Title: Evolution by Natural Selection
1Chapter 23
- Evolution by Natural Selection
2Outline
- Theories of lifes origins
- Evidence for evolution
- change over time
- relatedness of species
- Theories of evolution
- Darwin
- How natural selection works
- Case studies
3Theories of Species Creation Prior to Evolution
- Theory of Special Creation
- species are immutable/unchanged through time and
independent of one another - all species were created independently by God, as
recently as 6000 years ago - Theory of Spontaneous Generation
- new living organisms appear suddenly when
suitable conditions - flies appear on rotting meat, microbes in old
milk/puddles - some life-forms arise spontaneously
- not all life arises directly from living organisms
4Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection
- Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection
- key theory in biology
- jointly proposed by Darwin and Wallace (1858)
- Darwin described evolution as descent with
modification - ancestral sp. changed over time to become modern
sp. - evolution change in genetic characteristics
(allele frequency) in population over time
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6Evidence for Change Over Time
- Fossils traces of organisms that lived in past
- fossil record fossils that have been found and
described in the scientific
literature - most fossils found in sedimentary rocks
- rocks that form in layers from sand/mud deposited
at locations such
as beaches or river mouths - layers associated w/ different intervals in
geologic time
scale - radioactive isotopes used to assign ages to
geologic time scale - Earth 4.6 BYA, first signs of life 3.85 BYA
7Evidence for Change Over Time
- Extinction of Species
- fossil record provides evidence for sp. unlike
any living sp. - Darwin - evidence that species are dynamic and
change - Law of Succession
- particular geographic area
frequently
contains fossils w/
striking similarity to
living sp.
in same area - Darwin - evidence that extinct
sp.
are ancestors of modern sp.
and sp. change over
time
8Evidence for Change Over Time
- Transitional forms
- many fossils discovered w/ traits intermediate
btwn older and younger sp. - sp. change over time
- Environmental change
- Earth's topography and climate changed
drastically over time - planet and species are dynamic
9Evidence for Change Over Time
- Vestigial Traits
- rudimentary structures that have no function but
are similar to functioning structures in similar
sp. - human coccyx/primate tailbone, human
appendix/vertebrate caecum - trait structure and function change over time
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11Evidence That Species Are Related
- Geographic proximity of similar but distinct
species - similar but distinct sp. often found living in
close geographic area - Darwin collected mockingbirds from Galápagos
islands - superficially similar but different islands had
distinct sp. - Darwin proposed that different island sp. were
similar b/c they had descended w/ modification
from common ancestor - pattern of similar yet distinct sp. common among
islands - related species share phylogeny (family tree)
- phylogenetic tree graphical depiction of
relationships
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13Evidence That Species Are Related
- Homologies similar traits in differing
organisms - structural homology similar morphological
traits in different sp. - bone structures in human arm, horse leg and bat
wing - Darwin interpreted as product of descent w/
modification - developmental homology similar embryo
morphology and/or pattern of tissue
differentiation - all vertebrates have gill pouches and tails early
in development - genetic homology similar DNA sequences of genes
of different sp. - evidence suggests all sp. descended from single
common ancestor - almost all organisms use same 64 mRNA codons to
code for AA
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15Evidence That Species Are Related
- Distinguishing homology from analogy
- homologous structures appear similar and are
similar in structure/organization/function - due to similar descent
- analogous structures appear similar but are
different in structure/organization/function - due to convergent evolution
- occurs when natural selection leads to similar
solns to challenges posed by environment
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18Theories of Evolution
- Idea of evolution predates Darwin
- Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics (Lamarck)
- prior Darwin
- individuals change in response to environment and
changes are passed to next generation - giraffes neck
19Theories of Evolution
- Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection (Darwin
and Wallace, 1858) - sp. are related to one another and change over
time - thus sp. existing today descended from other
preexisting sp. (descent with modification") - natural selection acts on individuals and
individuals w/ certain favorable characteristics
will survive and reproduce more - if the advantageous characteristics are
heritable, traits may be passed to offspring thus
leading to change in population over time
20Darwin and Wallace
- Darwin
- travels on HMS Beagle
- writes paper on evolution in 1842
- does not publish for 17 years
- Wallace
- studies natural history specimens in Malaysia
- writes brief paper outlining evolution by NS
- sends it to Darwin for review in 1858
- Pressure from Wallace spurs Darwin to publish
- Both papers read simultaneously at
Linnean Society of
London in 1858
21How Natural Selection Works
- Populations undergo natural selection when 4
conditions occur - individuals in population vary in traits (i.e.,
size, shape, color, etc.) - variations are heritable (can be passed on to
offspring) - some individuals survive and reproduce better
than others - differential survival and reproduction (Darwinian
fitness) - individuals w/ traits that confer advantage more
likely to survive and reproduce - if favorable traits are heritable then evolution
of population will result (nonrandom selection) - traits that provide reproductive advantage will ?
