Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 25 and 26 • Past organisms were very different from those now alive • macroevolutionary The fossil record shows ______________________ changes over large time scales including – terrestrial The emergence of ________________ vertebrates – photosynthesis The origin of __________________ – mass extinctions Long-term impacts of _________ Conditions on early Earth made the origin of life possible • Chemical and physical processes on early Earth may have produced very simple cells through a sequence of stages: Abiotic 1. _______________ synthesis of small organic molecules macromolecules 2. Joining of these small molecules into _____________________ “protobionts” 3. Packaging of molecules into _____________________ self-replicating 4. Origin of ________________________ molecules Synthesis of Organic Compounds on Early Earth • Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago, along with the rest of the solar system • Earth’s early atmosphere likely contained water vapor and chemicals released by volcanic eruptions (nitrogen, nitrogen oxides, carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide) • A. I. Oparin and J. B. S. Haldane hypothesized that the early atmosphere was a reducing environment • Stanley Miller and Harold Urey conducted lab experiments that showed that abiotic synthesis the ______________________ of organic molecules in a reducing atmosphere is possible Protobionts • Replication metabolism _____________ and ___________________ are key properties of life • Protobionts ________________ are aggregates of abiotically produced molecules surrounded by a membrane or membrane-like structure • Protobionts exhibit simple reproduction and metabolism and maintain an internal chemical environment Self-Replicating RNA and the Dawn of Natural Selection • RNA The first genetic material was probably ________, not DNA • ribozymes RNA molecules called ____________ have been found to catalyze many different reactions – For example, ribozymes can make complementary copies of short stretches of their own sequence or other short pieces of RNA • self-replicating catalytic RNA Early protobionts with ____________________, ___________________ would have been more effective at using resources and would have increased in number through natural selection • The early genetic material might have formed an “RNA world” 1/ Remaining “parent” isotope 1 2 Accumulating “daughter” isotope 1/ 2 4 Time (half-lives) 1/ 3 8 1/ 16 4 Radiocarbon dating can be used to date fossils up to 75,000 years old For older fossils, some isotopes can be used to date sedimentary rock layers above and below the fossil Fig. 25-4 Present Rhomaleosaurus victor, a plesiosaur Dimetrodon Casts of ammonites Hallucigenia Coccosteus cuspidatus Dickinsonia costata Stromatolites Tappania, a unicellular eukaryote Fossilized stromatolite Humans Colonization of land Animals Origin of solar system and Earth 4 1 Proterozoic 2 Archaean 3 Multicellular eukaryotes Single-celled eukaryotes Atmospheric oxygen Prokaryotes Photosynthesis and the Oxygen Revolution • Most atmospheric oxygen (O2) is of biological origin • cyanobacteria The source of O2 was likely bacteria similar to modern _________________ • By about 2.7 billion years ago, O2 began accumulating in the atmosphere and rusting iron-rich terrestrial rocks • This “oxygen revolution” from 2.7 to 2.2 billion years ago – Posed a challenge for life – Provided opportunity to gain energy from light – Allowed organisms to exploit new ecosystems The First Eukaryotes • The oldest fossils of eukaryotic cells date back 2.1 billion years • endosymbiosis The hypothesis of ________________ proposes that mitochondria and plastids (chloroplasts and related organelles) were formerly small prokaryotes living within larger host cells • The prokaryotic ancestors of mitochondria and plastids probably gained entry undigested prey internal parasites to the host cell as __________________ or ________________________ • In the process of becoming more interdependent, the host and endosymbionts would have become a single organism • Serial endosymbiosis _______________________ supposes that mitochondria evolved before plastids through a sequence of endosymbiotic events • Key evidence supporting an endosymbiotic origin of mitochondria and plastids: – inner membrane Similarities in ____________________ structures and functions – Division _____________ is similar in these organelles and some prokaryotes – own DNA These organelles transcribe and translate their _____________ – ribosomes Their _________________ are more similar to prokaryotic than eukaryotic ribosomes Plasma membrane Cytoplasm Ancestral prokaryote DNA Endoplasmic reticulum Nuclear envelope Nucleus Plasma membrane Cytoplasm Ancestral prokaryote DNA Endoplasmic reticulum Nucleus Nuclear envelope Aerobic heterotrophic prokaryote Photosynthetic prokaryote Mitochondrion Ancestral heterotrophic eukaryote Mitochondrion Plastid Ancestral photosynthetic eukaryote The Origin of Multicellularity • The evolution of eukaryotic cells allowed for a greater range of unicellular forms • multicellularity A second wave of diversification occurred when _________________ evolved and gave rise to algae, plants, fungi, and animals Adaptive Radiations • Adaptive radiation is the evolution of diversely adapted species from a common ancestor _______________________ upon introduction to new environmental opportunities • allopatric speciation The break-up of Pangaea lead to ______________________ • The current distribution of fossils reflects the movement of continental drift • For example, the similarity of fossils in parts of South America and Africa is consistent with the idea that these continents were formerly attached Worldwide Adaptive Radiations • Mammals underwent an adaptive radiation after the extinction of dinosaurs ________________ • The disappearance of dinosaurs (except birds) allowed for the expansion of mammals in diversity and size • photosynthetic prokaryotes large Other notable radiations include ________________________, land plants insects, and tetrapods predators in the Cambrian, ___________, Regional Adaptive Radiations • Adaptive radiations can occur when organisms colonize new environments with little competition • The Hawaiian Islands are one of the world’s great showcases of adaptive radiation Cenozoic Present Eurasia Africa 65.5 South America India Madagascar 251 Mesozoic 135 Paleozoic Millions of years ago Antarctica 800 700 15 600 500 10 400 300 5 200 100 0 Era Period 542 E O Paleozoic S D 488 444 416 359 C Tr P 299 251 Mesozoic C J 200 145 Time (millions of years ago) Cenozoic P 65.5 N 0 0 Number of families: Total extinction rate (families per million years): 20 Changes in Rate and Timing • • Newborn 2 5 Age (years) 15 Adult (a) Differential growth rates in a human Chimpanzee fetus Chimpanzee adult Human fetus Human adult (b) Comparison of chimpanzee and human skull growth • Heterochrony _________________ is an evolutionary change in the rate or timing of developmental events It can have a significant impact on body shape The contrasting shapes of human and chimpanzee skulls are the result of small changes in relative growth rates • • • reproductive Heterochrony can alter the timing of _______________ development relative to the development of nonreproductive organs paedomorphosis In ________________, the rate of reproductive development accelerates compared with somatic development The sexually mature species may retain body features that were juvenile ancestral species structures in an __________________ Gills 1.2 bya: First multicellular eukaryotes 2.1 bya: First eukaryotes (single-celled) 535–525 mya: Cambrian explosion (great increase in diversity of animal forms) 3.5 billion years ago (bya): First prokaryotes (single-celled) Millions of years ago (mya) 500 mya: Colonization of land by fungi, plants and animals Origin of solar system and Earth 4 1 Proterozoic 2 Archaean 3 Investigating the Tree of Life • history Phylogeny is the evolutionary ___________ of a species or group of related species • The discipline of systematics classifies organisms and determines their relationships evolutionary _________________ • Systematists use fossil, molecular, and genetic data to infer evolutionary relationships • division and ____________ naming Taxonomy is the ordered __________ of organisms • taxon A taxonomic unit at any level of hierarchy is called a _____________ • Systematists depict evolutionary relationships in branching phylogenetic trees ____________________________ • A phylogenetic tree represents a hypothesis about evolutionary relationships • Each branch point represents the divergence of two species • common Sister taxa are groups that share an immediate ___________ ancestor taxons Order Family Genus Species Taxidea Taxidea taxus Lutra Mustelidae Panthera Felidae Carnivora Panthera pardus Lutra lutra Canis Canidae Canis latrans Canis lupus The connection