Title: Biology: Chapters 9 and 10
1Biology Chapters 9 and 10
- Evolution and Classification
2Living things show unity of pattern
- In structure (anatomy)
- In embryology
- Even in biochemistry!
- The more similarities we see, the more closely
organisms are related in a evolutionary sense.
3Embryos show relationships
fish
reptile
bird (chicken)
mammal (human)
4Structural similarities
- Are called homologies
- The next slide shown homologous structures in a
variety of vertebrates - The arrows show how each front leg (forelimb)
could have evolved from an early reptile.
51
early reptile
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
pterosaur
4
1
chicken
2
3
1
2
bat
1
3
4
5
porpoise
2
4
5
3
penguin
2
3
1
2
human
3
4
5
6Human and Cobra
backbone
pelvic girdle
coccyx (bones where many other mammals have a
tail)
thighbone attached to pelvic girdle
small bone attached to pelvic girdle
7Similarities in skull structure
adult
proportions in infant
chimpanzee
adult
proportions in infant
human
8 Comparative Biochemistry
- Kinds and numbers of biochemical traits that
species share is a clue to how closely they are
related - Can compare DNA, RNA, or proteins
- More similarity means species are more closely
related - All organisms use the same genetic code
9Sequence Conservation
- Cytochrome c functions in cellular respiration
- Deficits in this vital protein would be lethal
- Long sequences are identical in wheat, yeast, and
a primate
10Similar forelimbs, similar biochemistry
11The fossil record gives evidence of evolution
- Older fossils are found deeper in sediments
- Older fossils are simpler that more recent
fossils - Occasionally fossils are so well preserved that
they can show body coverings
12DINOSAUR AND EXTINCT BIRD
Dromaeosaurus
Archaeopteryx
13The SPECIES is a natural evolutionary unit
- Organisms that are the same species usually look
more or less alike - Members of a species are reproductively isolated,
because under natural conditions they will only
mate with others of their species to produce
fertile offspring
14Are these members of the same or different
species?
- Lion Tiger--gt Liger or Tigron ( only
occurs in zoos) - Horse donkey--gt mule (sterile)
- Usually, that is see page 224!
- spaniel poodle --gt mixed breed dog
- Bullfrog Leopard Frog --gt embryo which does not
survive
15Review Darwins Theory of Natural Selection
- Organisms are born with variations, and these
variations can be inherited - There is a constant struggle to obtain needed
resources more are born than can survive - Organisms with favorable variations tend to live
to reproduce more often than organisms with less
favorable variations - In time, these favorable variations (adaptations)
become more common in the population - What would happen if the environment changed?
16Artificial Selection or Selective Breeding
- Gave Darwin his idea about Natural Selection
- Definition humans breed organisms with specific
desired traits together to produce pure
breeding line with desirable characteristics - See page 228 for examples of Artificial Selection
in chickens
17Examples of Natural Selection 1
- MRSA Development of antibiotic resistance in
bacteria is now a serious problem. - Antibiotics kill most but not all of a bacterial
population. (A few lucky bacteria have a mutation
which gives them resistance to a low level of the
antibiotic.) - These lucky bacteria are not as vigorous as
other bacteria unless
18Examples of Natural Selection 1
- Unless the bacterial population is exposed to
antibiotics. - Then, guess who will survive, especially if the
infected person does not take all of their pills? - What would happen to the bacterial population as
a result? - See illustration on page 230
19Examples of Natural Selection 2
- Imagine a population of moths, some dark and some
light living in a forest. - Imagine the trees are covered with light-colored
lichens Which moths be better adapted? - Now imagine that many coal-burning industries
begin releasing sooty smoke into the forest, and
the trees become covered with the black
particles Which moths be better adapted? - This actually happened in England during the
industrial revolution, we have the insect
collections as evidence. - This is called Industrial Melanism See page 229
20Examples of Natural Selection 3
- Examine the next slide, which shows the
distribution of a mutant gene which causes sickle
cell anemia. Lets call the gene A - aa (normal hemoglobin) tend to get malaria and
die - Aa (sickle cell trait) tend to be resistant to
malaria - AA (sickle cell anemia) tended in the past to die
at a young age from sickle-cell disease
21Distribution of malaria cases in Africa, Asia,
and the Middle East in the 1920s
Frequency of people with the sickle-cell trait
less than 1 in 1,600
1 in 400-1,600
1 in 180-400
1 in 100-180
1 in 64-100
more than 1 in 64
22Examples of Natural Selection 3
- Explain why the gene for sickle-cell anemia would
remain in the population, even if it was fatal to
have the genotype AA.
