Title: Introduction to Evolution Biology
1Introduction to EvolutionBiology Ch 16
Where did all organisms come from? Why such
variety?
2Darwins Voyage
Five year voyage around the world collecting
1000s of specimens recording 1000s pages of
notes
3Darwins Observations
- Patterns of Diversity
- Different parts of the world exhibited slightly
different, - but similar organisms
- Similar phenotypes
- Africa and South America
- Galapagos Islands
- see next slide!
- Fossil evidence
- Ancient similar organisms?
- Culminate in Theory of Evolution
4Galapagos Tortoises
Different islands different tortoise shells
5Galapagos Finches
6(No Transcript)
7Darwins Influenced by others
- The world is ancient and continually changing
- MUCH older than previously thought
- Continually changes not fixed
- Populations grows faster than the environment can
support them - Leads to competition for existing resources
food, shelter, locations - Characteristics are inherited, not acquired
during a lifetime - Characteristics that allow organisms to survive
better can reproduce more offspring - The survival trait gets passed on to offspring
8Darwins Concepts
- Inherited Variation
- Observed that members of any species vary from
one another in nature - Observed that breeders are able to get desired
traits in animals by breeding together those
animals that exhibit the wanted traits - The traits randomly occurred in nature
- Named Artificial selection since helped by
humans
9- Struggle for existence
- Organisms produce more offspring than can
naturally survive - Produces a struggle for existence resources,
space, mates
10- Survival of the Fittest
- Struggle for existence led to only the most fit
surviving and having offspring - The ability of an individual to survive and
reproduce in an environment is fitness - Anatomical
- Structural
- Behavioral
(The BEST definition)
11- With time, natural selection results in changes
in the inherited traits of a population. These
changes can increase a species fitness in an
environment.
Descent with Modification Over a vey long period
of time, natural selection produces organisms
that have different structures, establish
different ways of surviving, or occupy different
habitats so that organisms today look different
from their ancestors
12Evolution Evidence
- Fossils showed that organisms have been around
and changing for millions of years - Geographical distribution of living species
similarity of species around the world in similar
environments - Homologous structures of living organisms
similar anatomical structures in different
species led to the idea that they may have had a
common ancestor - Similar embryonic development embryos of many
animals with backbones look similar
13Fossil Evidence
14Geographic Distribution of Living Organisms
15Homologous Body Structures
16Similar embryonic development
17Summary of Darwins Theory
- Individual organisms differ - some of these
variations are heritable - Organisms produce more offspring than can
survive. Some survivors do not reproduce - Due to overcrowding in an environment, there is
competition for limited resources - Each organism has unique characteristics that can
help it survive or not. Individuals that have
characteristics that allow them to survive and
reproduce successfully, produce more offspring
and pass along these traits to their offspring.
(Survival of the fittest) - Species alive today have descended, and changed,
from ancestors in the distant past (Descent with
modification)