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Evidence for evolution

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Another example is the evolution of the first amphibians from lobe finned fishes. ... like scales, palate and jaws, but an amphibian-like mobile neck and head, an ear ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evidence for evolution


1
Evidence for evolution
  • Early 1800s prevailing belief was that organisms
    specially created.
  • Organisms unchanged since their creation
  • Species created independently of each other
  • Earth not old. Usshers estimate for Earths
    creation 4004 BC

2
Lamarck
  • Fact of evolution proposed in late 1700s early
    1800s.
  • Jean Baptiste Lamarck 1809, 1815 proposed all
    species derived by gradual evolution from other
    species.
  • Evolution driven by innate tendency of organisms
    to become more complex.

3
Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • Lamarcks proposed mechanism of evolution was
    Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics (IAC)
  • IAC suggested that modifications to organisms
    during their life could be passed on to their
    offspring (e.g. giraffe stretching its neck
    during its life passes slightly longer neck to
    offspring)

4
Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • Obviously, Lamarcks ideas about mechanism of
    evolution contradict current biological
    knowledge.
  • Information flows from DNA to phenotype not in
    the reverse direction

5
Charles Darwin published On the origin of
species in 1859.

6
Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
  • Son of a wealthy doctor.
  • Dropped out of medical school.
  • Studied theology, but was much more interested in
    natural history.
  • After college signed on as captains companion on
    The Beagle.

7
Voyage of the Beagle
  • Darwin companion for Captain Fitzroy on
  • Voyage of The Beagle (1831-1836).
  • The Beagles mission was to map coast of South
    America, but traveled around the World.
  • Sites visited included Galapagos Islands.
  • Volcanic islands (hence of recent origin)
  • off coast of Ecuador.

8
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9
Unique animals on Galapagos include giant
tortoises, marine iguanas, and Darwins finches.
Galapagos Giant Tortoise
10
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11
Sharp- beaked Ground Finch
12
On voyage Darwin read Lyells Principles of
Geology. Lyell emphasized two major points
  • Gradualism Geological features can be
  • explained by the slow gradual action of
  • processes we see around us every day.
  • E.g. wind, waves, rivers.

2. Great age of the Earth the earth is old,
so there has been lots of time for change to
take place.
13
What Darwin observed
  • On the voyage Darwin noted many things that were
    puzzling from the point of view of a creationist
    explanation for the diversity of life.

14
What Darwin observed
  • 1. South American fossils resembled living
    animals.
  • 2. Parts of the world with similar climates and
    habitats
  • (e.g. Australia, South America) populated by very
    different organisms.
  • 3. Plants and animals on each continent are
    different from those on other continents.
  • 4. Many species on oceanic islands are
  • found only there (endemic).
  • 5. Endemic species on islands closely resemble
    species found on adjacent mainland.

15
What Darwin observed
  • These observations taken together dont make
    sense if organisms are specially created.
  • Why should similar habitats in different parts of
    the world have completely different faunas?
  • Why should remote islands have unique faunas that
    differ from, but resemble, those on adjacent land
    masses?
  • Together these observations suggested to Darwin
    that species change over time i.e., evolution
    occurs.

16
Darwin and Wallace
  • 1858 Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace
    jointly proposed natural selection as the primary
    mechanism by which evolution takes place.
  • 1859 Origin of Species published

17
  • Idea of evolution accepted rapidly
  • Lack of understanding of heredity and population
    genetics, however, prevented natural selection
    being accepted as mechanism until 1930s.
  • The Modern Synthesis in the 1930s of combined
    the ideas of population genetics and natural
    selection to explain gradual evolution,
    speciation, and macroevolution.

18
Evidence for Evolution
  • Evidence of change in organisms over time
  • Living species
  • evolution of beak length in soapberry bugs.
  • Soapberry bugs use long beak to penetrate seeds
    in fruits and eat them.
  • Native host plant is balloon vine which has thick
    fruits.

19
Evolution of Soapberry Bugs
  • In 1926 flat-podded Golden rain tree introduced
    to Florida. Has thin fruits.
  • Today soapberry bugs feeding on Golden rain trees
    have much shorter beaks than those living on
    balloon vines.

