Title: Introduction: Evolution Natural Selection and Species
1IntroductionEvolution Natural Selection and
Species
- Professor Pamela L. Pannozzo
- Principles of Biology II BSC 1011
2Where Does Biological Diversity Come From?
3Pre-1850s Thoughts on the Origin of Life
- Earth believed to be only thousands of years old
- Different organisms and their structures were the
results of the Creator - Species were specially created and unchangeable
over time
4A Journey Charles Darwin and the HMS Beagle
- 1831 - 22 year old Charles Darwin served as
naturalist on a five-year mapping expedition
around the world - Studied and collected plants and animals
- Examined fossils
- Observed series of related but distinct forms of
life
5Charles Darwins 5 Year Expedition
6Darwins Observations
- Earth of great geological change
- Earthquakes, volcanoes, ancient oceans
- Glyptodont fossils
- Geographical distribution of species
- Galapagos finches
7Other Influences on Darwins Thinking
- Thomas Malthus (1798) populations of plants and
animals tend to increase exponentially resources
are limited though reproductive rate is
not?competition for survival - Charles Lyell (1830) geological and fossil
records suggest Earth is very old and species
have changed over time - Artificial Selection selective breeding of
plants and animals to achieve certain desired
characteristics in their offspring
8Darwins Postulates
- Individuals vary in their traits
- Traits are inherited
- There is competition for limited resources
- Only the most fit organisms are able to
survive and reproduce
9Evolution
- The change in inherited characteristics of a
population from generation to generation,
eventually resulting in new species
10The Theory of Natural Selection
- On the Origin of Species, 1959
- Explanation for why and how evolution occurs
- Individuals with traits best suited to the local
environment generally have more surviving
offspring. This increases the representation of
certain heritable variations in the next
generations. This differential reproductive
success is called natural selection.
11Traits are Inherited, Not Acquired
12Two Meanings of Evolution
- Macroevolution
- Origin of new species over vast periods of time
- Microevolution
- Genetic changes within a species over generations
13How Fast Does Evolution Occur?
- Organism-specific
- Bacteria vs. Mammals
- Punctuated Equilibruim
- Gradualism
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15What is the Evidence for Evolution?
- Observed Changes in traits in rapidly reproducing
organisms - Aripo River system guppies (effects of predation
and mate attraction) - Pathogen bacteria and viruses 9effect of
drug-resisitance) - Fossils
- Molecular BiologyDNA, Proteins
- Anatomical Homologies
16Fossils
- Sedimentary rock burials
- Radioisotopic dating
17Fossils at different depths show successive
changes over time
18Fossil Evidence Shows Cetaceans Evolved from
Terrestrial Animals
19Molecular Biology
- Broad genomic differences
- Proteomic differences
- Individual gene sequences
Hemoglobin ß chain amino acids
20Anatomical Homologies
- Embryology
- All vertebrates share basic developmental
instructions
21Anatomical Homologies
- Homologous structures
- Vertebrates share like skeletons, body plans,
organs from same origin
22Convergent Evolution
- Analogous structures
- Unrelated organisms develop like adaptations due
to similar environmental pressures
23Convergent Evolution
24How Do We Determine Species?
25The Biological Species Concept
- Species a group of organisms that can
successfully interbreed in nature and produce
fertile offspring - Requires reproductive isolation
- What about?
- Dog wolf -gt wolf-hybrid (fertile)
- Horse donkey -gt mule (infertile)
- Tiger lion -gt liger (males infertile (?),
females fertile, but health problems) - Other definitions of species?
- Morphology, ecological niche, phylogeny
26Evolution Commonly Occurs On Islands
27Types of Reproductive Isolation
- Prezygotic barriers
- Habitat isolation (physical barriers)
- Temporal isolation
- Behavioral isolation
- Mechanical isolation
- Postzygotic barriers
- Reduced developmental viability in first
generation - Sterility of first generation
- Feeble or sterile second generation offspring
28Two Mechanisms of Speciation
- Allopatric speciation
- Geographic barrier separates gene pools, prevents
interbreeding - Sympatric speciation
- Less common
- No geographic barrier
- Chromomsomal mutations, genetic mutations
enabling use of different resources, sexual
selection