Title: Evolution
1Chapter 7
EvolutionThe Theory and Its Supporting Evidence
2Evidence for Evolution
- Some of the evidence for evolution
- is provided by fossils
- such as this Early Pleistocene mammoth
- known as Archidiskodon meridonalis
- on display in the Museum of Geology and
Paleontology at the University of Florence in
Italy
3Darwin and the Galápagos
- During Charles Darwins five-year voyage
- (1831-1836) on the HMS Beagle,
- he visited the Galápagos Islands
- where he made important observations
- that changed his ideas about
- the then popular concept called the fixity of
species - an idea holding that all present-day species
- had been created in their present form
- and had changed little or not at all
- Darwin fully accepted
- the Biblical account of creation before the voyage
4Route of HMS Beagle
- Map showing the route (red line) followed
- by Charles Darwin when he was aboard
- HMS Beagle from 1831 to 1836
- The Galápagos Islands
- are in the Pacific Ocean west of Ecuador
5The Galápagos Islands
- The Galápagos Islands
- are specks of land
- composed of basalt
- in the eastern Pacific
6The Galápagos Islands
7Darwin Developed the Theory
- During the voyage Darwin observed
- that fossil mammals in South America
- are similar yet different from present-day
- llamas, sloths, and armadillos
- that the finches and giant tortoises living
- on the Galápagos Islands vary from island to
island - and still resemble ones from South America,
- even though they differ in subtle ways
- These observations convinced Darwin
- that organisms descended with modification
- from ancestors that lived during the past
- the central claim of the theory of evolution
8Galápagos Finches
- Darwins finches from the Galápagos Islands
- arranged to show evolutionary relationships
- Notice that beak shape
- varies depending on diet
Berry eater
Seed eaters
Cactus eaters
9Why Study Evolution?
- Evolution
- involving inheritable changes in organisms
through time - is fundamental to biology and paleontology
- Paleontology is the study of life history as
revealed by fossils - Evolution is a unifying theory
- like plate tectonic theory
- that explains an otherwise
- encyclopedic collection of facts
- Evolution provides a framework
- for discussion of life history
- in later parts of the term
10Misconceptions about Evolution
- Many people have a poor understanding
- of the theory of evolution
- and hold a number of misconceptions,
- which include
- evolution proceeds strictly by chance
- nothing less than fully developed structures
- such as eyes are of any use
- there are no transitional fossils
- so-called missing links
- connecting ancestors and descendants
- humans evolved from monkeys
- so monkeys should no longer exist
11Evolution Historical Background
- Evolution, the idea that todays organisms
- have descended with modification
- from ancestors that lived during the past,
- is usually attributed solely to Charles Darwin,
- but it was seriously considered long before he
was born, - even by some ancient Greeks
- and by philosophers and theologians
- during the Middle Ages
- Nevertheless, the prevailing belief
- in the 1700s was that Genesis
- explained the origin of life
- and contrary views were heresy
12Evolution Historical Background
- During the 18th century,
- naturalists were discovering evidence
- that could not be reconciled
- with literal reading of Scripture
- In this changing intellectual atmosphere,
- scientists gradually accepted a number of ideas
- the principle of uniformitarianism,
- Earths great age,
- that many types of plants and animals had become
extinct, - and that change from one species to another
occurred - What was lacking, though,
- was a theoretical framework to explain evolution
13Lamarck
- Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck
- (1744-1829) is best remembered for his theory
- of inheritance of acquired characteristics,
- even though he greatly contributed
- to our understanding of the natural world
- According to this theory,
- new traits arise in organisms because of their
needs - and are somehow passed on to their descendants
- Lamarcks theory seemed logical at the time
- and was widely accepted
14Lamarcks Theory
- Lamarks theory was not totally refuted
- until decades later
- with the discovery that genes
- units of heredity
- cannot be altered by any effort by an organism
15Lamarcks Giraffes
- According to Lamarcks theory of inheritance of
acquired characteristics
- ancestral short-necked giraffes
- stretched their necks
- to reach leaves high on trees
- their offspring were born
- with longer necks
16Darwin
- In 1859, Charles Robert Darwin (1809-1882)
- published On the Origin of Species
- In it he detailed
- his ideas on evolution
- formulated 20 years earlier
- and proposed a mechanism for evolution
17Natural Selection
- Plant and animal breeders
- practice artificial selection
- by selecting those traits they deem desirable
- and then breed plants and animals with those
traits - thereby bringing about a great amount of change
- Observing artificial selection
- gave Darwin the idea that
- a process of selection among variant types
- in nature could also bring about change
- Thomas Malthuss essay on population
- suggested that competition for resources
- and high infant mortality limited population size
18Darwin and Wallace
- Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace (1823-1913)
- read Malthuss book
- and came to the same conclusion,
- that a natural process