23In order for a population to evolve
- The populations gene pool must change. This
means the alleles in the population must change
in one of 3 ways - Either new alleles must be added
- Or alleles must be removed
- Or the proportion of alleles must change
24If one or more of the 5 following criteria are
present, alleles will be added, removed, or their
frequency will change
- Mutations
- Migration (gene flow)
- Natural Selection
- Genetic Drift (Chance variations in gene pool,
more common in small populations) - Selective mating (mating is not entirely random)
25phenotypes of original population
A seabird carries a few seeds, stuck to its
feathers, from the mainland to a remote oceanic
island.
phenotype of island population
An example of genetic drift
26How geographic isolation can lead to a new species
1
A few individuals of a species on the mainland
reach isolated island 1. A new habitat produced a
new species.
3
2
4
Later in time, a few individuals of the new
species colonize nearby island 2. In this new
habitat, speciation again occurs. Now there are
2 species!
1
2
Speciation may also follow colonization of
islands 3 and 4. And it may follow invasion of
island 1 by species 2.
1
3
2
4
27There are two models of speciation
- Gradualism proposed by Darwin suggests that
species evolve slowly through time, as variations
gradually accumulate - Punctuation a newer model, suggests that
speciation occurs more rapidly, in response to
sudden changes in the environment. (Sudden could
mean 10s of thousands of years!)
28Gradual Model
- Speciation model in which species emerge through
many small morphological changes that accumulate
over a long time period - Fits well with evidence from certain lineages in
fossil record
29Punctuation Model
- Speciation model in which most changes in
morphology are compressed into brief period near
onset of divergence - Supported by fossil evidence in some lineages
30Evolutionary TreesGradualism Punctuated Punctua
ted
Figure 18.11Page 300
31Adaptive Radiation
- Burst of divergence
- Single lineage gives rise to many new species
- New species fill vacant niches (adaptive zones)
- Niche (adaptive zone) is way of life
- Often occurs after a mass extinction!
32Adaptive Radiation of mammals after the
extinction of the dinosaurs
Figure 18.12Page 301
33Evolutionary patterns1
- Parallel evolution When related species
continue to evolve in similar ways becasuse they
live in the same type of habitat. - Examples ostrich and rhea, horse and zebra
34Evolutionary patterns2
- Convergent evolution when distantly related
organisms come to resemble each other (at least
superficially) because they live in similar
habitats. - Example Euphorbia and Cactus (p. 228), shark
and dolphin.
35Evolutionary patterns3
- Coevolution when two unrelated species evolve
so each is adapted to the other. - Examples flowers and their pollinators, most
mutualistic relationships.
36 Taxonomy
- Field of biology concerned with identifying,
naming, and classifying species - Somewhat subjective
- Information about species can be interpreted
differently
37Phylogeny
- The scientific study of evolutionary
relationships among species - Practical applications
- Allows interpretation of the fossil record
- Allows us to classify organisms based on their
evolutionary relationships
38Binomial System
- Devised by Carl von Linne
- (aka Carolus Linnaeus)
- Each species has a two-part Latin name
- First part is generic
- Second part is specific name
39Examples of binomial nomenclature
- Homo sapiens (modern humans)
- Homo habilis (an extinct species of human)
- Gorilla gorilla (guess who?)
