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Darwin’s Theory of Evolution The Puzzle of Life’s Diversity Chapter 15-1 Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 WRITE A DEFINITION: EVOLUTION: change over time; the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms THEORY: a well-supported testable explanation of phenomena that have occurred in the natural world FOSSIL: the preserved remains of ancient organisms http://www.millan.net REMEMBER ! The total variety of all the organisms in the biosphere = ________________ BIODIVERSITY Where did all these different organisms come from? How are they related? What scientific explanation can account for the diversity of life? ANSWER: A collection of ______________, Scientific facts observations and ___________ hypotheses __________, known as ________________________ EVOLUTIONARY THEORY The person who contributed the most to our understanding of evolution was Charles Darwin ______________________ http://harrier.users.netlink.co.uk/Darwin_sm.jpg In 1831, at age 22, he joined the crew of H.M.S. Beagle as a naturalist for the _______________ a ________ 5 year voyage around the world. Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 During his travels, Darwin wrote thousands of pages in his journals, drew pictures of the things he saw, and collected a vast evidence amount of ______________ that led him revolutionary hypothesis to propose a _______________________ life changes about the way _____________. http://www.elsie.brandeis.edu/images/journals.gif http://www.24hourmuseum.org.uk/chg/content/images/2003_2233.JPG DARWIN WONDERED? different Why do Argentina and Australia have ________ animals ______ even though they have ________ similar ecosystems grassland ____________? Why are there no rabbits ______ in Australia and no ________ kangaroos in England? Why have so many species disappeared? How are these ______ extinct species related to living species? http://www.rc.umd.edu/praxis/mitchell/images/dinosaur1.gif Who Was Charles Darwin? While on his voyage around the world Beagle Charles Darwin aboard the H.M.S. ____________, spent about one month observing life on the ________________. Galápagos Islands There, he encountered some unique animals, tortoises such as finches ______ and ________. http://www.darwinadventure.com/pictures/galapagos_giantortoise.jpg http://mikebaird.com/ecuador/images/galapagos_off_ecuador_ng_map.jpg The Galάpagos Islands are close together climates but have very different _______. Some were hot and dry, with little vegetation. Others had more rainfall and were rich in vegetation Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 Each island had unique its own _____ _________ assortment of plant and animal species. Giant Tortoises of the Galápagos Islands Section 15-1 and on Pinta Island, tortoise necks were somewhere in between Pinta Pinta Island Tower Marchena Intermediate shell Fernandina James Santa Cruz Isabela Santa Fe Hood Island Floreana Isabela Island Hood Saddle-backed shell On the desert-like Hood Island, tortoises had long necks… Dome-shaped shell …while Go to on the lush rainforest of Isabela Island, Section:tortoises had short necks… After his voyage, Darwin spent a great deal of time thinking about his findings. Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 He began to wonder if animals living on different islands had once been members same species that had of the ____________ developed different _________ characteristics after becoming isolated _______ from one another in different habitats. Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Ideas that Shaped Darwin’s Thinking Chapter 15-2 Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 Ideas that shaped Darwin’s thinking: James Hutton In 1785 ______________ proposes that the EARTH shaped by was _______ geological forces _________________ occurring over very long __________ periods of time, and is millions of years old. _______________ http://www.creationism.org/books/TaylorInMindsMen/TaylorIMMc03.htm Ideas that shaped Darwin’s thinking: Charles Lyell In 1833 ___________ explains that the geological processes still ___________ occurring now have shaped Earth’s features over long periods of time ________________ http://www.biologydaily.com/biology/Sir_Charles_Lyell Ideas that shaped Darwin’s thinking: Theory of Pangaea …and continental drift http://wrgis.wr.usgs.gov/docs/usgsnps/animate/A08.gif http://www.wasatchcomputers.net/gallery/elk_fight.jpg REMEMBER ! Chapter 3 competition Living things must compete for food, shelter, space, mates http://www.nndb.com/people/250/000024178/malthus.jpg Ideas that shaped Darwin’s thinking: Thomas Malthus (1798) _____________________ He observed that babies were being