- was selecting only a few individuals for survival
- Darwins and Wallaces idea
- called natural selection
- was presented simultaneously in 1859
19Natural SelectionMain Points
- Organisms in all populations
- posses heritable variations such as
- size, speed, agility, visual acuity,
- digestive enzymes, color, and so forth
- Some variations are more favorable than others
- some have a competitive edge
- in acquiring resources and/or avoiding predators
- Not all young survive to reproductive maturity
- Those with favorable variations
- are more likely to survive
- and pass on their favorable variations
20Naturally Selected Giraffes
- According to the Darwin-Wallace theory
- of natural selection, giraffes long neck evolved
- because ancestors with longer necks
- had an advantage
- and reproduced more often
21Survival of the Fittest
- In colloquial usage,
- natural selection is sometimes expressed as
- survival of the fittest
- This is misleading because
- natural selection is not simply a matter of
survival - but involves differential rates
- of survival and reproduction
22Not only Biggest, Strongest, Fastest
- One misconception about natural selection
- is that among animals
- only the biggest, strongest, and fastest
- are likely to survive
- These characteristics might provide an advantage
- but natural selection may favor
- the smallest if resources are limited
- the most easily concealed
- those that adapt most readily to a new food
source - those having the ability to detoxify some
substance - and so on...
23Limits of Natural Selection
- Natural selection works
- on existing variation in a population
- It could not account for the origin of variations
- Critics reasoned that should a variant trait
arise, - it would blend with other traits and would be
lost - The answer to these criticisms
- existed even then in the work of Gregor Mendel,
- but remained obscure until 1900
24Mendel and the Birth of Genetics
- During the 1860s, Gregor Mendel,
- an Austrian monk,
- performed a series of controlled experiments
- with true-breeding strains of garden peas
- strains that when self-fertilized
- always display the same trait, such as flower
color - Traits are controlled by a pair of factors,
- now called genes
- Genes occur in alternate forms, called alleles
- One allele may be dominant over another
- Offspring receive one allele
- of each pair from each parent
25Mendels Experiments
- The parental generation consisted of
- true-breeding strains, RR red flowers, rr
white flowers - Cross-fertilization yielded a second generation
- all with the Rr combination of alleles,
- in which the R (red) is dominant over r (white)
26Mendels Experiments
- The second generation, when self-fertilized
- produced a third generation
- with a ratio of three red-flowered plants
- to one white-flowered plant
27Importance of Mendels Work
- The factors (genes) controlling traits
- do not blend during inheritance
- Traits not expressed in each generation
- may not be lost
- Therefore, some variation in populations
- results from alternate expressions of genes
(alleles) - Variation can be maintained
28Genes and Chromosomes
- Complex, double-stranded helical molecules
- of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
- called chromosomes
- are found in cells of all organisms
- except bacteria,
- which have ribonucleic acid (RNA)
- Specific segments of DNA
- are the basic units of heredity (genes)
- The number of chromosomes
- varies from one species to another
- fruit flies 8 humans 46 horses 64
29Sexually Reproducing Organisms
- In sexually reproducing organisms,
- the production of sex cells
- pollen and ovules in plants
- sperm and eggs in animals
- results when cells undergo a type of cell
division - known as meiosis
- This process yields cells
- with only one chromosome of each pair
- so all sex cells have
- only 1/2 the chromosome number
- of the parent cell
30Meiosis
- During meiosis,
- sex cells form that contain one member
- of each chromosome pair
- Formation of sperm is shown here
- Eggs form the same way,
- but only one of the four final eggs
- is functional
31Fertilization
- The full number of chromosomes
- is restored when a sperm fertilizes an egg
- or when pollen fertilizes an ovule
- The egg (or ovule) then
- has a full set of chromosomes
- typical for that species
- As Mendel deduced,
- 1/2 the genetic makeup
- of fertilized egg
- comes from each parent
- The fertilized egg
- grows by mitosis
32Mitosis
- Mitosis is cell division
- that results in
- the complete duplication of a cell
- In this example,
- a cell with four chromosomes (two pairs)
- produce two cells
- each with four chromosomes
- Mitosis takes place
- in all cells except sex cells
33Mitosis
- Once an egg
- has been fertilized,
- the developing embryo
- grows by mitosis
34Modern View of Evolution
- During the 1930s and 1940s,
- paleontologists, population biologists,
- geneticists, and others developed ideas that
- merged to form a modern synthesis
- or neo-Darwinian view of evolution
- They incorporated
- chromosome theory of inheritance
- into evolutionary thinking
- They saw changes in genes (mutations)
- as one source of variation
35Modern View of Evolution
- They completely rejected Lamarcks idea
- of inheritance of acquired characteristics
- They reaffirmed the importance of natural
selection - But since then,
- some scientists have challenged the emphasis
- in modern synthesis
- that evolution is gradual
36What Brings about Variation?
