How has the movement of continents contributed to the distribution pattern of organisms?
Briefly outline the major changes in the positions of the continents over time.
Neogene & Quaternary periods: continents continued drifting, most landmasses ended up north of the equator = climatic instability + glacial cycle in pleistocene
Explain how continental drift occurs.
Mechanism of continental drift= plate tectonics
- New sea floor created at mid-ocean ridges, where it moves outward by seafloor spreading & gets destroyed by subduction into ocean trenches
- Ocean floor= “conveyor belt” being continuously formed at mid-ocean ridges & then destroyed at trenches → continents passively ride along the conveyor belt
Provide evidence for the following events: first prokaryotic cells, increase in atmospheric oxygen, Cambrian explosion.
1st Prokaryotic Cells Evidence:
- Resemble modern photosynthetic algae?
- Stromatolites in limestone built by photosynthetic cyanobacteria
Increase in Atmospheric Oxygen Evidence:
- Deposition of iron oxide sediments on marine continental shelves
- Stromatolites in limestone built by photosynthetic cyanobacteria
- Extensive banded iron formations
Cambrian Explosion Evidence:
Burgess Shale! In Field, BC: very rich fossil record of the Cambrian Explosion
List the drivers of change (9).
Changing solar output
Evolving atmosphere
Tectonic/ volcanic activity
Asteroid impacts
Methane clathrate releases
Orbital patterns (Milankovitch cycles)
Changing ocean circulation
Changing sea levels
Humans!
Explain the three concepts of change.
Describe what life was like in the Phanerozoic eon.
Showed all 3 patterns of change (gradual, abrupt, periodic)
Both catastrophe and recovery
–> Mass extinctions and rebounds (adaptive radiation)
Diversity gradually increased during phanerozoic, but was punctuated by major extinctions
Explain the concept of extinction.
= the permanent loss of a species, population, etc
Often followed by adaptive radiation
Explain the cause behind many of the mass extinctions.
Tectonically-driven cycles of regression and transgression of marine waters across continental inland seas
- Regression → vast decreases in area of shallow water enviros
Describe the Permian-Triassic extinction event.
The most disastrous extinction ever!
Occurred 250 mya, and spanned 60,000 years
Massive scale and scope. Extinctions:
90%+ of marine invertebrates
75%+ of land tetrapods (mostly amphibians)
Majority of land plants
Explain the cause of the P-T extinction event.
There was likely more than one cause over the massive time span. Possibilities:
Describe the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event.
The mass extinction between the cretaceous and tertiary
~65 mya
Well-known because it caused the dinosaurs to go extinct
Explain the cause of the K-T extinction event.
Most likely cause= meteorite impact
Initial evidence= Italy: thin clay layer with very high iridium concentrations at the K-T boundary (later found around the world)
*Note Iridium suggests extraterrestrial origin
Additional evidence: Yucatan impact crater in Mexico (10km wide!)
What are the mechanisms for species formation (5)?
What is the difference between allopatric and sympatric speciation?
Allopatric:
Geographic isolation cuts off gene flow
Vicariance due to enviro barriers
Peripheral isolates due to founder events/ jump dispersal
Sympatric:
No geographic isolation
Includes sympatric and parapatric
Describe the two processes under which allopatric speciation occurs.
What is the difference between sympatric and parapatric speciation?
How does sympatric speciation arise?
There are a few causes of sympatric speciation:
- Strong selective pressures within a population
Eg the appearance of a new host in the cause of herbivorous insects or animal parasites, or new mutualistic associations
- Disruptions along an environmental gradient
- Resource partitioning and behavioral isolation (eg niche partitioning)
- Abrupt chromosomal changes (eg polyploidy common in plants)
Describe the Cenozoic radiation of mammals in terms of extinction and evolution.
Cenozoic radiation of mammals:
Ancestors of modern mammals developed key innovations like jaws, teeth, large brain, etc during the Mesozoic
K-T mass extinction brought about an abrupt change allowing terrestrial vertebrates to become dominant by extinguishing dinosaurs
Eliminates competitive rivals and opened new ecological niches
Describe the rise of angiosperms in terms of extinction and evolution.
Angiosperms evolved during cretaceous
Innovations in reproductive biology: allowed them to evolve mutualistic associations w/ animals that pollinate their flowers + disperse their seeds
Despite these advantages, rise to dominance took 100 million years to replace dominant gymnosperms like conifers and ferns
Describe the replacement of brachiopods in terms of extinction and evolution
Eg clams
What three observations did early biogeographers notice about islands?
What are the 3 themes in island biogeography?
Dispersal
Extinction
Diversity
Explain how islands become inhabited.
Steps:
1. Initial dispersal event to previously unoccupied land
- natural (swim or fly) or
- Artificial introduction (accidental or on purpose)
*reverse selection can occur
*radiation is very common on island archipelagos → adapts into niches