in frequency - Evolution genetically based change in
population over time - change in allele frequency over time
22How Natural Selection Works
- Fitness ability of individual to survive and
reproduce - fitness estimated by measuring of offspring
produced by one individual vs. another - Adaptation heritable trait that increases an
individual's fitness in a particular environment
relative to individuals lacking that trait
23Case StudyAntibiotic Resistance in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Historical background of TB
- prior to antibiotics TB caused 25 of all
deaths in NYC and 33 of all deaths in Paris in
800s - 1950 to 1990 sanitation, nutrition, and
antibiotics greatly reduced deaths due to TB in
developed nations - late 1980s resurgence in TB in developed
countries due to strains carrying antibiotic
resistance - Patient admitted to hospital in Baltimore with
active TB - patient given rifampin for 40 wks, released when
lung cultures show no bacteria - patient readmitted w/ TB symptoms 2 months later,
lung cultures show TB bacteria - patient given further antibiotic treatment but
dies in 10 days
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25Case StudyAntibiotic Resistance in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Evidence that evolution of resistance in TB
bacteria occurred - TB bacteria from lung cultures at wk 1 sensitive
to rifampin - TB bacteria cultured at wk 48 resistant
- DNA of TB bacteria from wk 1 and 48 sequenced and
compared - differ by 1 nucleotide (point mutation) in gene
for RNA polymerase - wk 1 rifampin binds to RNA polymerase of TB
bacteria, preventing growth of bacteria - wk 48 rifampin does not bind to mutant RNA
polymerase in bacteria, thus functional enzyme
and bacterial growth
26Case StudyAntibiotic Resistance in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- development of antibiotic resistance in TB
patient exhibits 4 conditions of natural
selection - variability in their characteristics (1
variation) - variation is heritable (coded in rpoB gene) (2
heritable) - nonrandom selection occurred
- only bacteria w/ resistance survive to reproduce
(3 survival) - pass resistance to offspring, thereby altering
allele frequency (4 pass traits to offspring and
population evolves)
27Case StudyBeak Size and Shape and Body Size of
Galápagos Finches
- Long-term research on changes in body size and
beak size and shape in medium ground finches show
that drought ? in average beak depth - Another change occurred btwn 1977-8 after seven
mo. rain
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29Case StudyPollinator Effects on Variation in
Alpine Skypilot Plants
- Research on alpine skypilot plants (Polemonium
viscosum) illustrate pollinator preferences led
to habitat-specific natural selection favoring
individuals w/ traits preferred by pollinator - variability (1)
- heritable traits (2)
- quantitative traits (i.e., size,
height, color) usually involve
1
gene and environmental effects - small-flowered plants produce
small-flowered offspring, etc. - strong genetic effect
30Tundra above timberline - pollinated by bumblebees
28 24 20 16 12 8 4 0
individuals
10 12 14 16 18 20 22
Big, long stalks, sweet-smelling
Flower size (mm), Ave 16 mm
Forests below timberline - pollinated by flies
10
8
6
individuals
4
2
0
10 12 14 16 18 20 22
Small, short stalks, skunky
Flower size (mm), Ave 14 mm
31Case StudyPollinator Effects on Variation in
Alpine Skypilot Plants
- Hypothesis NS produced differences in plants
due to bees preference for large, sweet-smelling
flowers - prediction 1 individuals with large flowers
attract more bees - prediction 2 individuals that attract more bees
have ? fitness - Experiment Do bees have preference for larger
flowers? - MM - randomly picked, sweet-smelling flowers
transferred to enclosure, pollinated by bees,
seeds produced counted - results - large flowers w/ tall stalks ? bee
visits ? seeds - conclusions - evidence supports NS postulates 3
(survival) and 4 (more large-flowered offspring)
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33Case StudyPollinator Effects on Variation in
Alpine Skypilot Plants
- Can natural selection of alpine skypilots be
observed in field? - MM allow bees to pollinate plants in field and
hand pollinate different set of plants, collect
seeds, plant them at random locations in field - results bee-pollinated plants offspring w/
large flowers, hand-pollinated plants offspring
w/ small flowers - conclusion bees exert NS pressure
- offspring of bee-pollinated plants had
significantly larger flowers than offspring of
hand-pollinated plants
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35Clarifications Regarding Evolution
- Selection acts on individuals but evolution
occurs in populations - individuals dont change during NS
- some simply produce more viable offspring causing
change in allele frequency in population - acclimation occurs when individual changes in
response to changes in environment - adaptation occurs only when population changes in
response to NS
36Clarifications Regarding Evolution
- Evolution is not progressive
- no such thing as "higher" or "lower" organisms
- instead more ancient and less ancient w/
different
adaptations that allow the groups
to thrive in
different environments
37Clarifications Regarding Evolution
- Not all traits are adaptive
- adaptation is not perfect process
- Some structures may be subject to genetic or
historical constraints - genetic constraints
- when selection on alleles for one trait causes
correlated but suboptimal change in another trait
(genetic correlation) - lack of genetic variation can constrain evolution
- historical constraints
- b/c all traits evolve from previously existing
traits, adaptations constrained by previous
history