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Evolution Ch 7 Pt 1

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Title: Evolution Ch 7 Pt 1


1
EvolutionCh 7Pt 1
2
Wooly mammoth skeleton Mammoths lived 2 million
to about 9,000 years ago. They were about 9 to
15 feet tall. Where would scientists look for
possible reasons for extinction?
3
5 mass extinctions1 underway
  • Evidence of five major mass dying of life forms
    on Earth
  • Each is followed by a succession of distinctly
    different organisms which can survive in the
    absence of predecessors
  • Example dinosaurs died
  • Gave way to rise of mammals
  • Eventually humans appear

4
Fossil succession shows
5
Life, as we can best define it
  • The definition must be built on descriptions
    that fit all living things.
  • Living things are both complex and organized
  • Living things grow and reproduce
  • Living things respond to stimuli
  • Living things acquire and use materials and
    energy
  • Living things have (use) DNA to store information

6
Misconceptions aboutevolution
?? Evolution proceeds strictly by chance ??
Evolved species must be more complex than the
predecessor ?? Where are the missing
links? ?? humans evolved from monkeys so monkeys
should no longer exist
7
Theory of Evolution
  • A theory explains a series of observations and
    often unifies related facts through supportive
    evidence.
  • Evolution is based on the observed accumulated
    generation to generation changes within a defined
    group.
  • Evolution accounts for
  • similarities among life forms
  • differences among life forms

8
Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck
  • (1744-1829) is best remembered for his theory of
    Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • -- new traits arise in organisms because of their
    needs and repetitive behaviors to meet those
    needs
  • Acquired traits are somehow passed on to their
    descendants
  • Lamarcks theory seemed logical at the time and
    was widely accepted

9
Lamarks Theory
10
Rethinkingwhy would giraffes develop or
actually express the trait of longer necks over
time?Was the acquired trait passed on?
11
Darwin
  • 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
  • he proposed a mechanism for evolution
  • From 1831 to 1836, he had traveled along the
    southern continents and Europe.

12
What most dont know about Charles Darwin
  • Darwin born in England on Feb. 12, 1809 same
    day as Abraham Lincoln.
  • Father a doctor. Mother affluent (Wedgwood
    pottery family) .
  • Both families were free thinkers and
    philosophers.
  • His private school education was useless for his
    interests his hobbies hunting, observing natural
    world, collecting things, and chemistry.

13
About the same time..
  • James Hutton was promoting his old earth and
    plutonic (igneous) rocks
  • and Abraham Werner promoted Neptunism (all rocks
    precipitate from oceans).
  • Darwin was exposed to Zoomania which promoted
    Lamarckian ideas. Learned taxidermy from a
    former black slave who inspired Darwin with his
    stories of the tropics.

14
And a little more.
  • Off to Cambridge, he studied to be a clergyman.
    Baptized into the Church of England, where it was
    compatible to be a naturalist.
  • He hunted, caroused, and collected beetles.
  • he learned to observe variations within a species
    from botanist and clergyman Professor Henslow.
  • Studied geology with Adam Sedgwick, a
    catastrophism proponent who later named the
    Cambrian system of rocks in England.
  • Learned to do field work and record observations
    meticulously.

15
Darwin spent only 5 weeks in the
Galapagos Islands. Here he made observations
about distinct differences among similaranimals
that were directly related to foodsupply. He
published his ideas in 1859, 24 yrs. later.
Fig. 7-1, p. 115
16
Observation of finchesin the Galapagos Islands
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What Darwin noticed
  • Plant and animal breeders practice artificial
    selection
  • breeding plants and animals with desirable traits
  • A process of selection among variant types in
    nature could also bring about change
  • Thomas Malthuss timely essay on population
    suggested that human competition for resources
    and high infant mortality limited a population
    size

19
Natural Selection (Key Points)The mechanism
  • Organisms in all populations posses heritable
    variations.
  • 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

20
Survival of the Fittest?
  • Natural selection is sometimes expressed as
    survival of the fittest

21
Survival of the Fittest What does it mean??
  • Misconception
  • among animals only the biggest, strongest, and
    fastest are likely to survive
  • Maybe these traits are an advantage-- but natural
    selection may favor species other than the
    obviously bigger, stronger, or faster. Examples?
  • Natural Selection involves differential rates of
    survival and reproductionSurvival of the species
    depends on producing offspring.

