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Exam 1 Study Guide/List of Topics (Chapters 1-7) AAAS Article and Chapter 1: People (those people not in boldface type will not be on the exam). Know their century, Historical period, nation of origin, and important contributions/writings! Anaximander (610 – 547 BCE) Greek Heraclitus (5th century BCE) (490-430 BCE) Greek Greek (384-322 BCE) Greek Empedocles Aristotle Imagined the transition from fish to reptiles to mammals and birds (first thoughts of evolution) thought change=fundamental principal of the universe Spontaneous generation from “body part soup” Only certain combinations survived. His writings cover many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, poetry, theater, music, logic, rhetoric, linguistics, politics, government, ethics, biology, and zoology. He was a great mind of the time, but his legacy as an unquestioned authority held back scientific progress for centuries. He made collections of creatures, did dissections of animals, recognized different kinds of organisms. He noted the sequence of organ development by observing chicken eggs. The world can be understood with observation and reason a slow rate for geological change, undetectable in the lifetime of a human being Claudius Ptolemy (90-168 AD) Ibn al-Haytham “Alhacen” St. Thomas Aquinas (965-1040) Greceoegyptian Arabic (1225-1274) Italian Christopher Columbus (1451-1506) Italian Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) Polish Ferdinand Magellan (1480-1521) Portugese Gaspard Bauhin (1560-1624) Swiss Sir Francis Bacon (1561-1626) English proclaimed that there was a hierarchical order of species from most imperfect to most perfect, a concept refined over the centuries as the "Great Chain of Being." Scala Naturae (Scale of Nature) which ranked things from the inorganic to humans to Gods. believed species were immutable Geocentric (earth centered) universe (WRONG) Father figure of Islamic science Italian Dominican priest of the Catholic Church, and an influential philosopher and theologian in the tradition of scholasticism. You can have religious beliefs, but still be rational. Foremost classical proponent of natural theology Italian explorer, colonizer, and whose voyages across the Atlantic Ocean led to general European awareness of the American continents in the Western Hemisphere. He proposed a heliocentric (sun centered) universe Explorer who was the first to sail from the Atlantic Ocean into the Pacific Ocean and the first to cross the Pacific; his ship was the first to circumnavigate the globe. Botanist who first used binomial nomenclature used in 1623, in his Pinax Theatri Botanici. English philosopher, statesman, scientist, lawyer, jurist, author and father of the scientific method. He outlined a new system of logic (inductive reasoning) to improve on the old philosophical process of syllogism [deductive reasoning] Inductive reasoning - a philosopher should proceed through inductive James Usher/Ussher Rene Descartes (1581-1656) Irish (1596-1650) French Carl von Linné (Carolus Linnaeus) (1707-1778) Swedish Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (1707-1788) French Albrecht von Haller (1708-1777) Swiss reasoning from fact to axiom to physical law. Contributed to the modern scientific method wrote Novum Organum (1620) Bishop, Argued the earth was born Sunday the 23rd of October 4004 BCE. A natural philosopher, rationalist and mathematician Rational thinking; “Cogito ergo sum” I think therefore I am. Vivisection- live dissection; believed animals felt no pain Discourse on Method (1637) – framework for scientific methods guiding principle Popularized the binomial nomenclature The idea originated with Swiss Botanist Gaspard Bauhin in 1623 in his Pinax Theatri Botanici Attempted to classify the material world as evidence of the power of the Christian God with Systema Naturae (1753) Naturalist, mathematician, cosmologist, and encyclopedic author. Buffon published thirty-six quarto volumes of his Histoire naturelle; this included everything known about the natural world up to that time. Concluded that species must have improved and degenerated (change through time) Noted that similar environments have distinct flora and fauna (Buffon’s Law or the first principle of Biogeography). Centers of creation/origin Climate change must have facilitated worldwide spread of species from their centers of origin Botanist, physiologist, lawyer, and poet who helped solidify evolution with his theory of encapsulation. Used the term Charles Bonnet (1720-1793) Swiss James Hutton (1726-1797) Scotland Captain James Cook (1728-1779) British William Paley (1743-1805) English Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (1744-1829) French evolution to describe the development of the individual in the egg. Lawyer who believed that all future generations are preformed within the egg, his theory of encapsulation. Geologist, physician, naturalist, chemist and experimental farmer. Considered the father of modern geology. His theories of geology and geologic