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1 Video Clip • 100 Greatest Discoveries Lamarck • Organisms adapted by acquiring traits – change in their life time • Disuse Cave fish No eyes TapewormNo digestive system • Use & Need – transmit acquired characteristics 2 Charles Darwin • • • • 1809-1882 Naturalist natural selection Collected clear evidence Voyage of the HMS Beagle • travel around the world – 1831-1836 (22 years old!) – Mission: Chart the S. American coastline – Collector Robert Fitzroy 3 Voyage of the HMS Beagle Found Fossils Armadillos are native to the Americas, with most species found in South America. Glyptodont fossils are also unique to South America. Why should extinct armadillo-like species & living armadillos be found on the same continent? 4 Darwin found! birds Collected many different birds on the Galapagos Islands. Finch? Sparrow? Thought he had found very different kinds! Woodpecker? Warbler? But Darwin found! a lot of Darwin was amazed to finches find out: All 14 species of birds were finches! But there is only one species of finch on the mainland! Finch? Large Ground Finch? Finch Sparrow? Small Ground Sparrow? Finch How did one species of finches become so many different species now? Woodpecker? Warbler Finch Woodpecker? Warbler? Veg. Tree Finch Warbler? 5 Tree Thinking Descendant species Ancestral species Large-seed Large Ground eater? Finch Warbler? Warbler Finch Small-seed Small Ground eater? Finch Leaf-browser? Veg. Tree Finch Artificial selection This is not just a process of the past! It is all around us today 6 Selective breeding the raw genetic material (variation) is hidden there November 24, 1859, Darwin published “On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection” 7 A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Observation: Organisms have great reproductive potential A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Observation: Population sizes are stable 8 A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Observation: Resources are limited A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Inference: Competition Struggle for Existence 9 A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Observation: Variation exists in the population A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Observation: Variation is inheritabled 10 A Mechanism of Natural Selection • Inference: Survival depends on hereditary characteristics; • Best fit for environment will leave more offspring Differential Reproduction Essence of Darwin’s ideas • Natural selection – Heritable variation exists in populations – over-production of offspring • more offspring than the environment can support – competition • for food, mates, nesting sites, escape predators – differential survival • successful traits = adaptations – differential reproduction • adaptations become more common in population 11 Artificial Selection of Domestic Breeds Mustard Plant 12 Artificial Selection of Domestic Breeds Dogs Artificial Selection of Domestic Breeds Chili Pepper Plants 13 Artificial Selection: Drosophilia Bristle number in Drosophilia EXAMPLE TODAY: Antibiotic and Pesticide Resistance 14 Evidence for Evolution Fossil Evidence 15 Transitional Fossils Land Mammal ?! ?! the are l e r Whe sitiona tran sils? fos ?! ?! Show Film on Whale Fossils (2:56 - 16:40) Basilosaurus! 16 2006 Fossil Discovery of Early Tetrapod • Tiktaalik! ! “missing link” from sea to land animals! Evidence for Evolution Biogeographic Evidence 17 Biogeographic Evidence Niche Burrower Placental Mammals Mole Marsupial mole Anteater Numbat Anteater Nocturnal insectivore Australian Marsupials Mouse Climber Marsupial mouse Spotted cuscus Lemur Glider Stalking predator Chasing predator Flying squirrel Sugar glider Ocelot Tasmanian cat Wolf Tasmanian “wolf” 18 Evidence for Evolution Comparative Anatomy Evidence Draw using 8 straight lines: ! An Airplane Wing ! A Tripod ! A Canoe Paddle 19 Homologous Structures Homologous Structures 20 Analogous Structures Convergent evolution • Fish: aquatic vertebrates ! • Dolphins: aquatic mammals! Tails Fins Body Shape 21 Vestigial Structures Vestigial Structures 22 Evidence for Evolution Comparative Embryological Evidence Vidio clip:http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/04/2/l_042_02.html Evidence for Evolution Comparative Embryological Evidence Which is a dolphin? Human? Cat? Cat Human Dolphin GUESS THE EMBRYO HERE: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/evolution/guess-embryo.html Vidio clip:http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/04/2/l_042_02.html 23 Evidence for Evolution Molecular/Biochemical Evidence • • • • • All cells have DNA All cells have same DNA code All cells have RNA All cells use same 20 amino acids All cells use ATP to transfer energy Biochemical Evidence 24 Molecular Biology Evidence 25 Practice applying the Hardy-Weinberg Equation Pg. 184 (HW), Pg. 187-8 What can cause a change in allele frequencies? When is this change adaptive? 