- Evolution by natural selection
- works on variation in populations
- most of which is accounted for by the reshuffling
- of alleles from generation to generation
- during sexual reproduction
- The potential for variation is enormous
- with thousands of genes
- each with several alleles,
- and with offspring receiving 1/2 of their genes
- from each parent
- New variations arise by mutations
- change in the chromosomes or genes
37Mutations
- Mutations result in a change
- in hereditary information
- Mutations that take place in sex cells
- are inheritable,
- whether they are chromosomal mutations
- affecting a large segment of a chromosome
- or point mutations
- individual changes in particular genes
- Mutations are random with respect to fitness
- they may be beneficial, neutral, or harmful
38Mutations
- If a species is well adapted to its environment,
- most mutations would not be particularly useful
- and perhaps would be harmful
- But what was a harmful mutation
- can become a useful one
- if the environment changes
39Neutral Mutations
- Information in cells is carried on chromosomes
- which direct the formation of proteins
- by selecting the appropriate amino acids
- and arranging them into a specific sequence
- Neutral mutations may occur
- if the information carried on the chromosome
- does not change the amino acid or protein
- that is produced
40What Causes Mutations?
- Some mutations are induced by mutagens
- agents that bring about higher mutations rates
such as - some chemicals
- ultraviolet radiation
- X-rays
- extreme temperature changes
- Some mutations are spontaneous
- occurring without any known mutagen
41Species
- Species is a biological term for a population
- of similar individuals that in nature interbreed
- and produce fertile offspring
- Species are reproductively isolated
- from one another
- Goats and sheep do not interbreed in nature,
- so they are separate species
- Yet in captivity
- they can produce fertile offspring
42Speciation
- Speciation is the phenomenon of a new species
- arising from an ancestral species
- It involves change in the genetic makeup
- of a population,
- which also may bring about changes
- in form and structure
- During allopatric speciation,
- species arise when a small part of a population
- becomes isolated from its parent population
43Allopatric Speciation
- Reduction of the area occupied by a species
- may leave a small isolated population
- Two peripheral isolates evolved into new species
- Isolation might result from a marine
transgression.
44Allopatric Speciation
- Geographic barriers may form across parts
- of a central populations range,
- thereby isolating small populations that speciate
45Allopatric Speciation
- A few individuals may somehow reach
- a remote area and no longer exchange genes
- with the parent population
- This out-migration can lead to the formation
- of a peripheral isolate that gives rise to a new
species - while the parent population persists without
change
46Finch Speciation
- Darwins finches from the Galápagos Islands
- underwent allopatric speciation
- due to isolation of birds among the many islands
47Rate of Speciation
- Although widespread agreement exists
- on allopatric speciation
- scientists disagree on how rapidly
- a new species might evolve
- Phyletic gradualism
- the gradual accumulation of minor changes
- eventually brings about the origin of new species
- This view was held by Darwin and reaffirmed by
modern synthesis
48Rate of Speciation
- holds that little or no change
- takes place in a species
- during most of its existence
- then evolution occurs rapidly
- giving rise to a new species
- in perhaps as little as a few thousand years
49Misconceptions
- Ideas about speciation
- commonly involve misconceptions
- One antievolution argument is
- If humans evolved from monkeys,
- why are there still monkeys?
