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AP Environmental Science Focus on Evolution

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AP Environmental Science Focus on Evolution Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution. Theodosius Dobzhansky (1973) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AP Environmental Science Focus on Evolution


1
AP Environmental ScienceFocus on Evolution
  • Nothing in biology makes senseexcept in the
    light of evolution.
  • Theodosius Dobzhansky (1973)

2
Biology during the 1800s
  • Late 18th-early 19th c. was an age of discovery
    and natural history
  • Natural Theology
  • All plants animals were created as is 6,000
    to 10,000 years ago
  • William Paley---a watch demands a watchmaker
    ---a design demands a designer!

3
Great Geological Debate1810-1840
  • Catastrophism
  • Cuvier, Buffon
  • All changes to animals and geology are due to
    sudden cataclysmic events
  • Uniformitarianism
  • Hutton Lyell
  • The earth was shaped by slow, gradual processes
    the we see today.

4
Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
  • Born February 12, 1809 in Shrewsbury, England
  • Education
  • Entered the University of Edinburgh at age 16 to
    study medicine
  • Entered Cambridge Universitys Christ College in
    1828 to study for the ministry

5
Darwins Parents
  • Dr. Robert Darwin
  • Susannah Wedgwood Darwin

6
Darwins Famous Grandfathers
  • Erasmus Darwin
  • Josiah Wedgwood

7
Wedgwood China
8
J.S. Henslow (1796-1861)
  • Darwins favorite botany professor
  • Recommends Darwin to the British Admiralty to
    serve as ships naturalist on the H.M.S. Beagle

9
H.M.S. Beagle
  • Captain Robert FitzRoy
  • Mission was to map the western coast of South
    America for the British Navy
  • Darwin serves as ships naturalist and companion
    to the captain.

10
Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (1831-1836)
11
Galapagos Islands
12
Galapagos Unique Animals
13
Return to England
H.M.S. Beagle by Conrad Martens
  • Publishes what came to be known as the Voyage of
    the Beagle
  • Begins notebook on Transmutation of Species

Title page 1905 edition
14
Settling Down
  • Marries his first cousin Emma Wedgwood on January
    29, 1839
  • Moves into an 18 acre estate in Down, England

15
Darwins Scientific Subjects
Barnacles
16
Establishes a Theory of Atoll Formation
17
Keeping Quiet on Evolution
  • Despite working on transmutation since 1837
    Darwin publicly says nothing.
  • Writes two private essays in 1842 1844.
  • Robert Chambers publishes Vestiges of the Natural
    History of Creation in 1844.
  • Contains evolutionary ideas but is severely
    ridiculed.

18
Alfred Russel Wallace (1823-1913)
  • June 18, 1858
  • Darwin receives a manuscript from Wallace, a
    young naturalist working in the Malay
    Archipelago.
  • On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart
    Indefinitely from the Original Type

19
Joint Presentation
  • On July 1, 1858 Charles Lyell and Joseph Hooker
    present both Darwins 1844 and Wallaces
    manuscripts before the Linnaean Society of
    London.
  • Darwin does not attend due to his sons death
    from scarlet fever three days before.

20
Publication of The Origin
  • Darwin finally publishes his big book, On the
    Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection,
    or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the
    Struggle for Life on November 24, 1859.
  • Its 1250 copies sold out on the first day.

21
Defending Darwin
  • Thomas Henry Huxley - Darwins Bulldog

22
Darwins Five Theories of Evolution
  • 1) Evolution as Such
  • 2) Common Descent
  • 3) Variation Natural Selection
  • 4) Population Thinking and Allopatric
    Speciation
  • 5) Gradualness

23
1) Evolution as Such
  • Change happens!
  • This theory was not new with Darwin.
  • Others like Lamarck had said that change
    happens over 50 years before!
  • However, the majority of scientists in 1859 did
    not believe in evolutionary change.
  • The massive evidence that Darwin presents was so
    overwhelming that within a few years virtually
    every biologist was convinced.

24
What we know now
  • 1 billion years of chemical change to form the
    first cells, followed by about 3.7 billion years
    of biological change.

Figure 4-2
25
Biological Evolution
  • This has led to the variety of species we find on
    the earth today.

Figure 4-2
26
2) Common Descent
  • All organisms have descended from common
    ancestors by a continuous process of branching.
  • Common descent explains so much about comparative
    anatomy, embryology, biogeography,
    systematicsand behavior.
  • Putting humans into this branching tree of common
    descent takes humans away from their privileged
    positionand causes many people to reject the
    idea.
  • What Darwin Doesnt Do
  • Darwin stops short of publishing mans place in
    this evolutionary tree and he never speculates on
    the origins of the first organisms

27
I think
  • Sketch from Darwins 1838 notebook on
    transmutation
  • First clue that Darwin had embraced the idea of
    common descent

28
Common Descent Diagram in The Origin of Species
29
Tetrapod Limb Homologies
30
Comparative EmbryologyOntogeny recapitulates
phylogeny
31
3) Variation Natural Selection
  • 1) Individual variation in organisms within a
    population is the norm not the exception.
  • 2) Populations reproduce at a geometric rate that
    is faster than the environment can support.
  • Thomas Malthus, Essay on Population
  • 3) Some organisms will survivemost will die.
  • 4) Which organisms will live and which will die?
  • Does each individual have an equal chance of
    survival? Darwin says---NO!
  • Those individuals with the best adaptations will
    survive---Natural Selection!

