Download Ch 22 Notes

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Unilineal evolution wikipedia , lookup

Ecology wikipedia , lookup

Sexual selection wikipedia , lookup

Natural selection wikipedia , lookup

Vestigiality wikipedia , lookup

Punctuated equilibrium wikipedia , lookup

Acceptance of evolution by religious groups wikipedia , lookup

Evidence of common descent wikipedia , lookup

Evolving digital ecological networks wikipedia , lookup

Catholic Church and evolution wikipedia , lookup

Genetics and the Origin of Species wikipedia , lookup

Hologenome theory of evolution wikipedia , lookup

Adaptation wikipedia , lookup

Transitional fossil wikipedia , lookup

Evolutionary history of life wikipedia , lookup

Paleontology wikipedia , lookup

The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex wikipedia , lookup

Evolution wikipedia , lookup

Theistic evolution wikipedia , lookup

Introduction to evolution wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Ch 22 Notes: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian
View of Life.
Some influential people:
Linnaeus: (1700’S) Specialized in
classification of living things.
Based mostly on physical
appearance. Not always accurate,
because looks can be deceiving.
Used a system based on Latin
names. Binomial, nomenclature.
Had difficulty grouping animals that may look alike but
aren’t related, or animals that look different but are
related.
Malthus: (1700-1800) Wrote about –
disease, famine, homelessness and war…
were a result of not enough resources.
Hutton (1726-97) & Lyell (1795-1875):
Geologists.
 Hutton was saying that things have
changed slowly over time – gradualism.
Geologic Time.
 Lyell observed, Uniformitarianism –
idea that geologic processes are still
going today. Could apply to living
things too… that the same things that
shaped organisms in the past is still
working today.
Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet,
Chevalier de Lamarck
Lamark (early 1800’s) : Came with a early
theory about how species look the way
they do. “Use and disuse” theory. If an
animal used some part, over time it
would become dominant and be passed
on to offspring.
Charles Darwin (1809-1882) Started medical school, but left
to be a clergyman. 1831 after graduation didn’t know what
he wanted to… so he went on a world wide voyage…on the
HMS Beagle as it’s naturalist.
Most famous stop was on the Galapagos Islands. Islands
are isolated from the mainland. Relatively few species.
These species showed some interesting patterns that
Darwin noted.
Darwin’s Inferences:
Observation: Resources are limited.
Inference: Not all can survive.
Observation: Organisms vary (look different)
Inference: Some variations are better suited than others to
survive.
Observation: Traits are heritable.
Inference: Those with the best traits will pass those traits
on.
Returned to England in 1836… was studying his collection.
Noticed the patterns. Applied them to his theory of
“evolution.” Finished major points in 1844… but didn’t
publish it (afraid of the consequences for his family –
thought they’d be shunned). Until 1858… when he received
a letter from Alfred Wallace… then he decided to publish his
essay. He was shunned, but over time his ideas were
accepted. Now they are the dominant thought about how
life appears to have changed over time.
Darwin’s Two Main Points:
 There is evolution over time (descent with modification)
– like a tree with branches.
 Natural Selection is the mechanism by which organisms
change over time.
You can see natural selection happen relatively quickly in
some instances.
- Pepper moths during the industrial revolution
- Cockroaches and “Raid Roach Spray”
- Drug resistant HIV and “super” bacteria
Some other evidence for Natural Selection and Darwinian
evolution.
- Homology. Similar structures in vastly different
organisms. Ex: bones in the arm of a human vs. bones
in the flipper of a dolphin.
- Vestigial Organs. Left-overs from evolution. Ex:
appendix or tailbone. Doesn’t have a function now, but
might have.
- Molecular Homologies ex: chimpanzee hemoglobin
and human hemoglobin…
Embryonic Homologies – similarities when we are
developing as embryos.
Biogeography – distribution of species seems to support a
Darwinian view of evolution. Similar environments seem to
lead to similar traits being favored.
Ex: white colored animals in areas where it snows are not
related, but have the same traits b/c the environment
“selected” that trait.
Fossil Record – A look into the past… to see how organisms
have changed over time. Fossils show some transition
species.