time, also called deep time, came to be included in theories which were called Plutonism and later Uniformitarianism. Explorer, navigator and cartographer. Cook made detailed maps of Newfoundland prior to making three voyages to the Pacific Ocean during which he achieved the first European contact with the eastern coastline of Australia and the Hawaiian Islands as well as the first recorded circumnavigation of New Zealand. Wrote Natural Theology; or, Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity in 1802. The book was a major influence on Charles Darwin. worked most of his life at the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris. Vitalism (wrong): Organisms have an inner disposition, a “purposive force,” to adapt their characteristics in response to changes in the environment (an aspect of vitalism for Lamarck but similar to the modern term developmental adaptation) hypothesized the Chain of Being or Scala Naturae as a moving “escalator” which he called Nature’s Parade = La Marche de la Nature (1597) (wrong) First organisms arose by abiogenesis (correct) Inheritance of acquired traits via use and disuse. (wrong) Baron Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) French Robert Edmond Grant (1793-1874) English Charles Lyell (1797-1875) British Friedrich Wöhler (1800-1882) German Charles Darwin (1809-1882) English Proposed the continuity of species by gradual modification through time without leaving any gaps, a materialistic explanation for evolution. (correct) Coined the term “invertebrates”. proposed a Theory of Catastrophism to explain extinct organisms Accepted some fossils as evidence of extinctions, but did not accept the concept of life evolving, in opposition to Buffon Recognized evidence of stratification of rock layers, examples of sedimentation, uplift and subsidence Recognized a Principle of Faunal Succession used to assign times to geologic strata The Animal Kingdom, Distributed According to Its Organization (1817) The first Professor of Comparative Anatomy at University College London. Described evolution of invertebrate groups in 1826; one of the first published uses of “evolution” for the transformation of organism lawyer and the foremost geologist of his day. Best known as the author of Principles of Geology, which popularized James Hutton's concepts of uniformitarianism – the idea that the earth was shaped by slow-moving forces still in operation today. Lyell was a close and influential friend of Charles Darwin. Synthesizes urea (discrediting vitalism) (1828) Naturalist who established that all species of life have descended over time from common ancestry, and proposed the scientific theory that this branching pattern of evolution resulted from a process that he called natural selection. Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) Austrian Wilhelm Weinberg (1863-1937) German Geoffrey Hardy (1877-1947) English Ronald A. Fisher (1890-1962) English Stephen J. Gould (1941-2002) American Richard Dawkins (1941present day) English Jeffery Barrick (1980 present day) American The author of the ground breaking book Origin of Species. Augustinian monk who provided the essential basis for understanding the material basis of biological inheritance in his genetic experiments using pea plants. Although Mendel's work was published soon after The Origin of Species, a mechanism of inheritance was not widely known until the beginning of the 20th century. He established several Laws of Inheritance. Independently derived a formula for calculating gene frequencies in populations under natural selection; Hardy-Weinberg Principle. Independently derived a formula for calculating gene frequencies in populations under natural selection; Hardy-Weinberg Principle. Mathematician who combined Mendelian inheritance with population genetics. An evolutionary biologist and invertebrate paleontologist who promoted Punctuated Equilibria as an explanation for the sudden appearance/disappearance of species in the fossil record as communities replace each other in locations over geologic time. Biologist who wrote The Blind Watchmaker (1986) Advocated for the gene is an important unit of selection in The Selfish Gene (1975) Contemporary opponent of Intelligent Design Demonstrated evolution experimentally using Escherichia coli bacteria in the laboratory (2009) and recording the mutations over 40,000 generations. AAAS "The Nature of Science" Article and Chapter 1 concepts: The Scientific Method o Observations/Data ➔ Hypotheses ➔ Hypothesis Testing ➔ Models ➔ Laws ➔ Theories Renaissance - the period of European/Western history during which the cultural rebirth occurred from roughly the fourteenth through the middle of the seventeenth centuries, based on the rediscovery of the literature of Greece and Rome. It gave birth to a new way of scientific thinking and rationalism that eventually led to the scientific method. It was also the time of the Great Voyages of Exploration which brought back many kinds of information and specimens that provided the data to expand scientific