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Download THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION
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Charles Darwin • In 1831, at the age of 21, he set sail on a five-year voyage on the HMS Beagle, collecting specimens and mapping South America & the South Pacific. • Darwin studied & compared the anatomy of many species of reptiles, insects, birds, & flowering plants, that are unique yet similar to species seen in other parts of the world, on the Galapagos islands. • By the end of his trip, Darwin was convinced that evolution occurs. • Evolution: The theory that species change over time. • Using data he gathered from the natural world, Darwin began to form his well-known idea of evolution by natural selection. • In 1859, Darwin published a controversial book; “On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection”. • Controversy led to criticism of Darwin’s ideas. Controversy led to criticism of Darwin’s ideas. • Natural selection: A mechanism for change in populations that occurs when organisms with favorable variations for a particular environment, survive, reproduce, & pass these variations on to the next generation. • Organisms with less favorable variations are less likely to survive and pass on traits to the next generation. • The idea of natural selection is often referred to as “SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST”. • NOT the strongest, but the organism best suited to the environment. • Adaptation: any trait that aids the chances of survival & reproduction of an organism. • Darwin’s theory of natural selection can be applied to explain the evolution of adaptations in organisms. • Mimicry: provides protection for an organism by enabling it to mimic the appearance of another species. • Camouflage: A defensive adaptation that involves changes to the color of organisms that enables an organism to blend in with its surroundings. • Organisms that are well camouflaged are more likely to escape predators and survive to reproduce. • Caused by changes in an organism’s metabolic processes • 50 years ago, the antibiotic penicillin was considered a wonder drug because it could kill many types of disease-causing bacteria. • Today, scientists know that penicillin is not as effective as it used to be because many species of bacteria have evolved physiological adaptations that make them resistant to penicillin. • Rapid changes have also been seen in pest organisms. • Most of the evidence for evolution comes from indirect sources. • Fossils are an indirect source of evolutionary history of animals such as whales • provide a record of earlier life. • fossil record is incomplete • it shows that 40 to 50 million years ago, horses were a species of small, dog-sized animals • Homologous Structures: Structures with common evolutionary origin • May be similar in arrangement (structure), function, or both • Analogous structures: Any body part that is similar in function but different in structure • Do not have a common evolutionary history. • Bird wings are made of a set of bones, whereas insect wings are mainly composed of a tough substance called chitin. • Vestigial Structure: A structure in a present-day organism that no longer serves its original purpose, but was probably useful to its ancestor • May develop as species change in form and behavior. • May serve no function, but continue to be inherited as part of the body plan for that species. • Human appendix useless yet in other mammals, including primates, it is necessary to aid in digestion of high cellulose diet • Human external ear muscles still present but useless • Humans have tailbones and some babies occasionally have tails • Human wisdom teeth are vestigial compared to other primates • Some snakes have skeletal limbs. • Cave dwelling crayfish have eyestalks yet no eyes. • Sometimes vestigial organs may be adapted for new uses. Penguin wings can't be used for flight yet adapted for swimming. • Embryo: the earliest stage of growth & development of a plant or animal. • Similarities among vertebrate embryos suggest evolution from a common ancestor. • In the earliest stage of development, a tail and gill slits can be seen in all species. • As development continues, the embryos become more and more distinct. Fish embryo Pig embryo Chicken embryo Human embryo • The most recent evidence for evolution has come from comparisons of DNA & RNA within taxonomic groups. • One study of comparisons of RNA sequences led to the construction of an evolutionary tree that shows 3 major groups: the eubacteria, the archaebacteria, and eukaryotes. • If an individual organism possesses a phenotype that isn’t adapted to the environment, it may result in the individual’s inability to successfully compete. • However, within the lifetime of one individual, new features cannot evolve in response to natural selection. • Rather, natural selection operates only on populations over many generations. • Natural processes such as: • Mutation: A change in the DNA sequence • Genetic Drift: (AKA allelic drift) Alteration of genes by chance processes. • Founder effect: Occurs in a newly colonized area where a few individuals settle. In this case, the gene pool is limited because no new genes enter the gene pool. • Amish communities where there is much intermarriage and certain genetic disorders are common such as Ellis vanCrevald syndrome. • Started from 1 couple that settle in Lancaster, PA in the 1770’s. • Sexual selection: Where females choose their mate based on physical appearance of the male. • Brightly colored males and dully colored females. • The above natural processes & natural selection can lead to changes in the allelic frequency in a population’s gene pool and possibly cause speciation. • Allelic frequency: How often (%) a certain allele appears in a population. • Gene pool: The sum of all genes among a population • Speciation: The evolution of a new species. • Species: A group of organisms that look alike & have the ability to interbreed & produce fertile offspring in nature. • Evolution of new species can occur only when either interbreeding or the production of fertile offspring is somehow prevented. • Occurs if a physical barrier separates a population into groups. • Over time, each small population would adapt to the local environment through the process of natural selection. • Eventually, the gene pools of each group would become so different that one could be considered a new species. • Example - Tree frogs that have been forced to separate because of drought in rain forests. • Polyploidy: The presence of multiple (extra) sets of chromosomes • Is the result of mistakes that occur during meiosis. • It’s estimated that nearly ½ of the known flowering plant species originated in this way, as well as crops such as wheat, cotton, apples, and bananas. Chrysanthemum: an example of speciation due to polyploidism. • Gradualism: The idea that species originate through a gradual change of adaptations. • Slow and steady • Supported by fossil record • Punctuated equilibrium: The idea that speciation occurs quickly in rapid bursts with long periods of stability in between. • Results from extreme environmental changes, such as warmer temperatures or the introduction of a new competitive species • Stabilizing selection: Natural selection that favors average individuals in a population • Both extremes are chosen against; the average is favored. • Example – predators easily see the larger spiders and the small ones die because they find it difficult to find food • Directional selection: Natural selection that favors one of the extreme variations of a trait. • The average and 1 extreme are chosen against • Disruptive Selection: Natural selection that favors either extreme of a trait’s variations • The average organism chosen against • Divergent Evolution: Evolution in which species that once were similar to an ancestral species diverge (branch off; deviate) • Occurs when populations change as they adapt to different environmental conditions, eventually resulting in new species • Adaptive Radiation: Divergent evolution in which ancestral species evolve in a variety of species that fit diverse habitats. • Convergent evolution: Evolution in which unrelated organisms evolve similar traits (converge: come together) • Occurs when unrelated species occupy similar environments and face similar selection pressures.