- Querqus rubrum (red oak)
- Querqus alba (white oak)
- Acer rubrum (red maple)
- QUESTIONS
- WHICH ORGANISMS ARE MOST CLOSELY RELATED?
- WHAT IS THE GENUS AND SPECIES NAME OF EACH?
40Higher Taxa
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Inclusive groupings meant to reflect
relationships among species
King Phillip Came Over For Good Soup
41Examples of Classification
corn
vanilla orchid
housefly
human
Plantae
Anthophyta
Monocotyledonae
Asparagales
Orchidaceae
Vanilla
V. planifolia
http//animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/index.h
tml
Figure 19.17Page 318
42Can you fill in the blanks?
43 Five-Kingdom Scheme
- Proposed in 1969 by Robert Whittaker
Monera Protista Fungi Plantae Animalia
445 kingdoms or 6?
ANIMALS
PLANTS
arthropods
chordates
FUNGI
flowering plants
conifers
annelids
roundworms
echinoderms
ginkgos
sac
club
mollusks
fungi
fungi
cycads
horsetails
rotifers
zygospore-
ferns
forming
flatworms
fungi
cnidarians
lycophytes
bryophytes
sponges
chlorophytes
chytrids
green algae
amoeboid
PROTISTANS
protozoans
(stramenopiles)
(alveolates)
red
brown algae
ciliates
algae
chrysophytes
sporozoans
oomycotes
?
dinoflagellates
crown of eukaryotes
euglenoids
(rapid divergences)
slime molds
kinetoplastids
parabasalids
(e.g., Trichomonas)
EUBACTERIA
spirochetes
diplomonads
ARCHAEBACTERIA
(e.g., Giardia)
extreme
Gram-positive bacteria
chlamydias
halophiles
methanogens
cyanobacteria
proteobacteria
extreme
thermophiles
molecular origin of life
45The 6 kingdoms
- Prokaryotes or Monera in our book
- Archaebacteria prokaryotic, most like the first
life forms on earth, live in extreme environments - Eubacteria prokaryotic, many are decomposers or
pathogens
46The 6 kingdoms
- All of the remaining Kingdoms are Eukaryotes
- Protista mostly unicellular. Variable, some
resemble plants, animals, or fungi. Some have
characteristics of both animals AND plants.
Groups are probably not closely related to each
other.
47The 6 kingdoms
- Multicellular Eukaryotes Plants, Animals, and
Fungi - Plants Photosynthetic autotrophs, cells walls
made of cellulose, store food as starch. Sexual
reproduction. - Fungi absorptive heterotrophs, cells walls of
chitin, either haploid or diploid, most are
mulicellular, either sexual or asexual
reproduction
48The 6 kingdoms
- Animals multicellular ingestive heterotrophs,
embryos with a blastula stage, no cell walls,
most have complex tissues and organs. Most
reproduce sexually.
49Origins and history of Life on Earth
- 4,600 million years ago Earth forms
- 3,400 million years ago, first living cells
- (similar to Archaebacteria)
- 2,500 million years ago, evolution of
photosynthesis. The O2 produced changes life on
Earth forever! Ozone layer develops, O2 slowly
accumulates in atmosphere - 1,200 million years ago, evolution of cellular
respiration. First eukaryotes appear - 900 million years ago, first animals and plants
appear. - 350 million years ago, land plants and first
amphibians appear (saw in American Museum)
50What was the atmosphere like on earth 4,000
million years ago?
- No oxygen, anaerobic
- Gases present were likely methane, ammonia,
carbon dioxide, water vapor, hydrogen, and
nitrogen - The earth was bombarded by powerful uv radiation.
- There were strong electrical storms.
- Under those conditions, it appears life was
inevitable!
51Millers Experiment
electrodes
to vacuum pump
spark discharge
CH4 NH3 H2O H2
gases
water out
condenser
water in
water droplets
water containing organic compounds
boiling water
liquid water in trap
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