thinking. Age of Reason or Age of Enlightenment - the period of European/Western history (~1685 - ~1815) during which politics, philosophy, science and communications were radically reoriented as part of a movement referred to by its participants as the Age of Reason which produced numerous books, essays, inventions, scientific discoveries, laws, wars and revolutions. Enlightenment thinkers throughout Europe questioned traditional authority and embraced the notion that humanity could be improved through rational change. The Scientific Method: Produce a Hypothesis based on observations/data; Design and Perform Experiments, controlled if possible, making detailed observations; Analyze the data in an objective way against the background of existing knowledge; and, Draw a conclusion that supports or refutes the hypothesis. The Experimental Method - the use of controlled observations and measurements to test hypotheses is the method of choice for having the greatest confidence in drawing conclusions from hypothesis testing but this method is not available to answer some kinds of questions posed by scientists. It involves the deliberate manipulation of one variable, while trying to keep all other variables constant Scientific World View: o The Universe Is Understandable. o The Universe Is a Vast Single System In Which the Basic Rules Are Everywhere the Same. o Scientific Ideas Are Subject To Change. o Scientific Knowledge Is Durable. o Science Cannot Provide Complete Answers to All Questions. o o o DIFFERENT SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES SHARE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES: the reliance on observation and the use of evidence the use of hypothesis testing to formulate laws and theories the use of logic, mathematics and statistics hypothesis - a tentative insight into the natural world; a proposal intended to explain certain facts or observations ; a concept that is not yet verified but that if true would explain certain facts or phenomena o Observe and describe a phenomenon or group of phenomena. o Formulate hypotheses to explain the phenomena; hypotheses often take the form of a proposed causal mechanism or mathematical relationship. o Use the hypotheses to predict the existence or actions of other phenomena, or to predict quantitatively the results of new observations. o Perform additional data collection or experimental tests of the predictions by several independent experimenters using properly performed techniques or experiments. Theories, Laws, Models and Hypotheses o Theories, Laws, Models and Hypotheses are supported by data analysis using the Scientific Method. Confidence in the accuracy of Theories, Laws, Models and Hypotheses is expressed by a level or degree of Probability (P value) which is established by the application of various kinds of statistical analysis. A P value of 0.05 is the minimal P value required to support a conclusion As a result of our confidence in the Scientific Method, both scientific laws and broader scientific theories are accepted to be “true” (accurate) by the scientific community as a whole o Theory - is an explanation of a set or system of related observations or events based upon proven hypotheses and verified multiple times by detached groups of unbiased researchers; should have predictive power; a theory will have significant predictive power and be falsifiable. Genuine scientific theories must be falsifiable by means of additional application of the scientific method (data collection and hypothesis testing including generating predictions of what data or observations, if found, would falsify the hypothesis). Falsifiability is the ability of a scientific theory to be disproved by an experiment or observation. The ability to evaluate scientific theories against observations is essential to the scientific method, and as such, the falsifiability of scientific theories is key to this and is the prime test for whether a proposition or theory can be described as scientific. If a scientific theory cannot be falsified, there is no point in even examining the evidence. o Law - governs a single action or situation, and can often be expressed as a mathematical relationship; whereas a theory explains an entire group of related phenomena o The biggest difference between a law and a theory is that a theory is much more complex and dynamic. o Model - A systematic description of an object or phenomenon that shares important characteristics with the object or phenomenon; scientific models can be material, visual, mathematical, or computational and are often used in the construction of scientific theories. COMMON MISTAKES IN APPLYING THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD Failure to collect appropriate data or perform appropriate experiments Personal, institutional or cultural bias – interpreting or manipulating data to produce a desired outcome or ignoring or dismissing evidence which disagrees with a preferred hypothesis Failure to recognize or account for errors in description, measurement or