History of Life & Evolution - Lake Station Community Schools
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Transcript History of Life & Evolution - Lake Station Community Schools
Evolution
Chapter 16
Early Theory of Evolution
Lamarck, a French biologist, proposed:
◦ That body structures could change according
to the actions of the organism.
◦ Acquired characteristics could be passed on
to any offspring.
◦ He was incorrect, but paved the way for
Darwin.
Developing the Modern Theory of
Evolution
@Charles Darwin published ideas on
how species evolved and they became the
basis of modern evolutionary theory@;
◦ He took a job as a naturalist on the HMS
Beagle where he traveled to South America
and the Galapagos Islands collecting samples
of specimens
◦ He made many observation and after further
experimentation he proposed the process of
natural selection.
Darwin’s observations:
Finches and tortoises had different beaks
and shells/necks depending on diet.
However, all the finches and all the
tortoises have many similar physical
characteristics suggesting a common
ancestor for each.
The differences in the finches and
tortoises was due to adaptation to the
food source.
Natural Selection
@Survival of the fittest, those individuals
better suited to survive@
◦ Darwin wrote “ On the Origin of Species by
means of Natural Selection”, after years of
observations and studying evidence he
collected on the mechanism of change.
4 principles of Natural Selection:
Variation
Heritability
Overproduction
Reproductive advantage
Evolution
@Is cumulative changes in groups of
organisms through time.@
Natural selection is not evolution but it is
the mechanism by which it occurs.
5 Types of Evidences of Evolution
1.
Fossils - Recorded for Earth’s history.
5 Types of Evidences of Evolution
2.
Anatomy
Homologous structures – Similar
structures, Different use or function.
Analogous structures – different structure
but are similar in function.
Vestigial structures – a body part structure
that has no function in a present day organism
but was useful to an ancestor. (ex human appendix)
5 Types of Evidences of Evolution
3.
Chemistry – reveals relationships
between organisms, species, and
individuals.
◦ Using RNA and DNA.
5 Types of Evidences of Evolution
4.
Embryology – through development of a
tail and gill silts can be seen in embryos
of birds, reptiles, and mammals.
5 Types of Evidences of Evolution
5.
Distribution – geographical distribution
Extra Credit Question
What is this fish’s name and
what TV show is it from?
Blinky. The Simpsons
Adaptation
@A trait shaped by natural selection that
increases an organisms reproductive
success.@
Mimicry – is a structural adaptation that enables
one species to resemble another; predator may
avoid them if they look harmful.
Camouflage – an adaptation that enables species
to blend with their surroundings.
Population Genetics
Populations evolve not individuals.
Natural selection acts on poor
phenotypes that will not benefit the
survival of the organism.
Genes in the population are called gene
pool.
5 Mechanisms of Evolution
5 Mechanisms of Evolution
1.
Genetic drift – change in frequency of
gene variations in a population.
Founder’s effect reduction in alleles resulting
from a small group settling in a separate location
away from the rest of the population.
Bottleneck effect is a reduction in alleles
resulting from a chance event that drastically
decreases population size.
5 Mechanisms of Evolution
2.
Genetic flow – migrating individuals
transport genes.
5 Mechanisms of Evolution
3.
Non-random mating – organism
mate with individuals in close proximity.
4.
Mutation – change in genetic material.
Extra Credit Quote
Mutation, it is the key to our evolution. It
has enabled us to evolve from a singlecelled organism into the dominant species
on the planet. This process is slow, and
normally taking thousands and thousands of
years. But every few hundred millennia,
evolution leaps forward.
–Professor X (X-Men 1)
Or
-Dr. Jean Gray (X-Men 2)
5 Mechanisms of Evolution
5. Natural
Selection acts on variation –
“Survival of the fittest”
Types of Natural selection
◦ Stabilizing selection – favors average individuals.
◦ Directional selection – favors one extreme or
the other, example very large or very small.
◦ Disruptive selection – favors individuals of both
extremes.
◦ Sexual selection – changes in
frequencies of traits based on
ability to attract mates.
Speciation
Speciation – evolution of new species.
Allopatric speciation – physical barrier divides a
population into 2 or more population.
Sympatric Speciation – a species evolves into a
new species without physical barriers.
Reproductive isolation occurs when
formerly interbreeding organisms can no
longer mate and produce fertile offspring.
◦ Prezygotic isolation – prevent fertilization
Geography
Behavioral
Mating time
Physical differences
◦ Postzygotic isolation – when fertilization
occurs, prevent hybrid organism from
reproducing. (sterility)
Patterns of Evolution
Adaptive radiation (Divergent evolution) –
when ancestral species evolve into an array
of species to fit number of diverse habitats.
◦ patterns in which similar species become
increasingly different.
Patterns of Evolution
Convergent evolution – patterns of
evolution in which distantly related
organisms evolve similar traits.
Due similar environmental pressures.
Rate of Speciation
Gradualism is the idea of
that species originating
through a gradual change of
adaptation.
Punctuated equilibrium is
rapid speciation, in burst with
long periods of genetic
equilibrium in between.