Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

232 ■ CHAPTER 13 Adaptation and Species


EVOLUTION


I


n 1971, the United States was at war in Viet-
nam, a gallon of gas cost 40 cents, a computer
engineer sent the first e-mail—and an Israeli
biologist named Eviatar Nevo captured 10 lizards
on Pod Kopište, a small, rocky island off the coast
of Croatia. Each lizard was about the length of a
pinky finger and as heavy as a nickel. There was
nothing remarkable about them.
Nevo and his team released the captured
lizards, a common Mediterranean species called
Podarcis sicula, on a nearby island just 3 miles
away, within sight of the original island but
separated by a deep ocean gulf (Figure 13.1).
Pod Mrcˇaru is a smaller, plant-covered island
that was already inhabited by two other lizard
species. Nevo was curious to find out what would
happen when the three species began to compete
for resources on Pod Mrcˇaru. But Nevo never
got the chance to return to the island. Shortly

after he and his team departed, unrest broke
out across Croatia, and war held the region in a
stranglehold throughout the 1980s and ’90s.
Scientists did not return to Pod Mrcˇaru until


  1. While visiting the University of Antwerp
    in Belgium, biologist Duncan Irschick from
    the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and
    his Belgian colleagues decided to investigate
    the mysterious island. One of the researchers,
    familiar with an obscure paper that Nevo had
    published in 1972, thought it would be interest-
    ing to see what, if anything, had happened to
    the lizards. Further, Irschick would be able to
    complete some research on lizard behavior that
    he had planned to do in Europe anyway. “We
    didn’t know what we’d find,” recalls Irschick.
    “We decided, ‘Let’s just go check.’” This time, the
    lizards on the island were quite remarkable.


Leaping Lizards


Back in the 1970s, Nevo’s ten Podarcis sicula
lizards had been well adapted to the rocky,
sparsely vegetated environment of Pod Kopište.
They had specific adaptive traits, inherited
characteristics that enabled them to survive and
reproduce successfully on the island. Adaptive
traits can be structural features, biochemical
traits, or behaviors. In this case, the lizards were
fast, with long legs that may have helped them
catch the insects that made up most of their diet
on the island. They were also territorial, fighting
with other lizards over space and mating part-
ners. These adaptive traits, among others, enabled
the lizards to survive and reproduce better than
competitors lacking those traits on Pod Kopište.
When transplanted to Pod Mrcˇaru, however,
the lizards faced a new environment. Pod
Kopište is large and rocky with few plants, and
the lizards ate primarily insects; Pod Mrcˇaru is
smaller yet has an abundant supply of plants,
including leaves and stems of local shrubs and
grasses (Figure 13.2). Either the lizards would
adapt to their new surroundings, or they would
die. The term adaptation is commonly applied
to adaptive traits or the process of evolution
through natural selection that brings about
adaptive traits, as discussed in Chapter 12.
Therefore, an adaptation can be a trait that is
advantageous to an individual or a population
or, in broader terms, it can be the evolutionary

Figure 13.1


View of Pod Kopište from Pod Mrcˇaru


The island Pod Kopište (top), the original home of the Podarcis sicula lizards


(bottom), is only 3 miles from their new home on the island Pod Mrcˇaru.

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