- This involves two misconceptions
- No scientist has ever claimed
- that humans evolved from monkeys
- Even if they had, that would not preclude
- the possibility of monkeys still existing
50Various Possibilities
- In allopatric speciation
- a small population may evolve
- whereas the larger parent population may
- remain unchanged,
- evolve in some other direction,
- or become extinct
51Styles of Evolution
- Divergent evolution occurs
- when an ancestral species
- giving rise to diverse descendants
- adapts to various aspects of the environment
- Divergent evolution leads to descendants
- that differ markedly from their ancestors
- Convergent evolution involves the development
- of similar characteristics
- in distantly related organisms
- Parallel evolution involves the development
- of similar characteristics
- in closely related organisms
52Styles of Evolution
- In both convergent and parallel evolution,
- similar characteristics developed independently
- in comparable environments
53Divergent Evolution
- Divergent evolution of a variety
- of placental mammals from a common ancestor
- Divergence accounts for descendants
- that differ from their ancestors and from one
another
54Convergent Evolution
- Convergent evolution takes place
- when distantly related organisms give rise to
species
- that resemble one another
- because they adapt
- in comparable ways
55Parallel Evolution
- Parallel evolution
- involves the independent origin
- of similar feature in related organisms
56Cladistics and Cladograms
- Traditionally, scientists have
- depicted evolutionary relationships
- with phylogenetic trees
- in which the horizontal axis represents
- anatomical differences
- and the vertical axis denotes time
- In contrast, a cladogram shows
- the relationships among members of a clade
- a group of organisms
- including its most recent common ancestor
- Cladistics focus on derived characteristics
- sometimes called evolutionary novelties
- as opposed to primitive characteristics
57Phylogenetic Tree
- A phylogenetic tree
- showing the relationships
- among various vertebrate animals
58Cladogram
- A cladogram showing inferred relationships
- Some of the characteristics used
- to construct this cladogram are indicated
59Evolutionary Novelties
- All land-dwelling vertebrate animals
- posses bone and paired limbs
- so these characteristics are primitive
- and of little use in establishing relationships
- among land vertebrates
- However, hair and mammary glands
- are derived characteristics
- Only one subclade, the mammals, has them
60Evolutionary Novelties
- If considering only mammals,
- hair and mammary glands
- are primitive characteristics,
- but live birth is a derived characteristic
- that serves to distinguish most mammals
- from the egg-laying mammals
61Cladograms
- Three different interpretations
- of the relationships among
- bats, dogs and birds
62Cladograms
- Bats and birds fly,
- which might suggest
- a closer relationship
- than to dogs
- Dogs and birds
- do not appear closely related
- Hair and giving birth to live young
- indicate that bats and dogs
- are more closely related
63Cladistics for Fossils
- Cladistics and cladograms work
- well for living organisms,
- but are trickier for fossils
- Care must be taken in determining
- what are primitive verses derived
characteristics, - especially in groups with poor fossil records
- Paleontologists must be especially careful
- of characteristics resulting
- from convergent evolution
64Cladistics for Fossils
- Nevertheless, cladistics is a powerful tool
- that has more clearly elucidated
- the relationships among many fossil lineages,
- and is now used extensively by paleontologists
65Evolutionary Trends
- During evolution, all aspects of an organism
- do not change simultaneously
- A key feature we associate
- with a descendant group might appear
- before other features typical of that group
- For example, the oldest known bird
- had feathers and the typical fused clavicles of
birds, - but it also retained many reptile characteristics
- Mosaic evolution is the concept that
- organisms possess recently evolved
characteristics - as well as some features of their ancestral group
66Phylogeny
- Phylogeny is the evolutionary history
- of a group of organisms
- If sufficient fossil material is available,
- paleontologists determine the phylogeny
- and evolutionary trends for groups of organisms
- For example, one trend in ammonoids
- extinct relatives of squid and octopus
- was the evolution
- of an increasingly complex shell