analysis Failure to review relevant prior scientific evidence Failure to communicate the results of research honestly or completely Theories should have predictive power, the ability to predict relationships among phenomena that previously seemed unrelated. The concept of predictive power differs from explanatory and descriptive power (where phenomena that are already known are retrospectively explained or described by a given theory) in that it allows a prospective test of theoretical understanding in application to new situations, data or evidence. Science is not authoritarian (authoritarian is the reliance on the statements or writings of important figures in an unquestioning way) Science is self correcting and progressive Scientific Bias describes the tendency or preference, conscious or unconscious, for a particular result or outcome; it interferes with the ability to be impartial, unprejudiced, or objective. The scientist attempts to remove all factors that would introduce bias into his or her experiment. That is part of the scientific method. A scientist’s nationality, culture, gender, ethnic origin, age, political convictions, etc., may be a cause of scientific bias. Scholasticism - the system of philosophy, theology, and teaching that dominated medieval western Europe and was based on the writings of the Church Fathers and Aristotle; Thomas Aquinas was a major proponent. Natural Theology - a type of theology that provides arguments for the existence of God based on reason and ordinary experience of nature which distinguishes it from revealed theology, which is based on scripture and/or religious experiences. Age of Reason - a period in history, especially the 18th century in France, England, etc., characterized by a critical approach to religious, social, and philosophical matters that seeks to repudiate beliefs or systems not based on or justifiable by reason. The Enlightenment - a European intellectual movement of the late 17th and 18th centuries emphasizing reason and individualism rather than tradition. It was heavily influenced by 17th-century philosophers such as Descartes, Locke, and Newton, and its prominent exponents include Kant, Goethe, Voltaire, Rousseau, and Adam Smith. Cosmogenesis – the origin of the universe in the Big Bang and the forces which generated the material nature of the universe, its composition and the laws by which it operates. Vitalism - a discredited doctrine that the functions of a living organism are due to a vital principle distinct from physicochemical forces; a discredited doctrine that the processes of life are not explicable by the laws of physics and chemistry alone and that life is in some part self-determining. Orthogenesis/Orthogenetic Evolution - an obsolete biological hypothesis that organisms have an innate vitalistic tendency to evolve in a definite phenotypic direction due to some internal mechanism or "driving force". Biogenesis/Abiogenesis – the origin of life from non-living chemical precursors. Scala Naturae/Scale of Nature/Great Chain of Being – a discredited ancient classification of the world (material universe) describing a continuous hierarchy of all beings arranged in order of “perfection; this system had religious roots and pictured beings rising in a linear order, starting with inanimate minerals, and rising through fossils (which were considered something between the mineral and the living) to plants, animals, humans, celestial beings, and ultimately, God; it was the accepted majority view in the Western Tradition from the time of the Greek Natural Philosophers until the time of Darwinism. Lamarckism - a discredited theory of organic evolution, proposed by Jean Baptiste Lamarck in the 18th century, asserting that environmental changes cause structural changes in animals and plants, through use and disuse of its body parts in response to the environment, are inherited by its offspring; the mechanism for this mode of inheritance is termed the inheritance of acquired characteristics. Intelligent Design - a creationist religious argument for the existence of God, and that life, or the universe, cannot have arisen by chance and was designed and created by some intelligent entity, presented by its proponents as "an evidence- based scientific theory about life's origin” but found to be pseudoscience by the law and by the scientific method because it cannot be falsified. Evolution 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. o Define evolution. Simplest definition: A change in allele frequencies in one or more genes/loci in a population's gene pool. Also: the process by which different kinds of living organisms are thought to have developed and diversified from earlier forms during the history of the earth Be sure to know the different definitions used over time (i.e. in the 17th century vs. the 18th century, vs. today, etc.) o What are some of the criticisms of evolution as a science? o What is some of the evidence that we have to validate evolution despite these criticisms? o Evolution that occurred in the past can