between classification and phylogeny Sorting Homology from Analogy • When constructing a phylogeny, systematists need to distinguish whether a homology analogy similarity is the result of _____________ or _____________ • shared ancestry Homology is similarity due to ____________________ • convergent Analogy is similarity due to __________________ evolution Cladistics • common descent Cladistics groups organisms by ____________________ • A clade is a group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants • Clades can be nested in larger clades, but not all groupings of organisms qualify as clades Cladogram - a tree constructed from a series of dichotomies or two-way branch points A valid clade ismonophyletic _______________, signifying that it consists of the ancestor species and all its descendants paraphyletic A _______________ grouping consists of an ancestral species and some, but not all, of the descendants polyphyletic A _______________ grouping consists of various species that lack a common ancestor A A A B B C C C D D D E E F F F G G G B Group I (a) Monophyletic group (clade) Group II (b) Paraphyletic group E Group III (c) Polyphyletic group Shared Ancestral and Shared Derived Characters • In comparison with its ancestor, an organism has both shared and derived characteristics • shared ancestral character A ______________________________ is a character that originated in an ancestor of the taxon • shared derived character A ______________________________ is an evolutionary novelty unique to a particular clade • A character can be both ancestral and derived, depending on the context Inferring Phylogenies Using Derived Characters • When inferring evolutionary relationships, it is useful to know in which clade a shared derived character first appeared Constructing a phylogenetic tree An outgroup is a species or group of species that is closely related to the ingroup, the various species being studied Systematists compare each ingroup species with the outgroup to differentiate between shared derived and shared ancestral characteristics TAXA Lancelet Tuna Leopard (outgroup) Vertebral column (backbone) 0 1 1 1 1 1 Hinged jaws 0 0 1 1 1 1 Lamprey Tuna Vertebral column Salamander Hinged jaws Four walking legs 0 0 0 1 1 1 Turtle Four walking legs Amniotic (shelled) egg 0 0 0 0 1 1 Hair 0 0 0 0 0 1 Amniotic egg (a) Character table Leopard Hair (b) Phylogenetic tree • Maximum parsimony ______________________ assumes that the tree that requires the fewest evolutionary events (appearances of shared derived characters) is the most likely • The principle of maximum likelihood states that, given certain rules about how DNA changes over time, a tree can be found that reflects the most likely sequence of evolutionary events • Computer programs are used to search for trees that are parsimonious and likely Human Mushroom Tulip 0 30% 40% 0 40% Human Mushroom 0 Tulip (a) Percentage differences between sequences 15% 5% 5% 15% 15% 10% 20% 25% Tree 1: More likely Tree 2: Less likely (b) Comparison of possible trees Species I Species III Species II Three phylogenetic hypotheses: I I III II III II III II I From Two Kingdoms to Three Domains • Early taxonomists classified all species as either plants or animals • Later, five kingdoms were recognized: Monera (prokaryotes), Protista, Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia • More recently, the three-domain system has been adopted: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya • The three-domain system is supported by data from many sequenced genomes A Simple Tree of All Life • eukaryotes archaea The tree of life suggests that _______________ and ____________ are bacteria more closely related to each other than to __________________ • The tree of life is based largely on rRNA genes, as these have evolved slowly • interchanges There have been substantial ___________________ of genes between organisms in different domains • Horizontal gene transfer is the movement of genes from one genome _________________________ to another • Horizontal gene transfer complicates efforts to build a tree of life EUKARYA Dinoflagellates Forams Ciliates Diatoms Red algae Land plants Green algae Cellular slime molds Amoebas Euglena Trypanosomes Leishmania Animals Fungi Sulfolobus Green nonsulfur bacteria Thermophiles Halophiles (Mitochondrion) COMMON ANCESTOR OF ALL LIFE Methanobacterium ARCHAEA Spirochetes Chlamydia Green sulfur bacteria BACTERIA Cyanobacteria (Plastids, including chloroplasts)