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How Insects Got Where They Are!!

Pests, Plagues & Politics Lecture 4. How Insects Got Where They Are!!. Or Insect Evolution. Key Points Insect Evolution. Evolution by Natural Selection Survival of the Fittest The 5 Principles How is Paleoentomology important? Evolutionary Timeframes Important events in insect evolution.

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How Insects Got Where They Are!!

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  1. Pests, Plagues & Politics Lecture 4 How Insects Got Where They Are!! Or Insect Evolution

  2. Key PointsInsect Evolution • Evolution by Natural Selection • Survival of the Fittest • The 5 Principles • How is Paleoentomology important? • Evolutionary Timeframes • Important events in insect evolution

  3. ????

  4. The true “ladder” of life DNA

  5. Alfred Russell Wallace Charles Darwin • Brit. • 1823 – 1913 • Interests in • Botany • Entomology • So. America • SE Asia • 1854 to 1862 • Brit. • 1809 – 1882 • Interests in • Botany • Entomology • So. America • 1831 to 1836

  6. Charles Darwin • 1859 • The Origin of Species “I have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term Natural Selection.”

  7. Evolution via Natural Selection • A theory independently derived by Wallace & Darwin. • Simplistically summarized as: • “Survival of the Fittest” by the English philosopher Herbert Spencer • Survival = placement of your genes into the next • generation • Fittest = your ability to get your genes into the • next generation

  8. Selective Pressure Forces (usually environmental change) that select for (in favor of) those organisms that are best suited to survive the change. Selective pressure also selects against those organisms that are not able to “cope” with change.

  9. Evolution by Natural Selectionworks on the principle of differential reproduction • Natality - more individuals are born into a generation than will survive and reproduce. • Variability - there is variation between individuals in any given population. • Survivorship - individuals with certain characters have a better chance of surviving and passing along their genes

  10. Natural Selection, cont. • Heritability • at least some of the characteristics responsible for differential reproduction are genetically mediated. • Time • enormous spans of time are involved in evolutionary change.

  11. Insect Evolution • Bugs do not make particularly good fossils • Phylum Cordata (vertebrates) • 33% of total known species have fossil representatives • Phylum Arthropoda (Class Insecta) • 1% of total species have a fossil record

  12. Paleoentomology • The study of prehistoric insects • Best preserved insect fossils are from ambers • How many orders of insects? • Extant = 27 • Extinct adds another 55! Flash: oldest salvaged DNA is from an amber termite ca. 100 mya.

  13. FYI CT Scan of an amber Insect inclusion A 100 mya wasp.

  14. FYI A North American Honey Bee Compression Fossil 14 mya Nevada

  15. FYI Newest {Oldest} bee fossil 35 – 46 mya Melittosphexburmensis

  16. FYI Coleoptera – Aquatic beetle Cretaceous Hymenoptera Eocene

  17. PhylogenyA family tree • A phylogeny is based largely on morphological & structural similarities between groups. • And while the fossil record is far from complete, it can be used to trace the outlines of insect evolution

  18. Evolutionary Time Frames • Micro-evolution - changes in populations that happen in a time scale of decades. • Speciation - changes over a longer time frame that result in the appearance of new species - hundreds of thousands of years • Macro-evolution - major changes in phylogenetic patterns over long time scales and broad geographical areas.

  19. Events of Note • Earth – 4.5 billion years old • Precambrian – 3.1 bya • Prokaryotes • Cambrian – 600 mya • First abundant fossils (metazoans) • Silurian – 425 mya • Invasion of land by arthropods

  20. Events of Note • Devonian – 400 mya • First true insects • Carboniferous – 345 mya • First great radiation of insects • Cretaceous – 135 mya • Second great radiation of insects • Tertiary - 63 mya • Dominance of the land by mammals, birds & insects • Quaternary – 2 mya • First Homo

  21. Insect Evolution • Insects (as a group = taxon) • Evolved from the Annelids (the worms) • Ca. 400 mya • Most primitive (oldest) Insect orders • TheAPTERYGOTES, wingless • Devonian, ca. 400 mya • Thysanura • The bristle tails & silverfish • Collembola • The Springtails

  22. From Annelid (worm) to “Bug” Thysanura Collembola

  23. The development of wings The Pterygotes: 350 mya Primitively winged insects known as PALEOPTEROUS Simple wing articulation Seen today in the orders: Odonata = the dragonflies Ephemeroptera = the mayflies

  24. Dragonfly - Odonata Mayfly - Ephemeroptera

  25. The development of the wing flexion mechanism Neoptera (new or “modern” wing) 300 mya Today this covers 97% of all extant species Snakefly Rhaphidioptera

  26. Development of Complete Metamorphosis (holometabolous) Ca. 290 mya (note: soon after the wing flexion mechanism) Benefits: utilize favorable aspects of different habitats for different life stages.

  27. Insect Evolution • Most advanced insect orders • Lepidoptera with 120,000 species • Coleoptera with 250,000 species • Hymenoptera with 89,000 species • Diptera with 78,000 species

  28. The BIG Four [in review] • Origin of insects400 mya • Wings [paleopterous]350 mya • Wing flexion [neopterous]300 mya • Complete metamorphosis290 mya

  29. “Humans are not the end result of predictable evolutionary progress, but rather a fortuitous cosmic afterthought, a tinytwig on the enormouslyarborescent bushof life.”--S.J. Gould, 1995

  30. Key PointsInsect Evolution • Evolution by Natural Selection • Survival of the Fittest • The 5 Principles • How is Paleoentomology important? • Evolutionary Timeframes • Important events in insect evolution

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