20
Comparison of beak lengths in areas with and
without golden rain trees
21
Data from museum specimens documents change in
beak length over time.
22
Vestigial organs
  • Many organisms possess rudimentary or
    functionless versions of body parts that function
    in close relatives/ancestors
  • Cave populations of Mexican tetra fish have eye
    sockets but no eyes.
  • Kiwis have tiny, stubby wings
  • Boas have tiny remnant hind limbs

23
Human vestigial structures
  • Coccyx vestigial tailbone at base of spine.
  • Arrector pili muscle at base of hair follicles
    makes hair stand up.
  • Appendix reduced in size. Used in digestion of
    cellulose in herbivores e.g. rabbits.

24
Vestigial developmental trait
  • Adult chickens three bones in forefoot (wing),
    four in hindfoot.
  • However, digit 5 appears briefly during embryonic
    development before disappearing.

25
Molecular vestigial traits
  • Human genome contains large numbers of
    pseudogenes that do not code for functional RNA
    or proteins.
  • E.g. several pseudogenes of hemoglobin. May be
    as many as 6,000 pseudogenes in human genome.

26
Fossil evidence of evolution
  • Clear from fossil evidence that many species (in
    fact almost all that have ever existed) have
    become extinct.
  • Equally clear that the faunas of different
    geological eras are very different and that they
    have changed over time.

27
Fossil evidence of evolution
  • Law of Succession Fossil and living organisms in
    same area related to each other and differ from
    organisms in other areas.
  • E.g. Australia filled with marsupials, fossils
    are of similar marsupial forms.
  • South America contains both fossil and living
    armadillos

28
Extinct glyptodont (2,000 kg) resembles
modern-day armadillo (2 kg).
29
Fossil evidence of evolution
  • Transitional forms
  • If fossil organisms ancestral to modern organisms
    then there should be transitional fossils that
    show characteristics intermediate between the
    older and more recent groups.

30
Archaeopteryx
  • Archaeopteryx the oldest known fossil bird (name
    means ancient wing) has mix of reptilian and
    avian features.
  • Reptilian long tail, teeth, long clawed fingers
  • Avian feathers, ribs with uncinate processes,
    avian shoulder girdle.

31
Archaeopteryx (oldest known fossil bird) Jurassic
150mya
32
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33
Evolution of mammals
  • There are numerous excellent fossil series that
    document the transitions from ancestral species
    to later species.
  • For example the evolution of mammals from
    synapsids. An extensive series of fossils
    documents the changes in the synapsid lower jaw
    from a jaw made of multiple bones to the modern
    mammals single dentary and the incorporation of
    some synapsid jaw bones into the inner ear.

34
Tiktaalik roseae
  • Another example is the evolution of the first
    amphibians from lobe finned fishes.
  • The transitional fossil Tiktaalik roseae
    possesses an intermediate suites of characters.
  • It has fish-like scales, palate and jaws, but an
    amphibian-like mobile neck and head, an ear that
    could hear in air, and the bones in its fins are
    intermediate between those of fish and early
    amphibians such as Acanthostega.

35
Tiktaalik roseae 375 mya
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37
Evidence of common ancestry. Homologous structures
  • Homologous structures are those constructed from
    the same basic components which have been
    modified for different purposes.
  • E.g. The forelimbs of human, mole, horse, dolphin
    and bat are constructed from the same bones, but
    the bones differ in size and shape and the
    structures made from the bones are used in
    radically different ways.
  • Homologous structures make no sense if organisms
    were specially created, but logical if organisms
    share a common ancestor.

38
Homologous structures (i.e. derived from a common
ancestor). Even though the forelimbs have
evolved to carry out very different tasks they
are all constructed from the same bones.
FIG 2.11
39
Developmental Homology
  • Embryos of diverse array of vertebrates very
    similar in early development

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41
  • Not all similarities due to homology.
  • Streamlined shapes of fish and whale not a result
    of common ancestry but convergent evolution. The
    same selection pressures acting on different
    lineages have produced similarly shaped bodies.

FIG 2.12.
42
Analagous structures
  • Similarly, the wings of butterflies and birds are
    not homologous (because their structural
    components were not derived from a recent common
    ancestor) but perform the same function.
  • Such structures are analagous. They carry out the
    same function.

43
Molecular Homology
  • With few exceptions all organisms use same
    genetic code.
  • Genetic flaws shared by species.

44
Molecular Homology
  • Chromosome 17 in humans PMP22 gene has duplicate
    sequence of DNA (CMT1A repeat) on either side of
    it.
  • Result of duplication and insertion of DNA.
  • Occasionally causes inaccurate crossing over
    during meiosis.

