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How do populations change over time? Evolution and Natural Selection Last time... • Classification/organization of life on earth • Puzzling observations (homologous structures, biogeography, vestigial traits, etc.) • Proposed explanation: evolution! Evolution • Change over time • Biologically: Descent with modification • Small scale: changes in gene frequencies in a population from one generation to the next • Large scale: accumulation of changes over thousands/millions of years leads to the descent of different species over many generations Thus... • All organisms share common ancestors • Some are more distant than others • Classification is really study of genealogy Taxonomy: study of species’ genealogy Common panthera ancestor Common felis ancestor Common carnivora ancestor Common mammal ancestor Common vertebrate ancestor Common animal ancestor Common ancestor of all living organisms How? Charles Darwin & Alfred Wallace • HMS Beagle (1831) chart the coast of South America • Darwin was offered job as naturalist, collecting specimens and recording observations • Naturalist • 1848 expedition to Amazon • 1854-1862 travelled through Malay Archipelago studying island biogeography • Known as the father of biogeography Who was Darwin? 1816 1830’s 1842 1881 The Voyage of the Beagle (1831-1836) (Darwin was 22 when he left.) Darwin’s observations: fossils armadillo ? glyptodont Darwin’s observations: geographic variation z ? Darwin’s observations: life on islands Darwin’s observations: life on islands “One might fancy that, from an original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species has been taken and modified for different ends…” Two of Darwin’s actual finch specimens ? Darwin’s finches (finches: Family Fringillidae) warblers (Emberizidae), woodpeckers (Picidae), parrots (Psittacidae), flycatchers (Tyrannidae) Influences on Darwin: domestic animals Influences on Darwin: Charles Lyell uniformitarianism Influences on Darwin: Thomas Malthus Influences on Darwin: Thomas Malthus # that can be supported by natural Resources Natural resources are limited and the production of more individuals than the environment can support leads to a struggle for existence among individuals of a population, with only a fraction surviving each generation Darwin puts it all together • Observations (Voyage of the Beagle) – Fossils – Biogeography – Life on islands • Influences – Bird breeders (Artificial Selection) – Charles Lyell: Uniformitarianism (Small changes accumulate to produce large changes, also the earth is much older than assumed) – Thomas Malthus: The reproductive potential of an organism surpasses the resources available, so at some point only a fraction of all individuals in a generation will survive and reproduce. Darwin’s big idea: Evolution by Natural Selection 1. The individuals that make up a population are not all identical. (variation) Darwin’s big idea: Evolution by Natural Selection 1. The individuals that make up a population are not all identical. (variation) 2. At least some of this variation can be inherited. (heritability) Darwin’s big idea: Evolution by Natural Selection 1. The individuals that make up a population are not all identical. (variation) 2. At least some of this variation can be inherited. (heritability) 3. Some of those heritable traits will allow individuals to reproduce more than others that do not possess those traits. (reproductive consequences) Darwin’s big idea: Evolution by Natural Selection 1. 2. 3. The individuals that make up a population are not all identical. (variation) At least some of this variation can be inherited. (heritability) Some of those heritable traits will allow individuals to reproduce more than others that do not possess those traits. (reproductive consequences) In this way the frequency of characteristics carried by individuals in the population will change over generations. The population evolves!! Summary Evolution by Natural Selection involves... NON-RANDOM REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS Q. Where does initial variation in a population come from? A. Mutations – random changes in DNA that cause changes in phenotype “Survival of the fittest” Which one is more ‘fit’? A B “Sneaky” males Depends on which has more offspring that survive to reproduce Types of reproductive consequences • Survival • Fertility vs. parental care • Mating (sexual selection) Differential Reproduction: individuals differ in the reproductive success. Some individuals have more offspring than others Testing Natural Selection! • John Endler (1970s) • Guppies (small fish) • Naturally found in small ponds in Venezuela • Males vary in coloration largely due to genetics • Endler noticed that males in ponds with predators present were more drab while males in ponds without predators were bright and colorful Testing Natural Selection • Question: Why are males in ponds with predators present more drab while males in ponds without predators are bright and colorful? • Hypotheses? • How would you design an experiment to test this? Male from pond with predators Male from pond without predators Testing Natural Selection! No predators Few predators Many predators In less than 15 generations! Re-summary Individuals that possess heritable traits that improve fitness will reproduce more than others and those traits will accumulate over time in the population How does Darwin’s hypothesis account for the major patterns of life?? I. Adaptations (giraffe’s necks, for example) time 1 time 2 (regular old antelopes) (next generation) less short (aka “long”) (one antelope is born with a slightly longer neck due to genetic change; it has an advantage) time 3 time 4 (next generation) (next generation) (increased frequency of longishnecked animals) (giraffe-alopes?) short 1 2 3 Time 4 NOW Genus Family Order LONG LONG AGO How does Darwin’s hypothesis account for the major patterns of life? I. Adaptations (giraffe’s necks, for example) II. Hierarchy of Shared Characteristics Taxonomic patterns Homologous traits, vestigial traits Can Darwin’s Idea Explain Homologous Traits? Text material © 2002 by Steven M. Carr Vertebrate Forelimb Way back when…. ? Text material © 2002 by Steven M. Carr Modern Vertebrate Forelimb Derived from Shared Ancestor Pederpes finneyae. 348 MYA (transitional from lobefinned fishes to semiterrestrial amphibian ancestors) Nature 418, 72-77 (4 July 2002) Modern Vertebrate Forelimb Derived from Shared Ancestor evolution.berkeley.edu/.../similarity_hs_03 How Does Darwin’s Idea Explain Vestigial Traits? How Does Darwin’s Idea Explain Vestigial Traits? Basilosaurus sp. (35 MYA) Ambulocetans natans (50 MYA) http://www.neoucom.edu/DEPTS/ANAT/Thewissen/whale_origins/ How Does Darwin’s Idea Explain Vestigial Traits? Physeter macrocephalus (modern sperm whale) http://www.neoucom.edu/DEPTS/ANAT/Thewissen/whale_origins/ How does Darwin’s hypothesis account for the major patterns of life? I. Adaptations (giraffe’s necks, for example) II. Hierarchy of Shared Characteristics Taxonomic patterns Homologous traits, vestigial traits III. Biological Diversity? now A’ B C ? then A A Next time... • Speciation (the formation of new species) • Other types of evolution • Misconceptions about evolution