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Biological Anthropology Darwin, Mendel, and The Rise of the Synthetic Theory Three Questions to Answer 1. Where does variation come from? 2. How is variation passed on from one generation to the next? 3. How is the variation present within a species at any time affected by the environment? Science as a revolutionary process scientific “revolution” anomalies “normal” science Normal Science ca. 1600 the origin of living things • Great Chain of Being • Held in the hand of God • Ranked living things as more or less like God • Links represent species • Discrete • Immutable Carolus Linnaeus 1707-1778 • Son of a Lutheran pastor • Groomed to be a pastor • Preferred science • Became a physician and botanist Carl Linneaus by M. Hoffman in 1734. Carolus Linnaeus 1707-1778 • Systema Naturae (1735, with many subsequent revisions) • Standardized names of plants and animals Binomial nomenclature Wedding Portrait of Linnaeus (1739) Carolus Linnaeus 1707-1778 Before, the common wild briar rose was known variously as Using binomial nomenclature, names were standardized: • Rosa sylvestris inodora seu canina • Rosa canina • Rosa sylvestris alba cum robore, folio glabro • Coffea arabica • Homo sapiens Carolus Linnaeus 1707-1778 • First believed species were immutable • Noticed hybrids • Observed that plant species could change appearance as they acclimatized to new areas • Eventually abandoned idea of fixity of species Georges Cuvier 1769-1832 • “Father” of comparative anatomy • Studied the anatomy of vertebrates • Established the field of vertebrate paleontology Georges Cuvier 1769-1832 • Noted distinct differences between fossil mammoth (top) and living Indian elephant (bottom) • Discovered that species could go extinct from Cuvier's 1796 paper on living and fossil elephants What had happened to these animals? • Periodic “revolutions” or catastrophes had befallen the earth • These were events that had natural causes • Although Cuvier did not identify these with Biblical events, others would Jean-Baptiste Lamarck 1744-1829 • Studied the anatomy of invertebrates • Saw a relationship between an animal’s form and the way it exploited the environment • Argued that a change in the environment could affect the needs of the organisms in that environment, causing them to alter their behavior Lamarck said • Altered behavior led to more or less use of a body part, which would therefore grow larger or smaller • Any such change could be inherited Trouble is… it’s wrong! James Hutton 1726-1797 • Scottish geologist • A cyclical “world machine” that exhibited “no vestige of a beginning – no prospect of an end.” • This view ultimately led to modern geological time scales James Hutton 1726-1797 • Pointed out role of erosion • Earth was timeless • A self-perpetuating place created for humans • No directional change, only cycles Charles Lyell 1797-1875 • Another Scottish geologist • Principles of Geology (3 Volumes; 1830-1833) • Argued that currently active principles were all that was needed to explain the geological history of the Earth Charles Lyell 1797-1875 uniformitarianism • Exclude the use of sudden catastrophes when explaining fossils • The earth was extremely old Thomas Malthus 1766-1834 • An Essay on the Principles of Population (1798) • Points out that more individuals are born into a species than will ever reach maturity • A struggle for survival Thomas Malthus 1766-1834 "population increases in a geometric ratio, while the means of subsistence increases in an arithmetic ratio." food supply population Adam Smith 1723-1790 • An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776) • Laissez-faire economics: markets will perform best if they are allowed to function according to their own principles Adam Smith 1723-1790 • Smith’s ideas inspired Darwin in a more general way: • A system, once established, will run itself according to its own principles • A system does not require a higher authority to regulate a system itself Charles Robert Darwin Feb. 12, 1809 – April 19, 1882 • father and grandfather were physicians • an avid insect collector from an early age • December 1827 begins to study for the clergy at Christ's College, Cambridge • Graduates with Bachelor of Arts degree in April, 1831 Charles Darwin • Invited to serve as ship’s naturalist on H.M.S. Beagle The Second Voyage of the Beagle Departs England on 27 Dec., 1831 – Returns to England on 2 October, 1836 The Post-Beagle Period • Darwin settles into a comfortable life • Publishes numerous books • Breeds pigeons The Post-Beagle Period • 1838-1844 – serves as Secretary of the Geological Society of London • Becomes friends with Charles Lyell • 1837 - first mention of the “transmutation” of species in his notes From Darwin’s notes – ca. 1838 Alfred Russel Wallace • Studies the distribution of animals in the Malay Archipelago Alfred Russel Wallace (1848) • Develops his own ideas about natural selection • Sends Darwin a manuscript in 1858 July 1, 1858 • Ideas of each presented at a meeting of the Linnean Society • both credited with the idea of natural