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Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations...

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Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7)
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Page 1: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Energy/NutrientRelations (Ch. 7)

Page 2: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Lecture Outline• 1) Major methods of gaining energy• 2) Limitations on energy gain

– Plants– Animals

Page 3: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Plants• Light curve….Photosynthetic rate vs. light (photon flux

density). Note Pmax at Isat

• Pmax = max. rate

• Isat = light amt. when system saturated

Fig. 7.20

Page 4: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Plants• Adiantum: fern in deep shade

– Sciophyte: shade-adapted plant

• Encelia: desert– Heliophyte: sun-adapted plant

Ps

Lite

Page 5: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Plants• Sun/shade plant Pmax and Isat values

• Highest Pmax?

• Highest Isat?Fig. 7.21

Page 6: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Lecture Outline• 1) Major methods of gaining energy• 2) Limitations on energy gain

– Plants– Animals

Page 7: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

What limits animal food intake?• Search time: find prey

• Handling time: subdue & process prey

Prey Density

Food IntakeRate

LoLo Hi

Hi

Page 8: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Animal Functional Response Curves• Holling: 3 functional

responses (how food intake varies with prey density)

Fig. 7.22

Page 9: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Animal Functional Response Curves• Type 1: Linear

– Little search or handling time (rare)

– Ex, filter feeders

Feather duster worm Fig. 7.22

Page 10: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Animal Functional Response Curves• Type 2: Rate increases

faster than density– Partially limited by

search/handling time– Common!

Fig. 7.22

Page 11: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Animal Functional Response Curves• Ex, moose feeding

Fig. 7.23

Page 12: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Animal Functional Response Curves• Ex, wolf feeding

Fig. 7.24

Page 13: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Animal Functional Response Curves• Type 3: S-shaped curve

(rare)– 1) Prey find safe sites at

low density– Or, – 2) Predator needs to learn

to handle prey efficiently

Page 14: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging• Principle: organisms cannot simultaneously

maximize all life functions.– Choose prey to maximize energy gain

Page 15: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging

Page 16: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging Theory• Model:• Ne = number prey encountered per unit time

• Cs = cost to search for prey• H = handling time• E = energy gained by consuming prey• Can calculate energy intake per unit time: E/T• E/T = (Ne1E1-Cs )/(1 + Ne1H1)• 1 refers to prey species 1

E: Energy gain minus CostTime: reflects handling prey

Page 17: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• What if 2 prey?• E/T = (Ne1E1-Cs ) + (Ne2E2-Cs )

• 1 + Ne1H1 + Ne2H2

Optimal Foraging Theory

Ne = number prey encountered per unit time

Cs = cost to search for preyH = handling timeE = energy gained by consuming prey

Page 18: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• What if 2 prey?• E/T = (Ne1E1-Cs ) + (Ne2E2-Cs )

• 1 + Ne1H1 + Ne2H2

• If optimal foraging: prey choice maximizes E/T– Ex: if 2 prey, prey #2 eaten if E/T for both prey

> E/T for prey #1 only

Optimal Foraging Theory

Page 19: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• Does it work?• Ex, bluegill sunfish

Optimal Foraging Theory

Page 20: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• Values calculated for prey in lab• Daphnia (water fleas), damselfly larvae, midge

larvae

Optimal Foraging Theory

midge

damselfly

water flea

Page 21: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• Prey abundance documented (top)

• Equation predicts optimal prey size (mid)

• Fish stomachs examined (bottom)

• Does it work?• Yup...

Optimal Foraging Theory

Page 22: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging By Plants?

Page 23: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging By Plants?• Allocation to leaves, stems & roots

• Principle of Allocation: Energy allocated to obtain resource in shortest supply

– Do plants allocate to resource in shortest supply?– Where we see this before?

Page 24: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging By Plants?• Allocation to leaves, stems & roots

• Principle of Allocation: Energy allocated to resource in shortest supply

– Do plants allocate to resource in shortest supply?

• Where we see this before?

Page 25: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Optimal Foraging By Plants• Ex, N in soil

Fig. 7.26

Page 26: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

THE END (material for knowledge demo #1)

Page 27: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Population Genetics &Natural Selection (Ch. 4)

Who??

Page 28: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Darwin• Proposed most important mechanism

evolution: natural selection

• Key points? (BIOL 1020)

Page 29: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• Organisms over-reproduce (competition).• Offspring vary.

