Adaptations:
Characteristics that increase an organism’s chance of survival and reproduction in its environment.
Three divisions of adaptations?
Examples of Anatomical adaptations:
Anatomical adaptations:
Body coverings:
Help an organism to fly, stay warm and provide protection.
Anatomical adaptations:
Camouflage:
Anatomical adaptations:
Teeth:
Shape and type of teeth present in an animals jaw is related to its diet.
- Herbivores (sheep) have continuously growing molars for chewing tough grass and plants.
- Carnivores (tigers) have sharp large canines to kill prey and tear meat.
Anatomical adaptations:
Mimicry:
Copying another animals appearance / sounds allows a harmless organism to fool predators into thinking it is poisonous or dangerous.
- Hoverfly mimic markings of a wasp.
Marram Grass adaptations to reduce the rate of transpiration:
Behavioural adaptations:
Behavioural adaptations:
Survival behaviours:
Opossum plays dead / rabbit freezes when they think they have been seen.
Behavioural adaptations:
Courtship:
This increases the organisms’ chance of reproducing.
Behavioural adaptations:
Types of seasonal behaviours:
Categories of behavioural adaptations:
Innate behaviour:
Ability to do this is inherited through genes.
- Spiders create spider webs.
- Woodlice avoid light.
- Allows organism to survive in the habitat in which it lives.
Learned behaviour:
Adaptations learned from experience or from observing other animals.
- Use of tools. Otters use stones to hammer shells off rocks.
Physiological adaptations:
Physiological adaptations:
Poison production:
Many reptiles produce venom to kill prey and may plants produce poison on leaves to prevent themselves from being eaten.
Physiological adaptations:
Antibiotic production:
Some bacteria produce antibiotics to kill other species of bacteria in the surrounding area.
Physiological adaptations:
Water holding:
Water-holding from can store water in its body. This allows it to survive in the desert for more than a year without access to water.
Many cacti and other desert plants can hold large amounts of water in their tissues.
Anatomical adaptations provide evidence for convergent evolution:
Examples of analogous structures:
What is an analogous structure:
Adapted to perform the same function but have different genetic origin
Convergent evolution:
Takes place when unrelated species begin to share similar traits. These similarities occur as organisms adapt to similar environments / other selection pressures.
Similarities between placenta mammals and marsypials:
Placental mammals: placenta connects the embryo to mother’s circulatory system in the uterus. This nourishes the embryo, allowing it to reach a high level of maturity before birth.
Marsupials also start life in uterus, but the leave and enter the marsupium (pouch) while they are still embryos. Development completed by sucking milk.