selection Darwin gets Busy! • Write “short” version of his ideas Darwin at Down House, ca. 1880 • Includes evidence from • His insights into insects and other organisms • Distribution of organisms • Fossil record • Embryology • Comparative anatomy • Comparative behavior • and, and, and November 24, 1859 ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES • First edition sells out the first day BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION, OR THE PRESERVATION OF FAVOURED RACES IN THE STRUGGLE FOR LIFE. BY CHARLES DARWIN, MA., FELLOW OF THE ROYAL, GEOLOGICAL, LINNAEAN, ETC., SOCIETIES; AUTHOR OF 'JOURNAL OF RESERACHES DURING H.M.S. BEAGLE'S VOYAGE ROUND THE WORLD.' LONDON : JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1859. • Acceptance in scientific circles is rapid • Makes no reference to evolution of humans From the final paragraph… “There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.” Later Works • The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871) • The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms, with Observations on Their Habits (1881) Keys Points of Natural Selection 1. At any one time, more individuals are born into a species than will survive 2. Each individual is unique (that is, different from the others) 3. Some of these differences may be advantageous in the environment in which the individual lives, while others may be disadvantageous 4. The individuals with the advantages are more likely to survive and reproduce than the individuals with the disadvantages 5. Over time, the advantageous traits become more common, and the disadvantageous traits become less common Microevolution ...and there’s nothing controversial about that Macroevolution …if the process continues long enough, you can end up with entirely new species And that’s what some people object to Two Types of Selection Artificial requires Natural requires • a trait to exhibit variation • a trait to exhibit variation • and a selective pressure • and a selective pressure The selective pressure is exerted by humans The selective pressure is exerted by the environment (nature) The Three Problems 1. How is the variation present within a species at any time affected by the environment? Darwin 2. How is variation passed on from one generation to the next? 3. Where does variation come from? The Next Piece of the Puzzle Gregor Mendel and The Mechanisms of Inheritance Gregor Mendel 1822-1884 • Entered the Augustinian monastery of St. Thomas at Brnø at 22 • Ordained as priest in 1847 • Taught secondary school science Two ideas about inheritance Particulate Blending If you bred a whiteflowered plant with a red-flowered plant, you will obtain a plant with either white or red flowers If you bred a whiteflowered plant with a red-flowered plant, you will obtain a plant with pinkish flowers Pisum sativum Trait seed form albumen color Forms smooth wrinkled yellow green seed coat color gray white seed pod form inflated constricted unripe pod color green yellow flower position axial terminal stem length tall dwarf What Mendel Discovered • Each plant contained two pieces of information for a particular trait • Some of these were dominant, some recessive • Each parent contributed only one piece of information to each of their offspring Some terms… •Gene – unit of hereditary information for a particular trait •Allele – alternate form of a gene •Gamete – a sex cell (egg for females; sperm, pollen for males) Pisum sativum genes alleles Trait seed form albumen color Dominant Recessive smooth wrinkled yellow green seed coat color gray white seed pod form inflated constricted unripe pod color green yellow flower position axial terminal stem length tall dwarf Mendel’s First Law The Principle of Segregation Alleles exist in pairs which are separated from one another during the production of gametes this means that… …the chances of any particular outcome can be predicted!!! Inheritance occurs according to statistical probabilities! Mendel’s Second Law The Principle of Independent Assortment The distribution of alleles for one trait does not affect the distribution of alleles for another trait Independent Assortment • Whether an individual inherited one particular trait from its father did not affect whether it inherited a different trait from the father as well • It’s a crapshoot! The Synthetic Theory of Evolution Variation is passed down according to Mendelian principles and selected for or against according to Darwinian principles What are the physical mechanisms through which traits are passed on? Particulate or Blending? The answer depends upon: •the trait being studied •the species it is being studied in In Humans? Over 4500 known “particulate” traits • ABO blood group • Rh blood group • Cystic fibrosis • Cerumen • Sickle-cell • PTC tasting Numerous “blended” traits • Height • Weight • Intelligence • Skin color • Eye color The Three Problems 1. How is the variation present within a species at any time affected by the environment? Darwin 2. How is variation passed on from one generation to the next? Mendel 3. Where does variation come from?