Title: 1:Evolution Prof Rod Page
11EvolutionProf Rod Page Dr Ruedi Nager
- Lectures 1-2 Evidence for Evolution
- Lectures 3-4 The process of selection
- Lectures 5-6 Origins of species
2Lecture Notes Online
Taxonomy.zoology.gla.ac.uk/rdmp1c/teaching/L1/Evo
lution
33 Definition
'Evolution' is a description of AND an
explanation of the history of species - their
origins, how they change, survive, become
extinct. So evolution concerns BOTH a
historical account of life on earth AND an
attempt to explain how observed changes have
happened.
44 Overview of Lectures 1 2
- Evidence that evolution has occurred
- Comparative anatomy
- Taxonomy
- Geology and fossils
- Biogeography
- How does evolution occur?
- Malthus and natural selection
- How does perfection arise?
- How does novelty arise?
55A changing world view (200-300 years ago)
Earth is young In the 17th century Archbishop
James Ussher used the Bible to date the origin of
the earth as 4004 B.C. (Vice-chancellor of
Cambridge refined this to the morning of Sunday,
October 23rd, 4004 B.C.) Fixity of
species Species are permanent, natural kinds.
They do not change. A fixed plan of
creation. Design Living things seem designed
for a purpose, and a design implies a designer
66 A changing world view
Earth is ancient Approximately 4,500,000,000
years old (radioactive isotopes) Species
evolve Living things are constantly changing,
new species arise and others go extinct The
history of life is contingent Adaptation Fit
between organisms and their environment is due to
natural selection (blind watchmaker) Organisms
are often imperfectly created
77 Darwins place in science
8Unity of Nature
99 Life is constructed on a similar plan
Human and chimpanzee facial expressions
1010 Life is constructed on a similar plan
1111 Vestigial organs
The eye bulbs of blind, cave-dwelling creatures,
such as the grotto salamander (Typhlotriton
spelaeus).
The anthers and pollen of asexual dandelions.
1212 Vestigial organs in humans
Appendix
Nictating membrane in eye
1313 Hind limbs in whales
Whale embryo
Fossil whale
Modern whale
1414 Human embryo at 5 weeks
15(No Transcript)
16Ontogeny
http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/odyssey/clips/
1716 Comparative anatomy and embryology
- A group of organisms is similarly constructed no
matter how they live (homologous structures) - Organisms show traces of previous stages in their
development (ontogeny) - Vestigial structures - reduced structures with no
apparent function
18Taxonomy
1918 Scala Naturae(scale of nature)
2019 Linnean classification of the domestic
cat(Felis silvestris) and common buttercup
(Ranunculus acris)
2120 Linnean Hierarchy is Tree-like
Carnivores
22Geology
2321 Three views of geology
Gradualism (Hutton) Profound changes can be the
result of small changes over long periods of
time.
Catastrophism (Cuvier) Recurrent catastrophic
events causing widespread extinction and
resulting in sharp boundaries between fossil
layers.
Uniformitarism (Lyell) The same processes we see
today also acted in the past
2422 Age of the Earth
The depth of the sedimentary column implies that
the Earth is old (it would take a long time to
accumulate these layers gradually)
2523 Lord Kelvin and the Age of the Earth
- Leading physicist of 19th Century
- (absolute temperature scale named after him)
- Argued from rate of cooling of the Earth that it
was about 98 Myrs old - Similar result from estimating the age of the sun
- Darwin estimated the Sussex Weald cliffs had
taken 300 Myr to form
2623a Resolution(what Kelvin didnt know)
- The source of the Suns energy is nuclear fusion
- The earth has a molten core due to radioactive
decay
27Fossils
- (the other evidence from geology)
28(No Transcript)
29Whale evolution(terrestrial to aquatic in 8
Myr)
3025Pakicetus (50 Myr ago in Pakistan)
50 Myr old fossils of Pakicetus (large animal)
and Ichthyolestes (small animal) from Pakistan
3126Rodhocetus (47 Myr ago in Pakistan)
3227Transitions in the fossil record Foraminifera
33Biogeography
When on board H.M.S. Beagle, as naturalist, I
was much struck with certain facts in the
distribution of organic beings inhabiting South
America, and in the geological relations of the
present to the past inhabitants of that
continent.
3429 Biogeography
Organisms in different areas are different, even
if they occupy the same "niche"
3530 Similar environment, different species
Northern Hemisphere
Puffins and auks
Southern Hemisphere
Penguins and petrels
36Summary
- Comparative anatomy - living things are
constructed along the same lines - Taxonomy - life is hierarchical (tree of life)
- Geology - Earth is ancient, fossils record
evolution, small changes can have big effects - Biogeography - same environment yields different
organisms