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What is Adaptation ?

What is Adaptation ? Inherited traits that increase the chances of 1. Survival 2. Reproduction of an organism in a particular environment Different Habitats Savanna Forest North Pole Desert in southwest Africa Wetland Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004

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What is Adaptation ?

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  1. What is Adaptation ? Inherited traits that increase the chances of 1. Survival 2. Reproduction of an organism in a particular environment

  2. Different Habitats Savanna Forest North Pole Desert in southwest Africa Wetland Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004

  3. How Does Evolution Work • Natural selection leads to adaptation • Natural selection involves genetic variation and selection among variants present in a population

  4. Misunderstanding on Adaptation • Myth: organism selects suitable environment for them to live in. • Fact: Environment selects suitable organisms to live in it.

  5. Use of Phylogeny toUnderstand Adaptation • Phylogeny is a method to classify organisms by natural evolutionary relationships • Organisms should be grouped together on the basis of shared specializations or shared-derived features

  6. Phylogenetic Tree of Bears # Base on their genetic similarity Brown bear (Ursus arctos) Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus) Black bear (Ursus americanus) Sun bear (Ursus malayanus) Sloth bear (Ursus ursinus) Spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus) Giant Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca)

  7. Ursidae Family Giant panda Polar bear Spectacled Bear Asiatic Black Bear Black Bear Sun bear Sloth bear Brown bear Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004

  8. What Problems Do Polar Bear Face ? • Cold • Unstable food source • Geographical change (melting ice) • Over heat

  9. Three Major Types of Adaptation • Morphological Adaptation • Physiological Adaptation • Behavioral Adaptation

  10. Morphological Adaptation • High-mobility long neck • Low surface area to volume ratio (m2 vs m3) • Slip resistant footpad • Teeth pattern with flat skull www.ngo.grida.no/.../ characteristics.html

  11. Adaptation for Carnivore Diet and lifestyle willexert selective pressuresupon skull morphology ! Polar bear Brown bear Giant panda Coronoid process 下顎齒骨冠突

  12. Physiological Adaptation • Thick pelt • Fat storage • Blubber system • Haemoglobin

  13. Thick Pelt • Inner short fur • Outer long transparent fur • Black skin

  14. Fur • Two types (long / short) • Translucent (半透明的) hairs can: (a) Reflect visible light back to the environment (b) Absorb UV light to warm up its body • Water repellant Sun light Reflection Hollow Structure of outer fur

  15. Fat Storage • Mainly as Triacylglycerols in adipose cells • Constitute 84% of stored energy • Convert energy source from white adipose to brown adipose White adipocyte Brown adipocyte

  16. Special Character of Brown Adipose

  17. Blubber System • The insulation afforded by blubber can be bypassed when the need for heat dissipation increases. • Fur outside the skin surface and its insulation value cannot be drastically changed by a bypass Animal Physiology 5/e (Cambridge university press) p263

  18. Oxygen Binding Affinity under Different Temperature • High temperature: Low affinity • Low temperature: High affinity

  19. Haemoglobin • Contain special Cl-binding site • Lower ∆H of oxygenation • Lower the oxygen binding affinity • Easier to release oxygen to tissues

  20. Behavioral Adaptation • Posture • Swimming • Annual migration • Hibernation (Denning)

  21. a b c Posturing Use different postures to regulate heat lost

  22. Swimming • Polar bear as marine mammal • Ursus means bear maritimusmeans sea • Swim long time and distance (60miles) • To avoid over heating Source: Polar bear pres

  23. Types of Polar Bear Habitats What causes ice-drift ? Two types of habitats for polar bears (1) Drift ice habitat (ice moved by wind or current) Drift = pelagic (2) Land-fast ice habitat (ice surrounding islands) http://seis.natsci.csulb.edu/rmorris/seaice/drift.htm

  24. Annual Migration • Pelagic polar bears move northwards (summer) when ice melting at the ice edge to counteract a continuous southwards ice drift. • While it moves southwards (autumn) during sea ice advance

  25. Hibernation True hibernation (does not occur in polar bears) • Body-core temperature close to freezing Walking hibernation (denning for pregnant female) • When no food is available • In order to save energy Using fat as the major energy source in order to preserve essential protein and carbohydrate

  26. Aerobic Respiration Energy

  27. energy Molecular Bases of Hibernation • Triggered by pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK-4) • A major effect on pyruvate metabolism • Allows modification of the pathways involving fatty acid production through acetyl co-A, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle to be markedly changed.

  28. Quick Summary • Environment selects the suitable guests to live in its room. • Only organisms with suitable characters can survive in a particular habitat. • Environment does change thus population changes as well.

  29. Why Is This Bear Green? Symbiosis: Algal growth inside the hollow hairs of polar bears in warm climates causes the pelt to have a green appearance

  30. How Do Polar Bears Relate to Us ?

  31. Enjoy the Nature

  32. Acknowledgements • Prof. K.L. CHOW • Prof. WONG • Prof. SO • Dr. T.K. GOH • Dr. Maggie LI • Dr. Ice KO • Dr. Y.Y. REN • Mr. Wilfred LEUNG • Mr. Jack LI • Center for Enhanced Learning and Teaching This project is supported by the funding from Center for Enhanced Learning and Teaching

  33. HKUST • http://www.ust.hk • Way: bo_lkwag@stu.ust.hk • John: bo_ssl@stu.ust.hk

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