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Evolving lineages in the fossil record Like all sources of data, the fossil record has inherent strengths and limitations “…so must the number of intermediate varieties, which have formerly existed, be truly enormous. Why then is not every geological formation and every stratum full of such intermediate links?…The explanation lies, as I believe, in the extreme imperfection of the geological record” Darwin, 1859 Imperfection of the fossil record Many time periods represented by few sedimentary layers Many lineages represented over long time periods with no fossils in between Many extinct species of large organisms represented by only a few fossils New taxa continue to be discovered Geologic column younger older index fossils define strata extinction events mark boundaries Evidence for an asteroid impact at the end-Cretaceous is now overwhelming The asteroid impact had profound effects on both marine and terrestrial ecosystems Extinctions of marine invertebrates at K-T were selective; genera with broad geographic ranges survived better cenozoic mesozoic paleozoic proterozoic archaean hadean Millions of years ago 1 10 100 1000 10000 cenozoic mesozoic paleozoic proterozoic archaean hadean Millions of years ago 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 Paleontological vocabulary Species - reproductively isolated population - morphologically distinguishable form Speciation - splitting of 1 lineage into reproductively isolated gene pools Chronospecies - does not imply speciation Extinction - termination of a lineage Pseudoextinction - species names disappear because lineage has changed form Evolution in the fossil record - sticklebacks Speciation - typically allopatric -need to be sympatric, synchronic Phylogeny & the fossil record Strong correspondence between phylogenetic branching and appearance in the fossil record Archaeopteryx Evolutionary trends Neo-Lamarckian theories Inherent drive Directional mutation Directional natural selection Irreversibility Irish elk Evolutionary trends Neo-Lamarckian theories Inherent drive Directional mutation Directional natural selection Irreversibility Evolutionary trends Parallel trends -same structural features evolve in parallel in related lineages Cope’s rule -trend toward larger body size in many groups Iterative evolution -same trend repeated in sequential radiations Evolutionary trends Clade - monophyletic group Grade - group of organisms that have achieved a certain level of structural organization Rate of evolution Taxonomic frequency rate -rate at which new taxa replace previous ones Phylogenetic rate -rate of change of single characters within a lineage -measured in standard deviations or darwins Rate of evolution Taxonomic frequency rate -rate at which new taxa replace previous ones Phylogenetic rate -rate of change of single characters within a lineage -measured in standard deviations or darwins Rate of evolution - darwins -change by a factor of 2.718 per million years -rapid rates masked if: rate fluctuates direction of evolution changes