User:Kelliecarblue/Peter and Rosemary Grant

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Peter Grant on site researching birds in 2007.

Peter Raymond Grant was born in 936 in London, but relocated to the English countryside to avoid bombings during World War II. He attended school at the Surrey-Hampshire border where he collected insects and studied flowers. He attended the University of Cambridge, then moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and began work on a doctoral degree in Zoology at the University of British Columbia. A few days after beginning his research he met Rosemary; they were married a year later.

As young child Peter was fascinated with the world around them and the animals that inhabited their environments.His curiosity helped shape them as scientists.[1]

He is an evolutionary biologist at Princeton University. Where they each hold the position of emeritus professor. As a research pair they are known for their work with Darwin's finches on Daphne Major, one of the Galápagos Islands. Since 1973, the Grants have spent six months of every year capturing, tagging, and taking blood samples from finches on the island. They have worked to show that natural selection can be seen within a single lifetime, or even within a couple of years. Charles Darwin originally thought that natural selection was a long, drawn out process. The Grants have shown that these changes in populations can happen very quickly.

Academic Career[edit]

  • BA (Hons) – Cambridge University- 1960
  • PhD – University of British Columbia- 1964
  • Post-doctoral fellowship – Yale University- 1964–1965
  • Assistant Professor – McGill University- 1965–1968
  • Associate Professor – McGill University- 1968–1973
  • Full Professor – McGill University- 1973–1977
  • Professor – University of Michigan- 1977–1985
  • Visiting Professor – Uppsala and Lund University – 1981, 1985
  • Professor – Princeton University- 1985
  • Class of 1877 Professor of Zoology- Princeton University- 1989
  • Professor of Zoology Emeritus – Princeton University- 2008

Peter’s Research[edit]

For his doctoral degree, Peter Grant studied the relationship between ecology and evolution and how they were interrelated. The Grants travelled to the Tres Marias Islands off Mexico to conduct field studies of the birds that inhabited the island.[1]

They compared the differences of bill length to body size between populations living on the Islands and the nearby mainland. Of the birds studied, eleven species were not significantly different between the mainland and the islands; four species were significantly less variable on the islands, and one species was significantly more variable[2]. On average, the birds on the islands had larger beaks. The Grants attributed these differences to what foods were available, and what was available was dependent on competitors. The bigger beaks indicated a greater range of foods present in the environment.[1]

In 1965, Peter Grant accepted tenure at McGill University in Montreal. He created a method to test the Competition Hypothesis to see if it worked today as it did in the past.[1] This research was done on grassland voles and woodland mice. The study looked at the competitiveness between populations of rodents and among rodent species[3]. In his article "Interspecific Competition Among Rodents", he concluded that competitive interaction for space is common among many rodent species, not just the species that have been studied in detail.[3] Grant also states that there are many causes for increased competition: reproduction, resources, amount of space, and invasion of other species.[3]

Awards and Recognition[edit]

Societies and Academies:

  • Royal Society of London
  • Royal Society of Canada
  • American Philosophical Society
  • American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • American Society of Naturalists (President – 1999)
  • American Academy of Sciences
  • Society for the Study of Evolution
  • Ecological Society of America
  • American Ornithologist's Union
  • Linnean Society of London
  • Society for Behavioral Ecology
  • Charles Darwin Foundation

Honorary Degrees

  • Honorary Doctorate Uppsala University, Sweden- 1986
  • Universidad San Francisco, Quito- 2005
  • University of Zurich- 2008
  • University of Toronto- 2017

Associate Editor of Scientific Journals

  • Ecology – 1968–1970
  • Evolutionary Theory – 1973–
  • Biological Journal of the Linnean Society – 1984–
  • Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London – 1990–1993

Honorary citizen of Puerto Bacquerizo, I. San Cristobal, Galapagos- 2005

Peter and Rosemary Grant

Joint Research With Barbara Rosemary Grant[edit]

Research Summary[edit]

Daphne Major, in the Galápagos Islands, was a perfect place to perform experiments and study changes within birds. It was isolated and uninhabited; any changes that were to occur to the land and environment would be due to natural forces with no human destruction[4]. The island provided the best environment to study natural selection; seasons of heavy rain switched to seasons of extended drought. With these environmental changes brought changes in the types of foods available to the birds. The Grants would study this for the next few decades of their lives.

