Download File - San Marin Science

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

Hologenome theory of evolution wikipedia , lookup

The Selfish Gene wikipedia , lookup

Sexual selection wikipedia , lookup

Natural selection wikipedia , lookup

Sociobiology wikipedia , lookup

Darwinian literary studies wikipedia , lookup

Vestigiality wikipedia , lookup

Evolution wikipedia , lookup

Genetics and the Origin of Species wikipedia , lookup

Evolutionary developmental biology wikipedia , lookup

Saltation (biology) wikipedia , lookup

Paleontology wikipedia , lookup

Adaptation wikipedia , lookup

Introduction to evolution wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
But don’t be fooled by these…
 Analogous structures

look similar
 on the outside
same function
 different structure & development

How is a bird
like a bug?
 on the inside
different origin
 no evolutionary relationship

Solving a similar problem with a similar solution
Regents Biology
Analogous structures
 Dolphins: aquatic mammal
 Fish: aquatic vertebrate
both adapted to
life in the sea
 not closely related

Watch the tail!
Regents Biology
Convergent evolution
 3 groups with wings

Does this mean they have a
recent common ancestor?
They just
came up
with the
NO!
same answer!
Regents Biology
Flight evolved 3
separate times —
evolving similar
solutions to similar
“problems”
Vestigial organs
 Hind leg bones on whale fossils
Why would whales
have pelvis & leg
bones if they were
always sea creatures?
Because they
used to
walk on land!
Regents Biology
Comparative embryology
 Development of embryo tells an
evolutionary story

similar structures during development
all vertebrate embryos have a “gill
pouch” at one stage of development
Regents Biology
Building “family” trees
Closely related species are branches on the tree —
coming from a common ancestor
Regents Biology
3. Geographical Distribution
 Geographical
distribution of living
organims
Darwin concluded that the
different finches found on
the galapagos islands came
from a common ancestor on
the mainland – they adapted
to different local
environments
 Organisms that live in
similar environments have
similar features
Regents Biology

4. Artificial selection
 How do we know natural selection can
change a population?
we can recreate a similar process
 “evolution by human selection”
“descendants” of wild mustard

Regents Biology
Selective Breeding
Humans create the
change over time
Regents Biology
“descendants”
of the wolf
Artificial Selection gone bad!
 Unexpected
consequences of
artificial selection
Pesticide resistance
Antibiotic resistance
Regents Biology
Insecticide resistance
 Spray the field, but…

insecticide didn’t
kill all individuals
 variation
resistant survivors
reproduce
 resistance is inherited
 insecticide becomes
less & less effective

Regents Biology
Regents Biology
Any Questions??
Regents Biology
Original presentation by Kim Foglia