22
Again, rethinking
  • 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
  • Others?
  • It helps to know what organisms had survived
    stressful conditions in the past .

23
The peppered moth
Peppered moths had light colouration, which
effectively camouflaged them against the
light-coloured trees and lichens which they
rested upon
During the Industrial Revolution in England, many
of the lichens died out, and the trees that
peppered moths rested on became blackened by soot,
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So, is natural selection the mechanism for
evolution?
  • Natural selection works on existing variations 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

26
Gregor Mendel
  • controlled genetic 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

27
Mendels Work
  • 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)

28
Mendels Work
  • The second generation, when self-fertilized
    produced a third generation with a ratio of three
    red-flowered plants to one white-flowered plant

29
Why is this important?
  • The factors (genes) controlling traits do not
    usually blend during inheritance
  • Traits not expressed in each generation may not
    be lost even if not seen!
  • Some variation in populations results from
    alternate expressions of genes (alleles)
  • Variation can be maintained!
  • Why is variation important to survival of a
    species?

30
Modern Genetics
Complex, double-stranded helical molecules of
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) called chromosomes
are found in cells of all organisms 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
31
Modern Thinking
  • 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 only one
    source of variation

32
Most Importantly
  • 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

33
The Species
  • Species
  • 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
  • When artifically bred in captivity, offspring are
    most often sterile.

34
Remember
  • 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
    (varieties), and with offspring receiving 1/2 of
    their genes from each parent
  • New variations arise by mutations
  • change in the chromosomes or genes

35
Mutations
  • Mutations result in a change in hereditary
    information
  • ONLY mutations that take place in sex cells are
    inheritable,
  • Can be 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 to
    survival!

36
The Species
  • Species
  • 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
  • When artifically bred in captivity, offspring are
    most often sterile.

37
Recipe for a species
  • Speciation is the process by which a new species
    arises 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

38
Variations among Darwins finches were
naturally selected from among the existing
variations within the gene pool and mutations
that may have occurred. What would cause the
selection of the observed variations?
39
Allopatric Speciation
  • Reduction of the area occupied by a species may
    leave a small isolated population
  • Two peripheral isolates evolved into new species
    (i.e. Darwins finches)

40
How long does it take for changes to appear?
  • 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 which eventually bring about new
    species

41
Punctuated Equilibrium
holds that little or no change takes place in a
species during most of its existence then
evolution occurs rapidly
42
Styles 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

43
Divergent Evolution
44
Convergent Evolution
45
Parallel Evolution
46
Evolutionary 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

47
It wouldnt be Geology without Death and
Destruction..
  • 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

48
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
  • so is the evolution of new species that usually
    quickly exploits 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

49
Extinction
  • The mass extinction of dinosaurs and other
    animals at the end of Mesozoic Era is well
    knownbut not the greatest loss of biologic
    diversity!
  • The greatest mass extinction occurred at the end
    of the Paleozoic Era end of Permian
  • More than 90 of all species died out
  • We will discuss these extinctions and their
    possible causes throughout the rest of the term

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Some predictions from the Theory of Evolution
  • Oldest fossil-bearing rocks should have different
    organisms than more recent rocks
  • There should be fossils connecting orders and
    classes of descendant organisms.
  • Closely related species should be similar in
    anatomy, biochemistry, genetics
  • Classification of organisms should show a nested
    pattern of similarities
  • Isolated populations should closely resemble
    nearer populations rather than distant
    ones.Organisms should show a predicted
    succession in the fossil record fish, reptiles,
    mammals
  • Animals that diverged from a common ancestor
    should evolve to be more different over time

52
Homologous or Analagous?
  • Homologous structures
  • Similar structure
  • Different purpose
  • Analagous structures
  • Distinctly different structures
  • Similar purpose Homologous or analagous? See
    Page 148 Text.
  • Forelimb of humans, whales, bats
  • Wings of birds, bats, flies

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