born faster than people were dying. He reasoned that if the human population continued to grow, sooner or later there insufficient space & food would be _______________________ http://www.educa.rcanaria.es/fundoro/00.corsi.htm Ideas that shaped Darwin’s thinking: Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1809) ___________________________ was one of first scientists to recognize living things changed over time and that _______________ all species were descended ________ from other species. Lamarck published his hypothesis of Inheritance of Acquired traits ________________________ the year Darwin was born. The male fiddler crab uses its front claw to _________mates attract predators and fight off _____________. repeated use, the Through _________ front claw becomes ________. larger The fiddler passes on this acquired __________ characteristic to its offspring http://www.geocities.com/arnold_schwarzenegger_pictures/ What’s wrong with Lamarck’s hypothesis? Lamarck didn’t know about genes and how traits are inherited _______. If you lifted weights your whole young adult life, and then you had children, would your kids be more muscular? ACQUIRED traits can ____ PASSED ON NOT be __________ NO! ________ to their offspring. What’s right with Lamarck’s hypothesis? Lamarck was first to develop a scientific hypothesis about evolution _______ and recognize that organisms are adapted to their environments ________________________ http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~he599900/giraffeeating.jpg Match the letter of the idea with the man or men who proposed it: Malthus Hutton Lyell a. b. c. d. Lamarck The earth is really old, and slowly changes Living things pass changes on to their offspring, leading to species changes Sooner or later growing populations run out of resources Living things change slowly over time because of competition for resources, and pass those changes on to their offspring Go to Section: c. Malthus Hutton a. Lamarck Lyell b. d. a. b. c. d. The earth is really old, and slowly changes Living things pass changes on to their offspring, leading to species changes Sooner or later growing populations run out of resources Living things change slowly over time because of competition for resources, and pass those changes on to their offspring Go to Section: Concept Map Section 15-3 Evidence of Evolution includes The fossil record Geographic distribution of living species Homologous body structures Similarities in early development which is composed of which indicates which implies which implies Physical remains of organisms Common ancestral species Similar genes Similar genes Go to Section: Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Darwin Presents his Case Chapter 15-3 Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 • http://groups.wfu.edu/ModelUN/images/Cover/Oranges.jpg http://www.fx.clemson.edu/~ablank/126436919.Broccoli.jpg http://www.butterball.com/en/images/plan_n_prep/preparing/carving1.jp THINK ABOUT IT •What do oranges, broccoli and •Butterball turkeys have to do •with EVOLUTION? •(Answers to come in this slide show!) •After Darwin returned to England in 1836 •he filled notebooks with his ideas •about species _____________ diversity and the process •that he would later call evolution _______. •He did not rush to publish his ideas •because they ________ with the disagreed______ of his •fundamental scientific beliefs •day. •He asked his wife to publish •his ideas when he ___. died http://www.elsie.brandeis.edu/images/journals.gif •In 1858 another naturalist, Alfred Russel Wallace wrote an •_________________, •essay describing his work in Malaysia _______ that •summarized the same ideasDarwin _____ had •been thinking about for 25 years! http://www.thesecondevolution.com/wallace&darwin.jpg •Suddenly Darwin had incentive to publish •the results of his work! •In 1859 On the Origin of Species •____________________ •presented evidence _______ •and proposed a mechanism •________ for evolution •that he called NATURAL SELECTION •__________________ http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/world/images/s125.jpg Isn’t evolution just a theory? A theory is well-supported a ____________, testable _______, explanation of phenomena that have occurred in the natural world, like gravitational the theoryattraction of cell __________________, theory atomic theory ________, and _____________. http://www.avgoe.de/StarChild/DOCS/STARCH00/questions/apple_falling.gif http://sixthsense.osfc.ac.uk/chemistry/atomic_structure2/atom.g •WHAT IS DARWIN’S THEORY? VARIATION is found • GENETIC _________________ • naturally in all populations http://www3.nationalgeographic.com/animals/images/primary/zebra-herd.jpg •WHAT IS DARWIN’S THEORY? STRUGGLE