67Evolutionary Trends
- Abundant fossils show the evolutionary trends of
- the Eocene mammals family Brontotheridea,
- better known as titanotheres
- These extinct relative of horses and rhinoceroses
- evolved from small ancestors
- to giants standing 2.4 m at the shoulder
- developed large horns
- and the shape of their skull changed
- Only 4 of the 16 known genera are show
68Evolutionary Trends
- Size increase is
- one of the most common evolutionary trends
- However, trends are complex
- they might reverse
- more than one can take place
- at the same time at different rates
- Trends in horses included
- generally larger size
- but size decreased in some now-extinct horses
- changes in teeth and skull
- lengthening legs
- reduction in number of toes
- These trends occurred at different rates
69Adaptations
- Evolutionary trends are a series of adaptations
- to changing environment
- or in response to exploitation of new habitats
- Some organisms
- show little evolutionary change
- for long periods
- Lingula is a brachiopod
- with a shell, at least,
- that has not changed
- significantly since the Ordovician
70Living Fossils
- Several organisms have shown
- little or no change for long periods
- If these still exist as living organisms today
- they are sometimes called living fossils
- For example
- horseshoe crabs
- closest living relative of a trilobite
- coelacanth (fish)
- gingkoes (tree)
- The absence of change for these organisms
- is not yet fully understood
71A Living Fossil
- Latimeria
- belongs to a group of fish
- once thought to have gone extinct
- at the end of the Mesozoic Era
- A specimen was caught
- off the coast of East Africa in 1938
72A Second Living Fossil
- Ginkgos
- have changed very little
- for millions of years
- They were found
- living in some isolated habitats in Asia
- and have been transplanted elsewhere
73Randomness in Natural Selection?
- But isnt evolution by natural selection
- a random process?
- If so, how is it possible
- for a trend to continue long enough
- to account just by chance
- for such complex structures as
- eyes, wings, and hands?
74Two Steps in Natural Selection
- Evolution by natural selection
- is a 2 step process
- Only the first step involves chance
- Variation must be present
- or arise in a population
- Whether a mutation is favorable
- is a matter of chance
- The natural selection of favorable variations
- is not by chance
75Extinctions
- Perhaps as many as 99 of all species
- that ever existed are now extinct
- Organisms do not always evolve
- toward some kind of higher order of perfection
- or greater complexity
- Vertebrates are more complex
- but not necessarily superior
- in some survival sense than bacteria
- after all, bacteria have persisted
- for at least 3.5 billion years
- Natural selection yields organisms adapted
- to a specific set of circumstances
- at a particular time
76Background and Mass Extinction
- The continual extinction of species
- is referred to as background extinction
- It is clearly different from mass extinction
- during which accelerated extinction rates
- sharply reduce Earths biotic diversity
- Extinction is a continual occurrence
- but so is the evolution of new species
- that usually quickly exploit the opportunities
- another species extinction creates
- Mammals began a remarkable diversification
- when they began occupying niches
- the extinction of dinosaurs and their relatives
left vacant
77Mass Extinction
- The mass extinction of dinosaurs
- and other animals at the end of Mesozoic Era
- is well known,
- but the greatest mass extinction
- occurred at the end of the Paleozoic Era
- More than 90 of all species died out
- We will discuss these extinctions
- and their possible causes later in the term
78Evidence in Support of Evolution
- Darwin cited supporting evidence
- for evolutionary theory such as
- classification
- embryology
- comparative anatomy
- geographic distribution
- fossil record, to a limited extent
- He had little knowledge
- of the mechanism of inheritance
- and biochemistry and molecular biology
- were unknown at his time
79Evidence in Support of Evolution
- Since Darwins time, studies from additional
fields - in biochemistry
- molecular biology
- more complete and better understood fossil record
- have convinced scientists that the theory
- is as well supported by evidence
- as any other major theory
- Scientists still disagree on many details,
- but the central claim of the theory
- is well established and widely accepted
80Is the Theory of Evolution Scientific?
