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Fitness

Life history traits like age of reproduction and fecundity affect fitness and influence what ecological niches a species can occupy. There is a cost to reproduction that trades off with survival and growth, leading to genetic variation in how organisms allocate resources. Natural selection weakens with age as extrinsic mortality increases, so selection is less efficient for traits not affecting survival. As a result, species evolve diverse life histories, reproductive strategies, and specializations depending on their environment and mortality risks.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views3 pages

Fitness

Life history traits like age of reproduction and fecundity affect fitness and influence what ecological niches a species can occupy. There is a cost to reproduction that trades off with survival and growth, leading to genetic variation in how organisms allocate resources. Natural selection weakens with age as extrinsic mortality increases, so selection is less efficient for traits not affecting survival. As a result, species evolve diverse life histories, reproductive strategies, and specializations depending on their environment and mortality risks.

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LESSON 7

Fitness

LIFE HISTORY TRAITS AS COMPONENTS OF FITNESS


• Life History Traits
→ affect rate of fitness (survival and reproduction)
→ affect ecological niches (range of condition of habitat and resources used)
→ includes:
 ages (beginning & end of reproduction)
 fecundity – quantity of gametes (usually eggs) produced by an individual
 average survival
• Potential (maximum) lifespan
→ greatest age reached
• Average life span (life expectancy)
→ average age reached

COST OF REPRODUCTION
• Reproductive effort
→ fraction of energy and nutrients allocated to reproduction
o Brown anoles (Anolis sagrei)
• Cost of reproduction
→ trade-off between reproduction and all other functions
 genotypes allocate more to reproduction, less to themselves – DECREASED
survival/growth (trade-off)
− negative genetic correlation
− prevent indefinitely long-life spans & infinite fecundity
 genetic variation in the number of resources acquired by individuals
− positive genetic correlation (between reproduction & survival)
o seed beetle (Callosobrochus maculatus)

FITNESS
• Fitness – number of offspring produced by an individual
• Life table – probability that a newborn will live at a given age
• changes in survival (lx) or fecundity (mx) affect fitness depending on the age (x)
→ selection for reproduction and survival at advanced ages = weak
• lifetime reproductive success (R) – summation of lmx per age

FITNESS IN AGE-STRUCTURED POPULATIONS


• Semelparous – individual reproduce only once
→ allocate store resources for reproduction
→ big-bang reproduction
o spiders and salmons
• Iteroparous – individual reproduce more than once
o humans
• natural selection does not act to prolong survival beyond last age of reproduction for semelparous
→ reproduction cease because energy is needed more for survival in advanced ages
LESSON 7
Fitness

SENESCENCE
• Senescence – condition or process of deterioration with age (physiological aging)
→ result of negative pleiotropic effects on later age classes of genes, but advantageous
effects on earlier ages
− more deleterious alleles are expressed at later ages

NATURAL SELECTION WEAKENS WITH AGE


• General Model – ultimate evolutionary cause of aging is extrinsic mortality (Hamilton, 19966)
→ INCREASING age, INCREASES extrinsic mortality = death from random causes
 genetic drift
 accidents
 non-age specific diseases
 predation
 factors not having to do with selection
→ natural selection is LESS efficient when deaths are random, not due to particular genetically
determined traits

DIVERSE LIFE HISTORIES


• reproduction at a later age may maximize fitness (even selection for long life) if:
→ juveniles have HIGH mortality
→ adults have HIGH survival
→ large body greatly INCREASES fecundity
1. cabbage palm (Corypha utan) – produce up to million flowers
2. bamboos – engage in highly-synchronous reproduction, then die
3. Australia’s little marsupial mice (Anthechinus) – live fast and die young due to
frenzy of winter mating (big-bang reproduction)
4. Coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisucth) – “big bang” life history (die after spawning)
• delayed onset of reproduction is most likely to evolve in species with HIGH rates of adult survival

NUMBER OF OFFSPRING
• the optimal number of offspring is affected by the following:
 trade-off between number and size (mass) of each offspring
 optimal reproduction effort at that age
 parent’s allocation to reproduction VS continued survival
• British ecologist David Lack – proposed that the optimal clutch size for a bird = number of eggs
with the greatest number of surviving offspring

LIFE HISTORIES AND MATING STRATEGIES


• sequential hermaphroditism – organism changing sex over the course of the lifespan
 Protandry – an organism male to female
 rare
o Clerodendrum
o female slipper shell (Crepidula fornicate) − carries a stack of males
 Protogyny – an organism female to male
 common
o Scrophularia
o bluehead wrasse (Thalassoma bufasciatum)
 females – yellow
 males – blue, white, & green

SPECIALIST AND GENERALIST


• life history of a species includes its ecological niche (range of combinations of all relevant
environmental variables that a species can persist)
LESSON 7
Fitness

 Generalist – species tolerate a wide range of conditions


 Specialist – species can only tolerate a narrow range of conditions
o larva of the juniper geometer (Patalene alyzonaria)
o larva fall cankerworm (Alsophila pometaria)
o blue crab (Callinectes sapidus)
o lady crab (Ovalipes ocellatus)

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