be observed, documented, studied and tested. Evidence to test evolutionary hypothesis exists in the fossil record, and evolution can be tested and demonstrated experimentally. o The four levels upon which Evolution operates. The Genetic level, through mutations, changes in gene number and regulation, and changes in gene networks. The Organismal level, seen as individual variation and differential survival through adaption and the evolution of new structures, functions and/or behaviors. The Population level, changes in the populations of organisms, operating through mechanisms that limit gene flow between populations. The Species level, the subsequent origin, radiation, and adaption of species. -The Twelve (12) Points of Evolution Organisms exist as Individuals living in populations and communities. Natural Selection acts on individuals but individuals do not evolve. Individuals exist in Populations that inhabit discrete ecological Niches. Populations of sexually reproducing organisms consist of individuals that are not identical; asexual individuals exist in populations composed of clones, though asexual individuals may experience genetic recombination due to HGT = horizontal gene transfer. Resources are often limited with the consequence that not all individuals in a population will survive to reproduce as a result of competition for resources. Individuals develop and reproduce, Populations may reproduce and evolve. 7. Heritable Variation is an essential prerequisite for evolution to act. Variation in an individual arises from 2 factors - the genotype (the alleles an individual has) and the environment (e.g., poor diet gives poor growth - even though there may be genes for good growth). The variation due to the environment is not inherited, e.g., if you double in size due to overeating this will not be inherited by your offspring. However the genes you possess will determine the fundamental characteristics of your offspring and this is the heritable variation. 8. Because resources are limited, natural selection results in survival to the next generation through reproduction of the individuals (variants) that are best suited to the conditions of their existence (survival and reproduction). 9. Because the genetic background of individual sexually reproducing organisms differs, those that are selected on the basis of their fit to the environment will preferentially pass their genes on to the next generation. 10. Because of differential reproduction the genetic composition/gene pool of a population can drift (change at random) and spontaneous mutations occur. 11. Populations may subdivide into smaller groups. Differences that emerge in the subgroups can provide the basis for speciation. 12. Populations or subsets of populations may “crash” or become extinct because of environmental catastrophes or other problems. Evolution that occurred in the past can be observed, documented, studied and tested. Evidence to test evolutionary hypothesis exists in the fossil record, and evolution can be tested and demonstrated experimentally. o The facts of Evolution come from Anatomical Similarities and differences. Habitats of Organisms Metabolic Pathways Embryological Stages Fossil Forms Genetic, Chromosomal, Molecular features o The four levels upon which Evolution operates. The Genetic level, through mutations, changes in gene number and regulation, and changes in gene networks. The Organismal level, seen as individual variation and differential survival through adaption and the evolution of new structures, functions and/or behaviors. The Population level, changes in the populations of organisms, operating through mechanisms that limit gene flow between populations. The Species level, the subsequent origin, radiation, and adaption of species. o -Individuals respond to Natural Selection but Populations Evolve. Phenotype/Character/Feature - Used interchangeably for any distinguishing attribute of an organism, whether morphological (blue eyes), behavioral (burrows), functional/physiological (breaths oxygen), or molecular (has gene for hemoglobin/has a particular DNA sequence). Phenotype - the set of observable characteristics of an individual resulting from the interaction of its genotype with the environment; whereas the "genotype" is the genetic makeup of an organism, the phenotype is how genetic and environmental influences come together to create an organism's physical appearance, physiology, biochemistry and behavior. Mosaic Evolution (or modular evolution) - the concept that evolutionary change takes place in some body parts or systems without simultaneous changes in other parts; the evolution of characters at various rates both within and between species; different characters in the same population/species evolve at different rates. Fitness - The adjustment of an organism to its environment leading to relative reproductive success (including adjustments to other organisms in that environment) is measured by the biological attribute Fitness/Darwinian fitness. The Species Problem o Defining species, why is it a problem? o What are the definitions of species? (will be covered in future chapters in more detail) Evolution: -First meaning o Evolution as the development of an Organism ( 17th Century Definition ) -19th Century Definition o Transformation of a species or transformation of the features of organisms. -from 1859-1900 Evolution was studied as o The origination and transformation of species o The transformation of major groups/lineages of organisms and the search for ancestors. o The transformation of features (; such as jaws, limbs, kidneys, nervous systems) within lineages of organisms. 