In 1973, the Grants headed out on what they thought would be a two-year study on the island of Daphne Major. There they would study evolution and ultimately determine what drives the formation of new species. [4]There are thirteen species of finch that live on the island; five of these are tree finch, one warbler finch, one vegetarian finch, and six species of ground finch. These birds provide a great way to study adaptive radiation. Their beaks are specific to the type of diet they eat, which in turn is reflective of the food available. The finches are easy to catch and provide a good animal to study. The Grants tagged, labelled, measured, and took blood samples of the birds they were studying. The two-year study continued through 2012.[4]

During the rainy season of 1977 only 24 millimeters of rain fell. Two of the main finch species were hit exceptionally hard and many of them died.[5] The lack of rain caused major food sources to become scarce, causing the need to find alternative food sources. The smaller, softer seeds ran out, leaving only the larger, tougher seeds. The finch species with smaller beaks struggled to find alternate seeds to eat. [5]The following two years suggested that natural selection could happen very rapidly. Because the smaller finch species could not eat the large seeds, they died off. Finches with larger beaks were able to eat the seeds and reproduce. The population in the years following the drought in 1977 had "measurably larger" beaks than had the previous birds.

In 1981, the Grants came across a bird they had never seen before. It was heavier than the other ground finches by more than five grams.[6] They called this bird Big Bird. It had many different characteristics than those of the native finches: a strange call, extra glossy feathers, it could eat both large and small seeds, and could also eat the nectar, pollen, and seeds of the cacti that grow on the island.[4] Big Bird is thought to be a hybrid of the medium-beaked ground finch and the cactus finch[6]. Although hybrids do happen, many of the birds living on the island tend to stick within their own species.[7] Big Bird lived for thirteen years, and his descendants have only mated within themselves for the past thirty years, a total of seven generations.[7]

Over the course of 1982–1983, El Niño brought a steady eight months of rain. In a normal rainy season Daphne Major usually gets two months of rain.[8] The excessive rain brought a turnover in the types of vegetation growing on the island. The seeds shifted from large, hard to crack seeds to many different types of small, softer seeds. This gave birds with smaller beaks an advantage when another drought hit the following year. [8]Small-beaked finch could eat all of the small seeds faster than the larger beaked birds could get to them.

In 2003, a drought similar in severity to the 1977 drought occurred on the island. However, in the time between the droughts (beginning in late 1982), the large ground finch (Geospiza magnirostris) had established a breeding population on the island. This species has diet overlap with the medium ground finch (G. fortis), so they are potential competitors. The 2003 drought and resulting decrease in food supply may have increased these species' competition with each other, particularly for the larger seeds in the medium ground finches' diet. Following the drought, the medium ground finch population had a decline in average beak size, in contrast to the increase in size found following the 1977 drought. This was hypothesized to be due to the presence of the large ground finch; the smaller-beaked individuals of the medium ground finch may have been able to survive better due to a lack of competition over large seeds with the large ground finch. This is an example of character displacement.

Significant Findings[edit]

In Evolution: Making Sense of Life, the takeaway from the Grants' 40-year study can be broken down into three major lessons. The first is that natural selection is a variable, constantly changing process. The fact that they studied the island in both times of excessive rain and drought provides a better picture of what happens to populations over time. The next lesson learned is that evolution can actually be a fairly rapid process. It does not take millions of years; these processes can be seen in as little as two years. Lastly, and as the author states, most importantly, selection can change over time. During some years, selection will favor those birds with larger beaks. Other years with substantial amounts of smaller seeds, selection will favor the birds with the smaller beaks.

