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  • (Music)

  • (City traffic) So I'm here today to encourage you to think about New York City,

  • not just as one of humanity's greatest achievements,

  • but as home to native wildlife that are subject to a grand evolutionary experiment.

  • So take this forested hillside in northern Manhattan, for example.

  • This is one of the last areas left in the city where there is clean spring water that's still seeping out of the ground.

  • You could drink this out of your hands and you'd be OK.

  • These tiny little areas of seeping water contain huge populations of Northern Dusky Salamanders

  • These guys were common in the city

  • maybe sixty years ago,

  • but now they're just stuck on this single hillside and a few places in Staten Island.

  • Not only do they suffer the indignity of being

  • stuck on this hillside,

  • but we divided the hillside in two

  • on two different occasions

  • with bridges crossing from the Bronx into Manhattan.

  • But they're still there

  • on either side of the bridges where you see the red arrows

  • about 180th street, 167th street.

  • And my lab has found that if you just take a few segments of DNA

  • from salamanders in those two locations

  • you can tell which side of the bridge they came from.

  • We build this single piece of infrastructure

  • that's changed their evolutionary history.

  • We can go study these guys, you know, we just go to the hillside

  • we know where they are, we can flip over rocks, we can catch them.

  • There are a lot of other things in New York City though that are not that

  • easy to capture, such as this guy, a coyote.

  • We caught him on an automatic camera trap somewhere,

  • in an undisclosed location, not allowed to talk about it yet.

  • But they're moving into New York City for the first time.

  • They're very flexible, intelligent animals.

  • This is one of this year's cubs checking out one of our cameras.

  • And my colleagues and I are very interested in understanding

  • how they're going to spread through the area,

  • how they're going to survive here, and maybe even thrive.

  • And they're probably coming to a neighborhood near you if they are not already there.

  • So, there are some things that are too fast to be caught by hand.

  • We can't pick them up on the cameras,

  • so we actually set up traps all around the New York City and the parks.

  • This is one of our most common activities.

  • Here's some of my students and collaborators getting the traps out and ready.

  • And this guy, we catch in almost every forested area in New York City.

  • This is the White-footed Mouse.

  • This is not the mouse you find running around your apartment.

  • This is a native species, been here long before humans,

  • and you find them in forests and meadows.

  • Because they're so common in forested areas in the city,

  • we're using them as a model to understand how species are adapting to urban environments.

  • So if you think back 400 years ago,

  • the five boroughs would have been covered

  • in forests and other types of vegetation.

  • This mouse would have been everywhere.

  • Huge populations that showed few genetic differences across the landscape.

  • But if you look at the situation today,

  • they're just stuck in these little islands

  • of forest scattered around the city.

  • Just using 18 short segments of DNA, we can pretty much take a mouse

  • somebody could give us a mouse, not tell us where it was from,

  • and we could determine what park it came from. That's how different they've become.

  • You'll notice in the middle of this colored figured here

  • there's some mixed up colors.

  • There are a few parks in the city that are still connected to each other

  • with strips of forest so the mice can run back and forth

  • and spread their genes so they don't become different,

  • but throughout the city, they're mostly becoming different in the parks.

  • All right, so I'm telling you they're different,

  • but what does that really mean? What's changing about their biology?

  • To answer this question

  • we're sequencing thousands of genes from our city mice

  • and comparing those to thousands of genes from the country mice.

  • So their ancestors outside of New York City

  • in these big, more wilderness areas.

  • Now genes are short segments of DNA

  • that code for amino acids.

  • And amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.

  • Now if a single base pair changes in a gene, you can get a different amino acid,

  • which will then change the shape and structure of the protein.

  • If you change the structure of a protein,

  • you often change something about what it does in the organism.

  • Now if that change leads to a longer life or more babies for a mouse,

  • something evolutionary biologists call fitness,

  • then that single base pair change will spread quickly in an urban population.

  • So this crazy figure is actually called a Manhattan plot,

  • because it kind of looks like a skyline.

  • And each dot represents one gene,

  • and the higher the dot is in the plot,

  • the more different it is between city and country mice.

  • The ones kind of at the tips of the skyscrapers are the most different,

  • especially those above the red line.

  • And these genes encode for things like immune response to disease,

  • because there might be more disease

  • in very dense, urban populations.

  • Metabolism, how the mice use energy,

  • and heavy metal tolerance. You guys can probably predict that

  • New York City soils are pretty contaminated with

  • lead, and chromium and that sort of thing.

  • And now our hard work is really starting,

  • we're going back into the wilds of New York City parks,

  • following the lives of individual mice and seeing exactly what these genes are doing for them.

  • And I would encourage you guys to try to look at your parks in a new way,

  • I'm not going to be the next Charles Darwin,

  • but one of you guys might be, so just keep your eyes open. Thank you.

  • (Applause)

  • (Music)

(Music)

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