FOR EXISTANCE •______________________ •means that members of each species •mustCOMPETE ________ for food, space, and •otherRESOURCES __________. http://www.wasatchcomputers.net/gallery/elk_fight.jpg •WHAT IS DARWIN’S THEORY? •Some organisms in a population ________ likely to survive. •are less ________ http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/rrs/lowres/rrsn69l.jpg •WHAT IS DARWIN’S THEORY? OF THE FITTEST • SURVIVAL _____________________ organisms which are better adapted to survive the environment will ______ and reproduce passing on their _____. genes ________, http://www.poster.net/bedard/bed202.jpg •VOCAB http://www.cartoonstock.com/newscartoons/cartoonists/cga/lowres/cgan170l.jpg •Ability of an individual tosurvive ______ and reproduce in its specific •____________ •environment •=fitness ______ •VOCAB characteristic that •Any inherited ___________________ of survival •increases an organism’schance ______________ •= ADAPTATION _____________ http://www.wildlife-traps.com/skunks.html http://www.3kitty.org/travelrama/Photos/123-21-4x6.jpg http://www.atomtigerzoo.com/photos/images/20060421233733_duckfeet.jpg WHAT IS DARWIN’S THEORY? Over time, natural selection CHANGES in the results in ________ inherited characteristics of a POPULATION __________. increase a These changes ______ species’ fitness _____ in its environment. How Does Evolution Really Work? WHAT IS DARWIN’S THEORY? DESCENT WITH MODIFICATION ____________________________ suggests that each species has DESCENDED with CHANGES ___________, ________, from other species over time. This idea suggests that all living TO EACH OTHER species are RELATED ____________________, and that all species, living and extinct, COMMON ANCESTOR share a _________________. • EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION: Artificial selection 1. ________________ 2. ________________ Fossil record Geographic Distribution • 3. _______________ Homologous structures • 4. _______________ • 5. _______________ Embryology • 6.DNA _______________ • 7.See _______________ Natural selection happen • ARTIFICIAL SELECTION WORKS NATURE •In artificial selection, ____________ •provides the _________ variation through •_________ and _________________ mutation sexual reproduction select those traits that •andhumans ______________ they find ______. useful http://www.pp3moo.com/hm2cow.jpg EX: We have selected for and bred cows to produce more milk, turkeys with more breast meat, etc. http://lazerbrody.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/turkey.gif Breeds of Dogs Chihuahua – bred from Techichi of Mexico by Mayans, had religious significance Saint Bernard – bred by monks around 1050 A.D to rescue travelers of mountain passes in the Swiss Alps between Italy and Switzerland Irish Wolfhound – bred in Ireland to hunt wolves and elk Dachshund – bred in Germany as early as the 15th century to hunt badgers SLIDE FROM: BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 ARTIFICIAL SELECTION WORKS •____________________________ BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 • http://groups.wfu.edu/ModelUN/images/Cover/Oranges.jpg http://www.fx.clemson.edu/~ablank/126436919.Broccoli.jpg http://www.butterball.com/en/images/plan_n_prep/preparing/carving1.jp THINK ABOUT IT •Now you know what broccoli and Butterball turkeys have to do with evolution! •(Answers about oranges to come in this slide show!) How Do We Know Evolution Happens? 2. The Fossil Record – Fossils remains ______ are the _______ _________________ of ancient organisms found in layers of rock in the Earth. How Do We Know Evolution Happens? The layers of rock tell the history of the Earth _____, while the fossils _____ found within the rock tell a history of life ___. The fossils are thought same age as to be the ________ the rock they are found in. Movement of Earth’s Crust Section 15-2 Earthquakes and volcanoes cause uplifting of the layers of the Earth, taking the fossils along Sea level Fish die in the ocean and are covered in sediment. Over time and under increasing pressure, the remains becomes fossilized Sedimentary rocks form in horizontal layers. When part of Earth’s crust is compressed, a bend in a rock forms, tilting the rock layers. As the surface erodes due to water, wind, waves, or glaciers, the older rock surface is exposed. Fossils of marine fish found on the mountainsides of southwest Wyoming, which at one time was covered by an inland sea TRANSITIONAL FOSSILS HAVE BEEN FOUND Scientific American; Dec 2005; Vol 293; p100-107 If Darwin’s theory is correct you would expect to find closely ____________ related yet _______________ different species living in a _________ geographic region as they spread into nearby habitats and evolve. That’s