1) Mutations Brown Body ! Green Body! Increase the Variety How else does nature increase variety? 26 2) Genetic Drift Changes in gene pool over! time due to chance.! Increase “drift” in small! populations.! 2) Genetic Drift --> 2 “things” that decrease a population Bottleneck effect 27 2) Genetic Drift --> 2 “things” that decrease a population Founder effect Boy with Huntington’s in Venezuela 3) Gene Flow --> Migration of….. 28 3) Gene Flow --> concerns with GMO crops 4) Nonrandom Mating 29 5) Natural Selection PRACTICE • Look at pg. 189 30 1) Stabilizing! Frequency of individuals Types of Natural Selection! Original population Phenotypes (fur color) Original population Evolved population 31 Frequency of individuals Types of Natural Selection 1) Stabilizing! 2) Directional! Original population Phenotypes (fur color) Original population Evolved population Types of Natural Selection Frequency of individuals Stabilizing selection Original population 1) Stabilizing! 2) Directional! 3) Disruptive! ! Phenotypes (fur color) Original population Evolved population Stabilizing selection Directional selection 32 Banded Snails 33 # with Trait! R O Y G B I V! 34 # with Trait! # with Trait! # with Trait! R O Y G B I V! R O Y G B I V! R O Y G B I V! 35 # with Trait! # with Trait! R O Y G B I V! R O Y G B I V! PRACTICE • Look at page. 185 36 How does one species turn into two?! How do different species stay different species?! 37 Ligers: Hybrid of male lion and female Tigons: Male tiger and female lion 38 Horse + Donkey = Mule 64 + 62 = 63 39 Mechanisms of Speciation Geographic Isolation Population Geographical Barrier Evolve: Genetically Different Unable to breed 40 41 Mechanisms of Speciation Squirrels of the Grand Canyon separated by the Colorado River N S Kaibab squirrel (Sciurus aberti kaibabensis) Abert squirrel (Sciurus aberti aberti) Pangea Other Continents Australia 42 Mechanisms of Speciation • one species to several • species find a specific niche • become own species Honey Creepers, Hawaiian Islands 43 Mechanisms of Speciation When one or very few species give rise to many new species within a relatively short period of time. Adaptive Radiation 44 Adaptive Radiation: Hawaiian Honeycreepers How does a species STAY a species? Reproductive Isolation --> #1 Temporal Isolation Rana aurora breeds January - March Rana boylii breeds late March - May 45 How does a species STAY a species? Temporal Isolation: Another Example How does a species STAY a species? Reproductive Isolation --> #2 Habitat Isolation Rana aurora (Red-legged frog) breeds in fast-moving, streams. Rana catesbiana (Bullfrog) breeds in permanent ponds. 46 How does a species STAY a species? Reproductive Isolation --> #3 Behavioral Isolation Reproductive Isolation: Behavioral Rana utricularia (Southern Leopard Frog) Rana catesbiana (Bullfrog) 47 More Examples: Behavioral Isolation How does a species STAY a species? Reproductive Isolation --> #4 Mechanical Isolation 48 How does a species STAY a species? Reproductive Isolation --> #5 Gametic Isolation How does a species STAY a species? Postzygotic --> Reproductive Isolation 49 How does a species STAY a species? Summary of Reproductive Barriers Zygote Gametes Prezygotic barriers Postzygotic barriers • Temporal isolation • Habitat isolation • Behavioral isolation • Mechanical isolation • Gametic isolation • Hybrid incompatibility Viable, fertile offspring Mechanisms of Speciation 50 Patterns of Evolution Species of different ancestry begin to share similar traits. Shared environment (same selection pressures) Patterns of Evolution 51 Patterns of Evolution 52 Predation and Coevolution Butterfly and the Passion Vine! HIGH FITNESS • Lots of offspring • Pass on most # of genes to gene pool LOW FITNESS • Few offspring • Pass on least # of genes to gene pool 53 Natural Selection --> Perfect Organisms????? 1. Organisms are limited by the structure of their ancestors. You can only change so much. 2. Adaptations are often compromised. Which is better?? Large or small webbed feet? 3. Chance a bigger factor than we realize. What are the chances of finding “perfect trait” & selecting for it. 4. Select from only existing variations. Can’t create variation on demand. Evolutionary Relationships 54 Binomial nomenclature 55 Phylogeny - The evolutionary history of a species. Cladistics - a system of taxonomy that reconstructs phylogenies by inferring relationships based on characteristics. Cladogram 56 What is a Clade? 57 58 Trees not Ladders 59 Not “Higher or lower” 60 Shared Derived Characteristics CAUTION: Homology vs Analogy 61 Adding Time to a Cladogram 62 63 Cladistics – Using characteristics to determine evolutionary relationships 64 Cladogram dimetrodon dimetrodon 65 66