- An idea can only be a truly scientific theory
- if testable predictive statements
- can be made from it
- No theory in science is ever proven
- in the final sense,
- although substantial evidence may support it
- All theories are always open
- to question, revision and occasionally
- to replacement by a more comprehensive theory
81Theories Must Be Predictive
- By predictive, we do not mean that
- it can predict the future
- No one knows which existing species
- will become extinct, or what descendants
- of any particular organism, if any,
- will look like in 10 million years from now
- Nevertheless, we can make a number of predictions
- about the present-day biological world
- and about the fossil record
- that should be consistent with the theory of
evolution, - if it is correct
82Some Predictions from Evolution
- If evolution has taken place,
- the oldest fossil-bearing rocks should have
- very different fossils than organisms of today
- More recent rocks should have
- more fossils similar to todays organisms
- Closely related species should have similarities
- in a whole range of areas, not just anatomy
83Some Predictions from Evolution
- Classification of organisms
- should show a nested pattern of similarities
- Neighboring plants and animals
- should be more similar to each other
- than to ones farther away
- A mechanism should exist
- that allows the evolution of one species to
another - fossils should appear in the fossil record
- in order of the organisms evolution
84Testable
- Suppose that contrary to evolutionary prediction
- wolves and coyotes were not similar
- in terms of their biochemistry, genetics
- and embryonic development
- Our prediction would fail
- and we would at least have to modify the theory
- If other predictions also failed
- say, if mammals appeared in the fossil record
before fishes - then we would have to abandon the theory
- and find a better explanation for our
observations - Since the theory of evolution is testable,
- it is truly scientific
85Classification
- Classification uses a nested pattern of
similarities - Carolus Linneaus (1707-1778) proposed
- a classification scheme
- in which organisms receive a two-part name
- consisting of genus and species
- for example, the coyote is Canis latrans
- Linnaeuss classification is an ordered list
- of categories that becomes more inclusive
- as one proceeds up the hierarchy
86Linnaean Classification
- the coyote, Canis latrans
- Animalia
- Chordata
- Vertebrata
- Mammalia
- Carnivora
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Subphylum
- Class
- Order
Least inclusive
87Classification shared Characteristics
- Subphylum vertebrata
- including fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and
mammals, - have a segmented vertebral column
- Only warm-blooded animals with hair/fur and
mammary glands are mammals
88Coyote, Canis latrans
- 18 orders of mammals exist including order
Carnivora - The Family Canidae are doglike carnivores
- and the genus Canis includes only closely related
species - Coyote, Canis latrans, stands alone as a species
89Coyote and Wolf
- Coyote (Canis latrans) and wolf (Canis lupus)
- share numerous characteristics
- as members of the same genus
- They share some but fewer characteristics
- with the red fox (Volpes fulva)
- in the family Canidae
- All canids share some characteristics with cats,
- bears and weasels in the order Carnivora
- which is one of 18 living orders
- of the class Mammalia
- Shared characteristics
- are evidence for evolutionary relationships
90Biological Evidence Supporting Evolution
- If all existing organisms actually evolved
- from ancestors that lived during the past,
- all life forms should have fundamental
similarities - all living things consist mainly of carbon,
nitrogen hydrogen and oxygen - their chromosomes consist of DNA
- except bacteria which have RNA
- all cells synthesize proteins
- in essentially the same way
91Evolutionary Relationships
- Biochemistry provides evidence
- for evolutionary relationships
- Blood chemistry is similar among all mammals
- Humans blood chemistry is related
- most closely to the great apes
- then to Old World monkeys
- then New World monkeys
- then lower primates such as lemurs
- Biochemical test support the idea
- that birds descended from reptiles
- a relationship also evidenced in the fossil record
92Structures with Similarities
- Homologous structures
- are basically similar structures
- that have been modified for different functions
- They indicate derivation from a common ancestor.
- Analogous structures are structures
- with similarities unrelated
- to evolutionary relationships
- that serve the same function
- but are quite dissimilar
- in both structure and development
93Homologous Structures
- Forelimbs of humans, whales, dogs, and birds
- are superficially dissimilar,
- yet all are made up of the same bones,
- have similar arrangement
- of muscles, nerves and blood vessels,
- are similarlyarranged with respect to other
structures, - have similar pattern of embryonic development
94Analogous Structures
- Wings of insects, birds and bats
- serve the same function but differ considerably
- in structure and embryological development
- Are any of these wings
- both analogous and homologous?
95Vestigial Structures
- Vestigial structures are nonfunctional remnants
- of structures in organisms that were functional
- in their ancestors
- Why do dogs have tiny,
- functionless toes on their feet (dewclaws)?
- Ancestral dogs had five toes
- on each foot,
- all of which contacted the ground
- As they evolved
- they became toe-walkers with only four toes on
the ground - and the big toes and thumbs were lost or reduced
- to their present state
96Remnants of Toes in Horses
- Normally a horses back foot
- has only one functional toe,
- the third
- Splints are small
- remnants of toes 2 and 4
- that remain as vestiges
- Occasionally,
- horses are born
- with one or both
- of these vestiges enlarged
97Evolution in Living Organisms
- Small-scale evolution can be observed today.