1. Evolution a. Modern definition: Evolution is now recognized as hierarchical; genes, structures, populations, species and ecosystems all evolve. 2. Niche/ecological niche a. All the relationships of a species with its community's other species and with the physical environment and resources of its habitat b. Niche is not defined as a place, but by a set of interactions. c. The unique role and position a species has in its environment; how it meets its needs for food and shelter, how it survives, and how it reproduces. A species' niche includes all of its interactions with the biotic and abiotic factors of its environment. It is advantageous for a species to occupy a unique niche in an ecosystem because it reduces the amount of competition for resources that species will encounter. 3. Transformation a. Change from one variant/form to another 4. Darwin’s phrase a. Descent with modification 5. Modern evolutionary synthesis/modern synthesis/Neo-Darwinism: established in the 1930s and continues as the explanation for most evolutionary change by means of natural, sexual, group/kin, and species selection or due to random events, especially likely in small populations. Chapter 2: The Origins of Matter, the Universe and the Earth People: Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Greek His writings cover many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, poetry, theater, music, logic, rhetoric, linguistics, politics, government, ethics, biology, and zoology. He was a great mind of the time, but his legacy as an unquestioned authority held back scientific progress for centuries. He made collections of creatures, did dissections of animals, recognized different kinds of organisms. Xenophanes of Colophon (570-480 B.C.E) Greek Ibn Sina (981-1037 AD) Persian Shen Kuo (1031-1095) Chinese James Usher/Ussher (1581-1656) Irish Isaac Newton (1643-1727) English Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon (1707-1788) French He noted the sequence of organ development by observing chicken eggs. The world can be understood with observation and reason a slow rate for geological change, undetectable in the lifetime of a human being recognized that some fossil shells were remains of shellfish, and, therefore, that sea floors had risen over time elaborated concepts related to earthquakes, mountain building, rock strata formation, and an understanding of what we would call the Theories of Catastrophism and Uniformitarianism in Geology Song Dynasty in China used the evidence of uplifted marine fossils found in neighboring mountains to propose gradual climatic and geological change Bishop, Argued the earth was born Sunday the 23rd of October 4004 BCE. Physicist and mathematician who calculated that an Earthsized sphere would require 50,000 years to cool to its present temperature As a pious Christian, he felt obliged to reject his own calculations Naturalist, mathematician, cosmologist, and encyclopedic author. Buffon published thirty-six quarto volumes of his Histoire naturelle; this included everything known about the natural world up to that time. James Hutton (1726-1797) Scottish John Playfair (1748-1819) Scottish Abraham Werner (1749-1817) German William Smith (1769-1839) English Concluded that species must have improved and degenerated (change through time) Noted that similar environments have distinct flora and fauna (Buffon’s Law or the first principle of Biogeography). Centers of creation/origin Climate change must have facilitated worldwide spread of species from their centers of origin Buffon calculated that the age of the earth was 75,000 years, basing his figures on the cooling rate of iron Buffon’s law – first principle of biogeography Father of modern Geology, though his “uniformitarian” proposals were obscured by his difficult writing style He recognized both sedimentation and vulcanism as sources for rock strata Plutonism Responsible for the concept of deep geological time. Calculated the earth to be millions of years old. restated Hutton’s ideas in Illustrations of the Huttonian Theory of the Earth (1802) 18th century Neptunist advocated that the Noachian Flood formed all rock strata Principle of faunal succession: noted that different rock strata contain particular types of fossilized flora and fauna, and that these fossil forms and communities succeed each Baron Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) French Alexandre Brongniart (1770 – 1847) French 19th