In their 2003 paper, the Grants wrap up their decades-long study by stating that selection oscillates in a direction. For this reason, neither the medium ground finch nor the cactus finch has stayed morphologically the same over the course of the experiment. The average beak and body size are not the same today for either species as they were when the study first began.[9] The Grants also state that these changes in morphology and phenotypes could not have been predicted at the beginning.[10] They were able to witness the evolution of the finch species as a result of the inconsistent and harsh environment of Daphne Major directly.

Achievements Received Jointly[edit]

Books Published[edit]

  • Evolutionary Dynamics of a Natural Population: Large Cactus Finch of the Galapagos – Rosemary & Peter Grant – (University of Chicago Press, 1989) ISBN 978-0-226-30590-5 (Received the Wildlife Publication Award, Wildlife Society, 1991)
  • How and Why Species Multiply: The Radiation of Darwin’s Finches – Peter & Rosemary Grant – (Princeton University Press,2008/2011) ISBN 978-0-691-14999-8
  • 40 Years of Evolution: Darwin's Finches on Daphne Major Island – Peter & Rosemary Grant – (Princeton University Press,2014) ISBN 978-0-691-16046-7

The Grants were the subject of the book The Beak of the Finch: A Story of Evolution in Our Time by Jonathan Weiner (Alfred A. Knopf, 1994), ISBN 0-679-40003-6, which won the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction in 1995.[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Ahmed, Farooq (2010-03-30). "Profile of Peter R. Grant". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 107 (13): 5703–5705. doi:10.1073/pnas.1001348107. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2851900. PMID 20339083.
  2. ^ Grant, P. R. (2011-02-14). "BILL LENGTH VARIABILITY IN BIRDS OF THE TRES MARÍAS ISLANDS, MEXICO". Canadian Journal of Zoology. doi:10.1139/z67-092.
  3. ^ a b c Grant, P. R. (1972-11-01). "Interspecific Competition Among Rodents". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 3 (1): 79–106. doi:10.1146/annurev.es.03.110172.000455. ISSN 0066-4162.
  4. ^ a b c d Singer, Emily (2016-09-22). "Watching Evolution Happen In Two Lifetimes". Quanta Magazine. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  5. ^ a b "The People Who Saw Evolution". Princeton Alumni Weekly. 2016-01-21. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  6. ^ a b Cressey, Daniel (2009-11-16). "Darwin's finches tracked to reveal evolution in action". Nature: news.2009.1089. doi:10.1038/news.2009.1089. ISSN 0028-0836.
  7. ^ a b Weiner, Jonathan (2014-08-04). "In Darwin's Footsteps". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  8. ^ a b Bell, Graham (2015-04-19). "Every inch a finch: a commentary on Grant (1993) 'Hybridization of Darwin's finches on Isla Daphne Major, Galapagos'". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 370 (1666). doi:10.1098/rstb.2014.0287. ISSN 0962-8436. PMC 4360115. PMID 25750230.
  9. ^ Grant, Rosemary B.; Grant, Peter R. (2003-10-01). "What Darwin's Finches Can Teach Us about the Evolutionary Origin and Regulation of Biodiversity". BioScience. 53 (10): 965–975. doi:10.1641/0006-3568(2003)053[0965:WDFCTU]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0006-3568.
  10. ^ "Peter and Rosemary Grant - Balzan Prizewinner Bio-bibliography". www.balzan.org (in Italian). Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  11. ^ "Barbara Rosemary Grant | Kyoto Prize". 京都賞. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  12. ^ "- Fondazione Internazionale Balzan". web.archive.org. 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  13. ^ "The Four Awards Bestowed by The Academy of Natural Sciences and Their Recipients". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 156 (1): 403–404. 2007/06. doi:10.1635/0097-3157(2007)156[403:TFABBT]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0097-3157. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  14. ^ "The Pulitzer Prizes". web.archive.org. 2017-06-15. Retrieved 2021-05-21.