- For example
- adaptations of some plants to contaminated soils
- insects and rodents developing resistance to new
insecticides and pesticides - development of antibiotic-resistant strains of
bacteria - Variations in these populations
- allowed some variant types
- to live and reproduce,
- bringing about a genetic change
98What do We Learn from Fossils?
- The fossil record consists
- of first appearances of various organisms
- through time
- One-celled organisms appeared
- before multicelled ones
- plants appeared before animals
- invertebrates before vertebrates
- Fish appeared first followed
- in succession by amphibians,
- reptiles, mammals, and birds
99Advent of Various Vertebrates
- Times when major groups of vertebrates appeared
in the fossil record - Thickness of spindles shows relative abundance
100Fossils Are Common
- Fossils are much more common
- than many people realize
- However the origin and initial diversification
- of a group is generally the most poorly
represented - But fossils showing the diversification
- of horses, rhinoceroses, and tapirs
- from a common ancestor are known
- as are ones showing the origin
- of birds from reptiles
- and the evolution
- of whales from a land-dwelling ancestor
101Horses and Their Relatives
- This cladogram shows the relationship among
- tapirs, rhinoceroses, horses and their extinct
relative - the titanotheres and chalicothers
- which are well documented by fossils
102Horses and Their Relatives
- These might seem an odd assortment of animals
- but fossils and studies of living animals
- indicate that they shared a common ancestor
- As we trace these animals back
- in the fossil record,
- differentiating one from the other
- becomes increasingly difficult
- The earliest members of each group
- are remarkably similar,
- differing mostly in size and details of their
teeth - As their diversification proceeded
- the differences became more apparent
103Never Enough
- Of course, we will never have enough fossils
- to document the evolutionary history
- of all living creatures simply because
fossilization - is an incomplete process
- The remains of some organisms
- are more likely to be preserved than those of
others - and accumulation of sediments
- varies in both space and time
- But several other kinds of evidence
- support the concept of evolution
- including biochemistry, comparative anatomy,
- genetics, molecular biology,
- and small-scale evolution of living organisms
104Summary
- Jean Baptiste de Lamarck proposed
- the first formal theory of evolution
- to be taken seriously
- Inheritance of acquired characteristics
- was his mechanism for evolution
- In 1859 Charles Robert Darwin
- and Alfred Russel Wallace
- published their views on evolution,
- and proposed natural selection
- as the mechanism for evolutionary change
105Summary
- Gregor Mendels breeding experiments
- with garden peas provided some of the answers
- regarding how variation
- is maintained and passed on
- Mendels work is the basis for modern genetics
- Genes are the hereditary determinants
- in all organisms
- This genetic information is carried
- in the chromosomes of cells
- Only the genes in
- the chromosomes of sex cells are inheritable
106Summary
- Sexual reproduction and mutations
- account for most variation in populations
- Evolution by natural selection has 2-steps
- First, variation must be produced
- and maintained in interbreeding populations,
- and second, favorable variants
- must be selected for survival
- An important way by which new species evolve
- is allopathic speciation
107Summary
- When a group is isolated
- from its parent population,
- gene flow is restricted or eliminated,
- and the isolated group is subjected
- to different selection pressures
- Divergent evolution involves
- an ancestral stock giving rise
- to diverse species
- The development of similar adaptive types
- in different groups of organisms results
- from parallel and convergent evolution
108Summary
- Scientists are increasingly using
- cladistic analyses to determine relationships
- among organism,
- but they still show relationships
- using phylogenetic trees
- Extinctions take place continually,
- and times of mass extinctions
- resulting in marked decreases
- in Earths biologic diversity
- have occurred several times
109Summary
- The theory of evolution is truly scientific
- because we can make observations
- that would falsify it
- That is, it could conceivably be proved wrong
- Much of the evidence supporting
- the theory of evolution comes from
- classification, embryology, genetics,
- biochemistry, molecular biology,
- and present-day small-scale evolution
110Summary
- The fossil record also provides evidence
- for evolution in that it shows a sequence
- of different groups appearing through time,
- and some fossils show features
- we would expect in the ancestors of birds
- or mammals, and so on