– Some differences heritable (transmitted between generations).

• Higher chance survival/reproduction: pass favorable traits to offspring

Natural Selection (BIOL 1020)

Define adaptation

Page 30: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

• Organisms over-reproduce (competition).• Offspring vary.

– Some differences heritable (transmitted between generations).

• Higher chance survival/reproduction: pass favorable traits to offspring

• Adaptation: Genetically determined trait with survival and/or reproductive advantages (improves “fitness”)

• Key: Trait heritable

Natural Selection (BIOL 1020)

Page 31: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Gregor Mendel• Discovered genes (heritable units).

– Alternate forms: alleles.– Some (dominant alleles) prevent

expression others (recessive alleles)

Define….

Page 32: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Evolution by Natural Selection• Adaptation: Genetically determined trait with

survival/reproductive advantages (improves “fitness”)– Genotype: Alleles for trait

– Phenotype: Expression of trait. May be affected by environment.

• Phenotypic plasticity: ability phenotype to change based on environment

Page 33: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Evolution by Natural Selection• Adaptation: Genetically determined trait with survival

and/or reproductive advantages (improves “fitness”)• Depends on heritability (h2) trait (how “well”

transmitted)

h2 = VG / VP

• VG: Variability due to genetic effect

• VP: Total variability phenotype

Page 34: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Evolution by Natural Selection• Heritability: h2 = VG / VP

• VG: Variability due to genetic effect

• VP: Total variability phenotype

• Phenotype influenced by both genes and environment

• Or, VP = VG + VE

Page 35: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Evolution by Natural Selection

• Modified equation: h2 = VG / (VG + VE)

• h2 ranges 0-1 • If VG small, little heritability

• If VE large (lots phenotypic plasticity), little heritability

How measure?

Page 36: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Measuring heritability• Linear Regression: Fits line to points

– Equation line: Y = m X + b

– m = slope (regression coefficient)

– b = Y intercept

– Regression coefficient: measures h2

Page 37: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species• Many species’ populations differ

• How much variation due VG vs. VE?– Clausen, Keck, Hiesey (CA plants)

How test VG vs. VE?

Page 38: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species• Common garden experiment: Grow same

location.

Page 39: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species– Differences remain: genetic variation (VG)

– Differences disappear: phenotypic plasticity (VE)

Result?

Page 40: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species• Found differences. • Populations form ecotypes: locally adapted to

environment– Same species (can interbreed)

Page 41: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species• Do animal populations vary locally?• Chuckwalla (Sauromalus obesus)

– Herbivorous lizard (desert SW).

Page 42: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within SpeciesFound at different elevationsRainfall amount & variation changes

Lizards biggerwhere more rain

Due to better environment (VE)or genetic (VG)? How test?

Page 43: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species• Chuckwalla “Common garden” expt.• Genetic differences!

Page 44: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Variation Within Species• Genetic differences suggest adaptations• Experiments: can show natural selection in populations?

Experiments: who am I?

Page 45: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Adaptive Change in Lizards• Genus Anolis (anoles)

• Hundreds species New World

• Length hind leg reflects use vegetation

• Perch diameter

Anolis carolinensis

Page 46: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Adaptive Change in Lizards• Experiment: lizards from 1 island (Staniel Cay) put on

islands with different vegetation• Do they evolve (limb size changes)?

Staniel Cay

Page 47: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Adaptive Change in Lizards• Positive correlation (after 10-14 yr) between

vegetation and change morphology• Is this natural selection in action?

Page 48: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Adaptive Change in Lizards• Positive correlation (after 10-14 yr) between

vegetation and change morphology• Is this natural selection in action? Probably. But

genetic change not shown

Page 49: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Adaptation by Soapberry Bugs• Soapberry Bug (Jadera haematoloma) feeds on seeds• Beak pierces fruit walls

Page 50: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Soapberry Bugs• Feeds on native or introduced plants

(fruit size varies)• Feed on bigger fruits: longer beaks• How test if differences genetic?

Page 51: Energy/Nutrient Relations (Ch. 7). Lecture Outline 1) Major methods of gaining energy 2) Limitations on energy gain –Plants –Animals.

Soapberry Bugs

• Raise bugs on common foods--beak length differences persisted

• Bugs adapted to different hosts: natural selection


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