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Science 1101:Interdisciplinary Science: Basic Principles

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Title: Science 1101:Interdisciplinary Science: Basic Principles


1
Science 1101Interdisciplinary Science Basic
Principles
  • Lecture 11

2
Evolution and Natural Selection
  • Approximately 1.5 million living species
    described
  • Likely at least 10 million species today
  • May represent only 1 of species ever to have
    lived on earth
  • 1 billion species presumed to have lived

3
Reason for this diversity?
  • Natural selection
  • Physical environment acts on various
    characteristics of organisms (variation among
    individuals of some species)
  • Sorts out harmful ones, leaving individuals
    with beneficial or neutral characteristics to
    produce next generation
  • Keeps organisms well-suited for survival in their
    environment

4
Natural selection drives evolution
  • Development of various forms or species to best
    match the environment
  • Can best take advantage of variations within that
    environment

5
History of concept of evolution by natural
selection
  • Lamarck - inheritance of acquired
    characteristics
  • Darwin, Wallace - natural selection, but
    mechanism really unknown
  • Mendel - genetic understanding of the acquisition
    of inherited traits

6
Old Theories of Evolution
  • Jean Baptiste Lamarck (early 1800s) proposed
  • The inheritance of acquired characteristics
  • He proposed that by using or not using its body
    parts, an individual tends to develop certain
    characteristics, which it passes on to its
    offspring.

7
The Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • Example
  • A giraffe acquired its long neck because its
    ancestor stretched higher and higher into the
    trees to reach leaves, and that the animals
    increasingly lengthened neck was passed on to its
    offspring.
  • This idea was proven wrong, however, when it was
    discovered that traits were passed on to
    offspring due to genetics.

8
Charles Darwin
  • Influenced by Charles Lyell who published
    Principles of Geology.
  • This publication led Darwin to realize that
    natural forces gradually change Earths surface
    and that the forces of the past are still
    operating in modern times.

9
Charles Darwin
  • Darwin set sail on the H.M.S. Beagle (1831-1836)
    to survey the south seas (mainly South America
    and the Galapagos Islands) to collect plants and
    animals.
  • On the Galapagos Islands, Darwin observed species
    that lived no where else in the world.
  • These observations led Darwin to write a book.

10
Charles Darwin
  • Wrote in 1859 On the Origin of Species by Means
    of Natural Selection
  • Two main points
  • 1. Species were not created in their present
    form, but evolved from ancestral species.
  • 2. Proposed a mechanism for evolution
    NATURAL SELECTION

11
Natural Selection
  • Individuals with favorable traits are more likely
    to leave more offspring better suited for their
    environment.
  • Also known as Differential Reproduction

12
The peppered Moth
  • Example The peppered Moth
  • Pre 19th century- most of the peppered moths were
    light colored. A dark variety was also present.
  • The lighter variety was more present because it
    could hide from predators by blending in with the
    light color on the trees.
  • Mid 19th century the industrial revolution
    created lots of soot that covered the barks of
    the trees the darker variety could blend in with
    the new color and became the dominant variety.

13
Artificial Selection
  • The selective breeding of plants and animals by
    man.
  • Primitive Ears of Corn Modern
    Domesticated Corn

14
Darwin Descent with modificationvia natural
selection
  • Genetic variation is the raw material of
    natural selection
  • A trait or characteristic that is favored by the
    environment is more likely to be passed on to the
    next generation (inherited) whether it is long
    ears for a rabbit, a long neck for a giraffe, or
    flashy coloration for a guppy

15
The normal distribution of ear lengths in a
population of rabbits (an example)
16
The normal distribution of ear lengths in a
population of rabbits (an example)
No selection acting on ear length
Increased Predation
Number of Rabbits
Short Average Long Ear Length
17
The normal distribution of ear lengths in a
population of rabbits (an example)
Number of Rabbits
Short Average Long

Ear Length
18
Evidence of Evolution
  • Biogeography
  • Geographical distribution of species.
  • 2. Fossil Record
  • Fossils and the order in which they appear in
    layers of sedimentary rock (strongest evidence).

19
Evidence of Evolution
  • 3. Taxonomy
  • Classification of life forms.
  • 4. Homologous structures
  • Structures that are similar because of common
    ancestry (comparative anatomy)

20
Evidence of Evolution
  • 5. Comparative embryology
  • Study of structures that appear during embryonic
    development.
  • 6. Molecular biology
  • DNA and proteins (amino acids)

21
Evolution by natural selection - established some
intriguing ideas
  • 1) Individuals that form a population of a
    species are not identical
  • 2) Some of the variation between individuals can
    be inherited

22
Evolution by natural selection - established some
intriguing ideas
  • 3) All populations are capable of exponential
    growth, but most individuals die before
    reproducing, and most others reproduce at less
    than their maximum rate
  • 4) Different ancestors leave different numbers of
    descendents they do not all contribute equally
    to subsequent generations

23
  • Natural selection acts on the individual while
    evolution is a change of gene frequencies in a
    population.

24
Evolution change through time
25
Microevolution
  • A change in a populations gene pool over several
    generations.
  • Evolutionary changes in species over relatively
    brief periods of geological time.

26
Five Mechanisms of Microevolution
  • 1. Genetic drift
  • Change in the gene pool of a small population
    due to chance.
  • This happens in populations
  • Two examples
  • a. Bottleneck effect
  • b. Founder effect

27
Genetic drift
  • A. Bottleneck Effect
  • Genetic drift (reduction of alleles in a
    population) resulting from a disaster that
    drastically reduces population size.
  • B. Founder Effect
  • Genetic drift resulting from the colonization of
    a new location by a small number of individuals.
  • Results in random change of the gene pool.

28
Five Mechanisms of Microevolution
  • 2. Gene Flow
  • The gain or loss of genes from a population by
    the movement of individuals or gametes.
  • e.g. Immigration or emigration.

29
Five Mechanisms of Microevolution
  • 3. Mutation
  • Change in an organisms DNA that creates a new
    gene.
  • 4. Non-random mating
  • The selection of mates other than by chance.
  • 5. Natural selection
  • Differential reproduction.

30
Speciation
  • Speciation
  • The evolution of new species
  • There are two patterns of speciation we will
    discuss.
  • Anagenesis
  • Cladogenesis

31
Anagenesis
  • One species changes into another species over
    time
  • Original species evolves out of existence and
    is replaced by new species
  • Evolutionary extinction

32
Cladogenesis
  • One species gives rise to one or more additional
    species while still remaining
  • Clade-set of species descended from a particular
    ancestral species

33
Mutation, Evolution, and Speciation
  • Mutations usually produced by mutagens (e.g.,
    Chemicals, viruses)
  • 1 mutation per gene in every 100,000 sex cells
  • Higher organisms have 10,000 genes
  • 1 in 10 individuals has newly created mutation

34
Mutation, Evolution, and Speciation
  • 1 in 1000 mutations may be beneficial
  • 1 in 10,000 individuals per generation has a
    useful mutation
  • Most individuals have at least one mutant gene
    (original, or passed down from ancestors)

35
Mutation, Evolution, and Speciation
  • Estimate - 500 mutations are necessary to produce
    new species from existing one
  • Rate of new mutations 1 million times greater
    than needed to account for known rate of evolution

36
So.
  • Mutations produce the variation, and natural
    selection acts upon the changes
  • Add in nonrandom mating, changing environment
  • End product EVOLUTION
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