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Evolution – change over time • Populations evolve not individuals • Adaptations – Inherited traits that enhance survival and thus reproduction in a particular environment • Charles Darwin – Theory of Evolution • Based on many observations Path to Darwin’s Theory 500 BC 322 BC ~2000 yrs old 1700s 1809 1830 1831-1836 • Similar idea: simpler forms of life preceded more complex forms from ancient Greeks (2500 years ago) • Aristotle believed that species are fixed – Judeo-Christian thought (book of genesis) • Divine creator; earth to be 6,000 years old • Early fossil studies; extinct spp.; earth may be older • Lamarck: inheritance of acquired characteristics • Lyell: Geologist; gradual change by nat. forces • Darwin’s voyage • Charles Darwin: British naturalist born 1809 – expanded on some existing ideas • • Did not address origin of life, but rather focused on explaining the vast diversity of life – – • • Geologists, naturalists, and scientists provided supportive evidence; 5 year voyage around the world 1831-1836 Galapagos Islands Wrote essay on evolution based on his observations/experiences 1844 Published “On the Origin of Species” 1859; under competition by Wallace – – Descent with modification: ancestral species could diversify into many descendent species by accumulation of adaptations to environment Hypothesized natural selection as driving force What is natural selection? • • • • Over production of offspring Limited natural resources Heritable variations Differential or unequal reproductive success Offspring w/in a varied population, whose characteristics best adapt them to the environment are most likely to survive and reproduce • more fit individuals leave more offspring than less fit individuals • with so much diversity in just a few thousand years… • even more diversity over thousands of generations – With natural selection over vast time allows for changes to accumulate Evidence for evolution • Fossils: preservation of dead organic matter 35 mya examples: 1.5 mya 375 mya 190 mya 40 mya 5,500 ya Fossil record • Layers of sediments • Deposits pile up over millions of years forming strata • Young on top; older on bottom – Read the layers – compare preserved fossils – track changes over time Is Earth 6,000 years old or 4.6 billion? • Radiometric Dating – Dating geologic structures by rate of radioactive decay • Atomic elements decay at a fixed rate – Half-life = time it takes for half of an element to decay – C14 or radiocarbon dating (plants and animals) • unstable carbon isotope, 5730 years to decay half of a sample • C14 : C12 ratio is half in fossil than atm = 5730 • If C14 : C12 ratio is ¼ of atm = 11,460 – K40 has half life of 1.3 billion years • Famous tests: – Iceman (Italy, 1991); dated to 5500 years old – Shroud of Turin; evidence shows to be about 700 years old rather than 2000 years old Dr. Willard Libby – Atomic physicist – Nobel Prize for C14 dating work. Before that, was a key researcher in the development of the atomic bomb. Comparative anatomy & embryology • Homology – Similarities in form and structure from common ancestory • E.g. mammal forelimbs with different functions • Similar embryological stages – Common structures during similar early development (e.g., gill slits) Molecular Biology • Hereditary background and proteins encoded in DNA – Compare gene sequences • Similar sequences – more recent ancestor • More dissimilar – more distant ancestor Why is evolution the best explanation to the vast natural diversity? • Mountains of evidence of various types – e.g. fossils, radiometric dating, comparative anatomy & embryology, molecular biology • each agrees with the other • provides tremendous support of evolution theory… – disagreement would be falsifiable evidence • Theory still challenged – Theory guess or based on any belief – Theory = falsifiable idea supported by extensive evidence • Theory of Gravitation, Theory of Relativity…principles based on facts (e.g. earth is round) Populations evolve • Although natural selection acts on individuals, which affects survival & chances to reproduce w/in an env., a population changes over time • Population genetics – Darwin’s and Mendel’s ideas together – Populations change genetically over time • Gene pool – All alleles in a population • Microevolution – Change in allele frequencies over time – e.g. pesticide resistant allele will increase while its alternate decreases frequency Agents of potential changes in allele frequency • Natural Selection – pesticide example • Non-random mating – Plants closer to each other may get fertilized – People sometimes choose similar mates (short couples…) • Mutation - creates new alleles • Gene flow – gain or loss of alleles in a popln. – Immigration or emmigration • Genetic drift – change in gene pool due to chance – Founder effect – colonization of small group – Bottleneck effect – reduction of population Genetic drift – bottleneck effect Drastic reduction of popln. size – Earthquakes, floods, fires, etc – Surviving popln has underrepresented alleles e.g. elephant seals were hunted down to 20; restored now to 30k; found only 1 allele in ea. of 24 genes; no variation Selection pressures • A particular phenotype selected for or against depending on the environment • Guppy example: – 2 forces of natural selection working against each other: mate preference and predator vulnerability – Balance where females are attracted to males with brighter colored tails; risk of attracting predators ♀ ♂ – How could you test these selection pressures? • Observe many generations… • In predator-free environment? – More brightly colored males with large tails evolved • Re-introduced predators – Less flashy males became more “fit” Natural selection affects populations • Affects the distribution of phenotypes – Normal distribution of varied fur frequencies • Stabilizing selection – Reduces extremes; favors intermediates – Most common • Directional selection – Acting against one extreme or environment favors one extreme – e.g. darker landscape or, insects exposed to pesticides • Disruptive selection – Environment is varied to favor both extremes – e.g. patchy landscape with light soil and dark rocks