspring. Way in which organisms interact w/ their environment (including other organisms) Entire environment, physical properties + all the organisms/communities found there o. Any group of species that live in the same place + could interact w/ each other o. Two species interact closely together in a way which benefit one or both. Interaction can either be essential to existence of one or both species: obligate: have to happen or else one would die o. Mutualism: both species in the relationship benefit from the association. Obligate: corals have symbiotic algae --> without algae, coral dies. Facultative: feed off ticks on skin of buffalo: not essential for existence but hugely beneficial.

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