EXACTLY what we do see! http://www.newtonswindow.com/problem-solving.htm •REMEMBER THE GALAPAGOS TORTOISES Intermediate vegetation Intermediate necks Little vegetation Long necks Image from: BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publisher©2006 Lots of vegetation Short necks Tortoises adapted to different habitats as they spread from the mainland to the different islands. = DIVERGENT EVOLUTION = ADAPTIVE RADIATION http://images.encarta.msn.com/xrefmedia/aencmed/targets/illus/ilt/T014608A.gif •GALAPAGOS FINCHES The _____ beaks of Galapagos finches have adapted ______ to eating a variety _____ of foods _____. If Darwin’s theory is correct you would species also expect to find different _______________ living in far ________ apart geographic regions but similar habitats becoming more ________ alike similar ecosystems as they adapt to ______________. That’s EXACTLY what we do see! http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/gallery/descript/TigerShark/scars.J http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/guides/456900/456973/html/nn1page1.stm Whales and sharks have a _____ similar body design different organisms even though they are very _______ (one is a fish; the other, a mammal) because they have _________________ independently adapted to living in a _____ similar environment. = CONVERGENT EVOLUTION Whales are closely related to wolves, but don’t look or act much like them = divergent evolution Conclusion: The pressure of the environment drives evolution Whales are distantly related to sharks, but look and act more like them = convergent evolution Section 15-3 Geographic Distribution of Living Species Beaver Beaver and capybara are closely-related species ______________ _______ different living in very ________ environments, while beaver and musk-rat are distantly-related _______________ species similar _______ living in a ______ environment. Differences between beaverdivergent and capybara show _________ evolution, while similarities between beaver and convergent muskrat show Beaver NORTH AMERICA Muskrat Muskrat Beaver and Muskrat Coypu Capybara Capybara SOUTH AMERICA Coypu Coypu and Capybara Differences between _____________ closely-related muskrat and coypu divergent show _________ evolution, while similarities between distantly-related ______________ capybara and coypu show convergent ___________ evolution. Structures 4. HOMOLOGOUS _____________________ Image from: http://www.angelfire.com/ab7/evolution12/evolutionclues.html 4. Homologous Body Structures – Structures, like the limbs of vertebrates, look very different _______, but are made from the __________, same bones because they are made from the same clump of undifferentiated _____________ cells in the embryo _______. Image from: Section 15-3 Turtle Figure 15– 15 Homologous Body Structures Alligato r Ancient lobe-finned fish Bird Mammal 4. Homologous Body Structures – Some homologous _______________________ body structures are vestigial _______ and have no useful function even though they are still present, likehipbones ________in whales and boa constrictors, or atail ____ and ________________in cecum (appendix) humans. http://www.txtwriter.com/backgrounders/Evolution/EVpage12.html • Most mammals have a pouch between their small and large intestine that contains bacteria cecum to digest plants called a _____. In humans the cecum is shrunken and unused. appendix It is our _________ http://www.medicalgeo.com/images/appendix.gif Why grow a tail and then lose it? •HUMAN EMBRYO •________________ has a tail at 4 weeks _ tail http://www.suite101.com/files/topics/6234/files/tail_HumanTail.gif Tail disappears at •________________ about 8 weeks _ •________________ _ • Skinks are a type of lizard. In some species, legs have become so small they no longer _______ • function ______ in walking. Why would an organism possess organs with ___ little or no function ________________? One explanation: code is present to make the organ, but The gene ________ function has been lost through ______________. change over time _________________ If the organ is not vital to survival, then natural selection would not cause its elimination. http://www.medicalgeo.com/images/appendix.gif 5. Similarities _____________________ in Embryology ________ Embryos of many animals with backbones are very similar. Image from: http://calspace.ucsd.edu/virtualmuseum/litu/03_3.shtml It is clear that the same groups of undifferentiated _____________ cells develop in the same order to produce the same tissues and organs of all vertebrates, suggesting that they allevolved _______ from common a _______________. ancestor Image from: http://io.uwinnipeg.ca/~simmons/16cm05/1116/16anim3.htm Similarities in DNA 6. _______________ Similarities DNA and in ____ PROTEIN ________ sequences suggest relatedness Image from: BIOLOGY AP EDITION by Campbell and Reece; Prentice Hall Publishing©20 Human- 46 chromosomes Chimpanzee- 48 chromosomes karyotypes suggest an Similar _________ evolutionary relationship ___________________. Human: http://www.nationmaster.com/wikimir/images/upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/18/300px-Human_karyogram.png Chimpanzee: Middle School Life Science , published by Kendall/Hunt. BANDING PATTERN MATCHES 1. ________________________ If you take the two smaller chromosomes apes have that we don’t, and place them banding end to end, the ______ _______________ pattern is identical to the we #2 human chromosome __ have that they don’t ________________. http://www.evolutionpages.com/chromosome_2.htm TELOMERES IN MIDDLE 2. ____________________ Chromosomes have special sequences called telomeres _______ at their ends to protect the strands during replication. http://joannenova.com.au/Speaking/Morslids.html 2. TELOMERES IN MIDDLE Telomere sequences are the ends and found at __________ ALSO IN THE MIDDLE _____________________ of human chromosome #2 suggesting it was made by fusing _____ two other chromosomes together. → → → http://www.evolutionpages.com/chromosome_2.htm EXTRA CENTROMERE 3. _________________ Chromosome #2 has a INACTIVE second __________ CENTROMERE region _____________ → http://www.evolutionpages.com/chromosome_2.htm • http://groups.wfu.edu/ModelUN/images/Cover/Oranges.jpg http://www.fx.clemson.edu/~ablank/126436919.Broccoli.jpg http://www.butterball.com/en/images/plan_n_prep/preparing/carving1.jp THINK ABOUT IT •What do oranges, broccoli and •Butterball turkeys have to do •with EVOLUTION? •(Answers to come in this slide show!) Did you ever wonder why dogs and cats don’t need to eatfresh ________, fruit YOU but DO _______? http://www.naturescornermagazine.com/NaturesBlog/images/dog%20care%20in%20summer.jpg http://www.alpo.com/where.aspx Fish, amphibians, reptiles, and most mammals can make their own VITAMIN C but humans need to eat _________, fresh fruit or they end up with ________. SCURVY http://www.med.uc.edu/departme/cellbiol/Image7.gif http://www.rachelleb.com/images/2005_02_22/scurvy.jpg Human DNA contains the gene that codes for the enzyme to make vitamin C, but it is NONFUNCTIONAL ________________. Guess what other group of organisms lack the ability to make their own PRIMATES… Vitamin C? which includes chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas, and other apes. http://groups.wfu.edu/ModelUN/images/Cover/Oranges.jpg Humans have many other nonfunctional vestigial genes called ________________. PSEUDOGENES EX: Humans have more than 99 different odor receptor genes, but more than 70% of them nonfunctional are ___________. http://www.animationplayhouse.com/new/dogs2.html http://unraveling.typepad.com/photos/uncategorized/nose_1.jpg WHY DOES EVOLUTION MATTER NOW? Can see Natural selection happen 7.____________________________ EX: Peppered Moths Typica Carbonaria There is a natural variation in populations of peppered moths. Typica form - lighter ________________ Carbonaria form - darke _________________ __ http://www.hipusa.com/eTools/webmd/A-Z_Encyclopedia/tuberculosis.jpg http://www.hhmi.org/askascientist/images/hiv.gif The light ___________ colored form was the predominant form in England prior to the Industrial Revolution _____________________________. darker Around the middle of the 19th century the ______ form began to appear. It was first reported dark in 1848. By 1895 98% of the moths in Manchester were the ____ variety. In recent years, the burning of cleaner fuels and Clean Air regulations has reduced the lighter pollution there and the ______ colored moths have increased in numbers. http://www.hipusa.com/eTools/webmd/A-Z_Encyclopedia/tuberculosis.jpg 7.____________________________ Can see Natural selection happen EX: Changes in disease-causing microbes that produce new organisms and new __________. diseases Bird flu _______ HIV ___ http://www.hhmi.org/askascientist/images/hiv.gif Antibiotic-resistant tuberculosis __________________________ http://www.hipusa.com/eTools/webmd/A-Z_Encyclopedia/tuberculosis.jpg Should the Use of Antibiotics Be Restricted? Read the Issues in Biology article on p. 403 in your text. Then watch the video Why Does Evolution Matter Now and discuss the question: Should the use of antibiotics be restricted? PBS EVOLUTION VIDEO CLIPS •Isn’t Evolution Just a Theory? • QuickTime •Who was Charles Darwin? • QuickTime •How Do we Know Evolution Happens? • QuickTime •How Does Evolution Really Work? • QuickTime | •Why Does Evolution Matter Now? • QuickTime •Why is Evolution Controversial Anyway? • QuickTime