45
Molecular Homology
  • Humans share CMT1A repeat with bonobos and
    chimpanzees, but not gorillas, orang-utans or
    other primates.
  • Suggests CMT1A derived from common ancestor of
    bonobos, chimps and humans.

46
Other evidence for evolution
  • Jerry-rigged structures e.g. The Pandas thumb.

47
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48
Pandas Thumb
  • In Pandas, a wrist bone modified as tool to
    strip bamboo.
  • Pandas thumb not very efficient solution to
  • Bamboo-stripping problem.
  • Natural selection must work with the material
  • available.
  • Thumb implies pandas not designed,
  • but evolved.

49
Other evidence for evolution
  • Adaptive radiation and clusters of species.
  • Many remote islands populated by
  • diverse, but closely related species.

50
Adaptive radiation
  • Ancestral colonist arrives on island.
  • Shortage of resident species means many niches
    are unfilled.
  • Ancestral species give rise to many species that
    occupy unfilled niches.

51
Adaptive radiation
  • Examples Darwins finches on Galapagos Island,
    Drosophila on Hawaiian Islands.

52
Darwins Finches
  • On Galapagos Islands there are 13 species of
    anatomically very different, but closely related
    species of finch.
  • They differ greatly in beak size and diet having
    evolved very different lifestyles.

53
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54
Hawaiian Drosophila
  • More than 25 of the worlds 1,250 species of
    Drosophila fruit flies found on Hawaiian Islands.
  • Few insect competitors so Drosophila have
    diversified to fill large number of niches.

55
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56
If faunas created, why are woodpecker finches,
but not woodpeckers found on the Galapagos?
57
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • The idea of evolution has been harshly criticized
    by religious fundamentalists since the
    publication of the Origin in 1859.
  • This has been especially true in the U.S.
  • Repeatedly, believers in the literal truth of the
    Bible have attempted to have alternatives to
    evolution (i.e., creationism) taught in the
    public schools and to have the teaching of
    evolution either banned or restricted.

58
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • The U.S. Supreme Court has prohibited the
    teaching of creationism in public schools as a
    violation of the establishment of religion clause
    of the Constitution.
  • Latest attempt to insert creationism into schools
    is the idea of Intelligent Design.

59
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • The concept of intelligent design is outlined
    most clearly in Michael Behes book Darwins
    Black Box.
  • The central idea in intelligent design is that
    some structures in the body are so complex that
    they could not possibly have evolved by a gradual
    process of natural selection. These structures
    are said to irreducibly complex.

60
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • By irreducibly complex Behe means that a
    complex structure cannot be broken down into
    components that are themselves functional and
    that the structure must have come into existence
    in its complete form.

61
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • If structures are irreducibly complex Behe
    claims that they cannot have evolved. Thus,
    their existence implies they must have been
    created by a designer (i.e. God, although the
    designer is not explicitly referred to as such).

62
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • Behes main examples are various biochemical
    pathways in the body, the blood clotting system,
    and structures such as the bacterial flagellum.

63
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • Since the publication of Behes book, it has been
    demonstrated repeatedly that things he has
    claimed to be irreducibly complex are not in fact
    so.
  • E.g. the flagellum in eel sperm lacks several of
    the components found in other flagella, yet the
    flagellum functions well.

64
Creationism and Intelligent Design
  • The blood clotting system in dolphins lacks at
    least one component that the human system has,
    yet it too is functional.
  • In addition, plausible gradual scenarios for the
    evolution of biochemical pathways including the
    Krebs cycle have been documented.

65
Evolution of complex structures
  • The evolution of complex structures, such as the
    eye, appears difficult, but natural selection
    achieves this by the slow accumulation of minor
    improvements from one generation to the next.

66
Evolution of complex structures
  • Each step on the evolutionary pathway from a
    simple light sensing cell to a complex eye
    capable of focusing and producing color vision,
    must be beneficial to the organism that possess
    it and a slight improvement on earlier versions.
  • It is not necessary for a structure to be perfect
    or even very good it just needs to be better than
    the alternatives to be favored by selection.

67
Variation in mollusc eyes from (a) pigment spot
to (b) pigment cup to (c) simple optic cup in
abalone to (d) complex lensed eyes in a marine
snail and octopus.
68
Evolution of complex structures
  • Computer simulations suggest that eyes can evolve
    easily and in nature eyes have evolved
    independently more than 40 times.
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