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EVOLUTION Click this The Unifying Concept • “Nothing in biology makes sense, except in the light of evolution.” • Theodosius Dobzhansky • Evolution: The descent of modern organisms with modification from pre-existing life-forms; strictly speaking, any change in the proportions of different genotypes in a population from one generation to the next All Life Shares a Common Ancestry Are the these organisms... …related? EXAMPLE • Some distant ancestor of today’s elephants is also the ancestor of the extinct mammoths • If we follow this line back far enough, it links up with other ancestors of other organisms which ultimately links up with the HUGE tree of life, linking ALL organisms Darwin’s Conclusion 1 • There is competition for survival and reproduction. In each generation, many individuals must die young, fail to reproduce, produce few offspring, or produce less fit offspring that fail to survive and reproduce in their turn Conclusion 2 • The most well-adapted individuals in any generation tend to be the ones that leave the most offspring Conclusion 3 • Over many generations, differential or unequal, reproduction among individuals with different genetic makeup changes the overall genetic composition of the population How do we know evolution has occurred? • What do you think? • Fossil record, comparative anatomy, embryology, biochemistry, and genetics The Fossil Record • The fossil record shows a slow change over time • We see a progressive series of fossils leading from an ancient, primitive form, through intermediate stages culminating in the modern form The best example we have • The fossil record of the horse is the best example of this • That of elephants, giraffes and mollusks are good as well • They all suggest that species evolved from and replaced previous species Comparative anatomy • Appearance has long been used as an indicator of the relatedness of organisms • The elephant and the mammoth clearly have similar anatomies and share a common ancestor Examples of homologous structures Figure 3.1.1. Comparison of the forelimbs of various relatives of modern birds. Forelimbs of (A) Ornitholestes, a theropod dinosaur, (B) Archaeopteryx, (C) Sinornis, an archaic bird from the lower Cretaceous, and (D) the wing of a modern chicken (modified from Carroll 1988, p. 340; Vestigial structures • These are structures that serve NO apparent purpose • examples include: molar teeth in vampire bats, pelvic bones in whales and snakes, the appendix, wings on ants Embryology • It was observed, in the 1800’s, that vertebrate embryos look quite similar to each other in early development • All vertebrates have gill slits at some point in their development. Only fish retain them in adulthood • The plausible explanation is that early forms had these traits and passed the genes on but in some forms the genes get masked or turned off during development Examples • ALL use DNA as the carrier of genetic information • ALL use RNA, ribosomes and approximately the same genetic code to translate genetic information into proteins • ALL use the same 20 amino acids to build proteins • ALL use ATP as the intracellular energy carrier Some evidence that populations evolve by natural selection • Artificial Selection: The breeding of domestic plant and animal species to produce specific, desirable features • The reasoning is this, if humans can produce such a wide variety of, say, dog breeds in a few hundred or thousand years it stands to reason that nature could produce a wide variety of organisms in several billion years •