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Evolution and Darwin Evolution The processes that have transformed life on earth from it’s earliest forms to the vast diversity that characterizes it today. A change in the genes!!!!!!!! Old Theories of Evolution Jean Baptiste Lamarck (early 1800’s) proposed: “The inheritance of acquired characteristics” He proposed that by using or not using its body parts, an individual tends to develop certain characteristics, which it passes on to its offspring. “The Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics” Example: A giraffe acquired its long neck because its ancestors needed to stretch higher and higher into the trees to reach leaves, and those animals with longer necks were more likely to reach food and survive to reproduce. Organisms with shorter necks couldn’t reach enough food to survive to the age of reproduction. Charles Darwin Influenced by Charles Lyell who published “Principles of Geology”. This publication led Darwin to realize that natural forces gradually change Earth’s surface and that the forces of the past are still operating in modern times. Natural Selection Individuals with favorable traits are more likely to leave more offspring better suited for their environment. Example: English peppered moth (Biston betularia) - light and dark phases Artificial Selection The selective breeding of domesticated plants and animals by man. Question: What’s the ancestor of the domesticated dog? Answer: WOLF Evidence of Evolution 1. Biogeography: Geographical distribution of species. 2. Fossil Record: Fossils and the order in which they appear in layers of sedimentary rock (strongest evidence). Evidence of Evolution 3. Homologous structures: Structures that are similar because of common ancestry (comparative anatomy) Evidence for Evolution 4. Vestigial Structures Organs or structures which were once useful but no longer provide any benefit. They do not, however, have any selective pressure against them so they remain in the species. Evidence of Evolution 5. Comparative embryology: Study of structures that appear during embryonic development. 6. Molecular biology: DNA and proteins (amino acids) Evidence for Evolution Evidence comes from every single subcategory of biology Ecology Cell Biology Anatomy Genetics Biochemistry Population A localized group of individuals belonging to the same species. Gene Pool The total collection of genes in a population at any one time. Species A group of populations whose individuals have the potential to interbreed and produce viable offspring. Mechanisms of Evolution 1. Mutation: Change in an organism’s DNA that creates a new allele. 2. Non-random mating: The selection of mates other than by chance. 3. Natural selection: Differential reproduction. Speciation The evolution of new species. From Turtles to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Interpretations of Speciation Two competing theories: 1. Gradualist Model: Slow changes in species overtime. 2. Punctuated Equilibrium: Evolution occurs in spurts of relatively rapid change followed by periods of stagnation. ++ Adaptive Radiation The swift evolution of a single lineage such as the case of Darwin’s finches Fossil Records Stratification Radiometric dating (Isotopes) are used to date rock around fossils CoEvolution The evolution of two or more species counter to one another