Title: Evolution
1Evolution
- Principles of Natural Selection
- Contributors
- Related Terms
2Evolution
- Scientific way to explain how species appear and
change over time - Based on testable ideas
- Evidence for evolution is so overwhelming that
most scientist accept it as fact
3Creationism
- A common part of all cultures is a mythology that
explains how humans came about on earth - Based on faith and religious doctrine
- Mythologies and creation stories differ from
evolution, which relies upon scientific language
4Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778)
- Classified plants and animals in a systema
naturae - Systema naturae placed humans in the same order
(Primates) as apes and monkeys - Hierarchical classification scheme (kingdom,
class, order, genus, and species) provided
framework for idea that human, apes, and monkeys
had a common ancestor
5Jean Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829)
- Proposed that acquired characteristics could be
inherited and therefore species could evolve - Individuals who in their lifetime developed
characteristics helpful to survival would pass
those characteristics on to future generations - Classic example Long neck of giraffe as the
result of successive generations of giraffes
stretching their necks to reach the high leaves
6Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
- Read the work of Lyell (suggested that the earth
is constantly being shaped and reshaped by
natural forces that have operated over a vast
stretch of time) before and during famous Beagle
voyage - Rejected the notion that each species was created
at one time in a fixed form - Wrote Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection
7Natural SelectionDefinition3 Principles
Necessary
- Natural Selection
- the main process that increases the frequency of
adaptive traits through time. - 3 Principles
- Variation every species is composed of a great
variety of individuals, some which are better
adapted to their environment than others - Heritability offspring inherit traits from their
parents, at least to some degree - Differential reproductive SUCCESS since better
adapted individuals generally produce more
offspring over the generations than the poorer
adapted, the frequency of adaptive traits
gradually increases in subsequent generations
8Gregor Mendel (1822-1884)
- Pioneered studies in science of genetics and
heredity by breeding several varieties of pea
plants - Significance
- Explains how variation arises and present basic
laws of heredity - Individual level Illustrates how parents pass
traits on to their offspring - Population level reveals evolutionary processes
and how it affects patterns of biodiversity on
earth
9Heredity Terms
- Dominant allele of a gene pair that is always
phenotypically expressed in the heterozygous form - Recessive allele phenotypically suppressed in
the heterozygous form and expressed only in the
homozygous form - Genotype genetic makeup
- Phenotype observable appearance
- Mutation a change in the DNA sequence, producing
an altered gene
10Georges Cuvier (1769-1832)
- Leading opponent of evolution
- Theory of catastrophism proposed that a quick
series of catastrophes accounted for changes in
the earth and fossil record - Invoked to help explain the disappearance of
certain species, while still being faithful to
religious doctrine
11Behavioral Ecology
- Study of how all kinds of behavior may be related
to the environment. - The theoretical orientation involves the
application of biological evolutionary principles
to the behavior (including social) of animals
(including humans)
12Journey of Man
- Spencer Wells geneticist
- Y-Chromosome
- Skin Pigmentation
- San Bushmen
- Hunting
- Language
- Skin color
- Chukchi adaptive example
13Primatology 3 Goals
- Primate Adaptation To understand how different
primates have adapted anatomically and
behaviorally to their environments. Results may
help us understand the behavior and evolution of
human primates. - Primate Evolution Differing adaptations of
living primates may also suggest why certain
divergences occurred in primate evolution - Primate Preservation
- Key Example Jane Goodall
- Study of Chimpanzee behavior and preservation
- Language
- Tool Making
14Classification of Primates
15Prosiminians
- Resemble other mammals more than anthropoids
- Depend more on smell for information
- More mobile ears, whiskers, longer snouts,
relatively fixed facial expression - Similar to other primates in that they have
grasping hands, stereoscopic vision, enlarged
visual centers in brain - Examples Lemurs, lorises, tarsiers
16Anthropoids
- Humans, apes, monkeys
- Rounded braincases
- Reduced, non-mobile outer ears
- Relatively small, flat faces instead of muzzles
- Dextrous hands
- Examples New world monkeys, old world monkeys,
lesser ages (gibbons, siamangs), great apes
(orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees), humans
17Anthropoids are divided into 3 groups
- New World Monkeys, Old World Monkeys, and
Hominoids
18New World Monkeys (Platyrrhines)
- Found in South and Central America
- Shape of the nose and position of the nostrils
(broad, flat-bridge noses, with nostrils facing
outward) - Have 3 premolars
- Prehensile (grasping) tails
- Completely arboreal vary in size of their
groups - Food ranges from insects to nectar and sap to
fruit and leaves
19Old World Monkeys (Catarrhines)
- Found in Africa, Asia, and Europe
- Shape of the nose and position of the
nostrils(Narrow noses with nostrils facing
downward) - Have same number of teeth as apes and humans
- Have 2 premolars
- Do not have prehensile tails
- Live in great variety of habitats
20Hominoids
- Brains of relatively large, especially the areas
of the cerebral cortex - Have fairly long arms, short, broad trunks and no
tails - Have greater range of movement because of their
wrist, elbow and shoulder joints - Dental features are related to diets
- Include gibbons and siamangs, orangutans,
chimpanzees and hominids
21Hominoids
- Hominoids (under the suborder anthropoids) that
includes both apes and humans. - Classified into 3 families
- lesser apes (gibbons and siamangs)
- greater apes (orangutans, gorillas, and
chimpanzees) - hominids (humans) group of hominoids consisting
of humans and their direct ancestors
22Primates
- Primatology
- Primate Characteristics
23List and describe the physical traits that set
primates apart from the other mammals.
- Complex of all the following traits is unique to
primates - Skeletal features reflect arboreal (tree living)
existence - Grasping feet
- Flexible forelimb
- Clavicle or collarbone freedom of movement-
throw spears, turn doorknob - Prehensile grasping hands
- Opposable thumbs precise grabbing, can touch all
other fingers - Stereoscopic vision eyes are directed forward
rather than sideways (allows for focus on object
with both eyes at once) - Relatively larger portion of brain devoted to
vision rather than smell - Relatively large brain to body size ratio
- Mature slower and longer life span
- Reproductive Organs
- Females have 2 nipples
- Uterus for single fetus
- Quality over quantity
- Infants well developed at birth
24List and describe the social traits that set
primates apart from other mammals.
- Diurnal-active during the day
- Learning from others
- Dependency and development in social context
- More time to observe and learn complex behaviors
- Play
- Peer behavior, racing through trees (help escape
predators)
25What traits distinguish humans from other
primates?
- Bipedalism humans are only primates to
consistently walk erect on two feet - Heads balance on spinal column
- Dish shaped pelvis, lumbar curve in spine,
straight lower limbs - Arched, nonprehensile feet
- Greater length and flexibility of opposable thumb
- Sophisticated brain cerebral cortex- center of
speech and higher mental activities - Sexually of females all year rather than purely
in heat - Advance tool making
- Language- complex and symbolic (written language)
- Longest dependency period
26What are the possible explanations, suggested by
research, for the various primate adaptations?
- Body size
- Determined by when and where active and what it
eats - Brain size
- Larger brain means more capacity for memory
however it also means it requires more oxygen and
glucose - Group size
- Nocturnal animals tend to have small group sizes,
this way they are be able to avoid attacks by
predators, as they are quieter. - However, larger groups have advantages in the
daytime as there are more eyes, ears and noses in
a group to detect predators.