32
Natural Selection and Adaptation Leaving More
Offspring With Beneficial Traits
  • Three conditions are necessary for biological
    evolution
  • Genetic variability,
  • Traits must be heritable,
  • Trait must lead to differential reproduction.
  • An adaptive trait is any heritable trait that
    enables an organism to survive through natural
    selection and reproduce better under prevailing
    environmental conditions.

33
Coevolution A Biological Arms Race
  • Interacting species can engage in a back and
    forth genetic contest in which each gains a
    temporary genetic advantage over the other.
  • This often happens between predators and prey
    species.
  • Or results in symbioses

34
Hybridization and Gene Swapping other Ways to
Exchange Genes
  • New species can arise through hybridization.
  • Occurs when individuals to two distinct species
    crossbreed to produce a fertile offspring.
  • Some species (mostly microorganisms) can exchange
    genes without sexual reproduction.
  • Horizontal gene transfer

35
Limits on Adaptation through Natural Selection
  • A populations ability to adapt to new
    environmental conditions through natural
    selection is limited by its gene pool and how
    fast it can reproduce.
  • Humans have a relatively slow generation time
    (decades) and output ( of young) versus some
    other species.

36
4) Population Thinking Allopatric
Speciation
  • Darwin recognizes that it is populations that
    change, not individuals.
  • Gives rise to population thinking
  • Darwin realizes that varieties are no more than
    incipient species.

37
Geographic Isolation
Figure 4-10
  • Darwin realizes that when a population becomes
    split by geographic barriers that these separate
    populations change in their own unique
    ways---Geographic Isolation.

38
Allopatric Speciation
After a long period of time these changes become
so great that the individuals from the different
populations can no longer reproduce with one
another---Reproductive Isolation
39
5) Gradualness
40
GEOLOGIC PROCESSES, CLIMATE CHANGE, CATASTROPHES,
AND EVOLUTION
  • The movement of solid (tectonic) plates making up
    the earths surface, volcanic eruptions, and
    earthquakes can wipe out existing species and
    help form new ones.
  • The locations of continents and oceanic basins
    influence climate.
  • The movement of continents have allowed species
    to move.

41
Extinction Lights Out
  • Extinction occurs when the population cannot
    adapt to changing environmental conditions.
  • The golden toad of Costa Ricas Monteverde cloud
    forest has become extinct because of changes in
    climate.

Figure 4-11
42
Species and families experiencing mass
extinction
Bar width represents relative number of living
species
Millions of years ago
Era
Period
Current extinction crisis caused by human
activities. Many species are expected to become
extinct within the next 50100 years.
Extinction
Quaternary
Today
Cenozoic
Tertiary
Extinction
65
Cretaceous up to 80 of ruling reptiles
(dinosaurs) many marine species including
many foraminiferans and mollusks.
Cretaceous
Mesozoic
Jurassic
Triassic 35 of animal families, including many
reptiles and marine mollusks.
Extinction
180
Triassic
Permian 90 of animal families, including over
95 of marine species many trees, amphibians,
most bryozoans and brachiopods, all trilobites.
Extinction
250
Permian
Carboniferous
Extinction
345
Devonian 30 of animal families, including
agnathan and placoderm fishes and many trilobites.
Devonian
Paleozoic
Silurian
Ordovician
Extinction
Ordovician 50 of animal families, including
many trilobites.
500
Cambrian
Fig. 4-12, p. 93
43
Effects of Humans on Biodiversity
  • The scientific consensus is that human activities
    are decreasing the earths biodiversity.

Figure 4-13
44
Darwins Later Life
  • Becomes even more reclusive in later life.
  • Publishes extensively, including The Descent of
    Man (1871) and Expressions of the Emotions in Man
    and Animals (1872).
  • Dies of a heart attack on April 19, 1882 and is
    buried in Westminster Abbey near Sir Isaac Newton.

45
Darwins Legacy
  • Darwin moved intellectual thought from a paradigm
    of untestable wonder at special creation to an
    ability to examine the workings of the natural
    world, however ultimately formed, in terms of
    natural mechanisms and historical patternshe in
    effect creates the modern science of biology.

46
Work Cited
  • ""gradualism vs. punctuated equilibrium"." 18
    October 2009 ltlhs2.lps.org/.../U6Evolution/gradual
    ism.gifgt.
  • Biello, David. "Gene Swapping Helps Bacteria."
    Scientific American 21 November 2005.
  • "Cool Bug 9 Acacia ants." 2 October 2007.
    Bioblog Music and Biology in the News . 18
    October 2009 lthttp//bioblog.biotunes.org/bioblog/
    2007/10/02/cool-bug-9-acacia-ants/gt.
  • "Hand in hand saving the coral reef." 13 August
    2008. 18 October 2009 ltcoralreeftoday.com/wp-admin
    /acropodia/1b.jpggt.
  • Martens, Conrad. ""HMS Beagle"." The Voyage of
    the Beagle by Charles Darwin. 18 October 2009
    ltwww.sacred-texts.com/aor/darwin/beagle/beagle.jpg
    gt.
  • Siegel, Robert David. ""Darwin's Finches"." 31
    October 2008. Darwin Safari 2007. 18 October 2009
    lthttp//stanford.edu/siegelr/england/darwinsafari
    2007.htmlgt.
  • Speciation. 30 March 2009. 18 October 2009
    lthttp//users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/Biology
    Pages/S/Speciation.htmlgt.
  • Wyhe, John van. The Complete Works of Charles
    Darwin online. 6 October 2009. 18 October 2009
    ltdarwin-online.org.uk/life14.htmlgt.
  •  
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