Century Catastrophists William Whewell (1794-1866) English Sir Charles Lyell (1797-1875) British Richard Owen (1804-1892) British other in a specific and predictable order that can be identified over wide distances proposed a Theory of Catastrophism to explain extinct organisms Accepted some fossils as evidence of extinctions, in opposition to Buffon Recognized evidence of stratification of rock layers, examples of sedimentation, uplift and subsidence Recognized a Principle of Faunal Succession used to assign times to geologic strata The Animal Kingdom, Distributed According to Its Organization (1817) improved the Linnaean system of classification was an colleague of Cuvier’s and made important contributions to geology and paleontology accepted the Earth was many thousands of years old Coined the terms Catastrophism and Uniformitarianism Uniformitarianism Mentor to Darwin Principles of Geology in 3 vols. (1830-1833) 19th Century Christian Catastrophist and antiDarwinist comparative anatomist who never accepted Darwinism important comparative anatomist and paleontologist who identified homologies to establish characteristic Louis Agassiz (1807-1873) American Charles Darwin (1809-1882) English William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824-1907) Irish Platonic "archetypes," "ideal" body plans / bauplans for higher taxa, especially vertebrates 19th Century Christian Catastrophist and antiDarwinist paleontologist at Harvard Father of Evolution - He had geologic training - focused on fossils and coral reefs, (formation by incremental growth), likened geologic distribution of organisms to geology. Naturalist who established that all species of life have descended over time from common ancestry, and proposed the scientific theory that this branching pattern of evolution resulted from a process that he called natural selection. The author of the ground breaking book Origin of Species which relied little on fossils, accepted uniformitarianism which gives time for gradual changes, documenting the fact that evolution has occurred, and mechanisms of evolution are artificial and natural selection. Mathematician and physicist who estimated the age of the earth at 15-20 mybp maximum Based his calculations of thermodynamic properties, comparing the size and temperature of the sun and earth, and estimating the rate of cooling of the earth Alexander du Toit (1878-1948) South African Alfred Wegener (1880 – 1930) German Léon Croizat (1894 – 1982) Italian discovery of radioactive isotope decay in the Earth’s core as the heat source which refuted Kelvin’s calculations Geologist, only major supporter of Wegener at the time Wegener first advocated for continental drift Our Wandering Continents (1937) Meteorologist who proposed continental drift in 1912 based on fossil and mineral distributions and continental coast lines Proposed the supercontinent Pangea Biologist, also proposed continental drift, more or less independently, based on distribution of communities of living organisms Croizat developed a new biogeographic methodology, which he named Panbiogeography ― Based on the metaphor that "life and earth evolve together" ― which means that geographic barriers and biotas co-evolve. This method was basically to plot distributions of organisms on maps and connect the disjunct distribution areas or collection localities together with lines called tracks Vicariance Concepts: Cosmogenesis - The origin and evolution of the universe: Big bang 15-12 BYA [approximately 13.73 BYA) solar system formation 5-4.5 BYA Sun formation 4.6 BYA Planets form 4.5 BYA (BIG WHACK : formation of the moon when Earth collides with a Mars sized object, “Theia,” soon after the planets formed.) Origin of the solar system 1. Supernova injects matter into space and disturbs nearby interstellar gases 2. Gravity causes matter to coalesce into planets, sun, etc. 3. Requires more than 100 million years Earth’s Ability to sustain life: o In the Goldilocks Zone – conditions just right for life/biogenesis o Size of the Sun o Orbital distance from the earth to the sun o Mixture of atomic elements o Liquid water o Ozone layer o Magnetic field Earth’s early atmosphere o First Atmosphere: Reducing: hydrogen and helium o Second atmosphere: A violent and energy abundant reducing atmosphere produced by volcanic out gassing Gases: H2O, CO2, SO2, CO, S2, Cl2, N2, H2 and NH3 (ammonia) and CH4 (methane) but with no free O2 Water vapor condenses from it to form the oceans The atmosphere under which life evolves o Third Atmosphere (current) Organic molecules H2O, CO2, SO2, CO, S2, Cl2, N2, H2 and NH3, and CH4 from volcanic out gassing Oxygen O2 from cynaobacterial photosynthesis Autotrophs consume CO2 Ozone (O3) layer forms gradually Ozone blocks uv radiation which reduces mutation rates in DNA Oxygen most likely arose due to photosynthetic cyanobacteria some of which form colonies/fossils in shallow marine environments known as stromatolites Rock Formation: o Igneous rocks - molten magma cools o ~65% of the total crust volume o 17-20% of the exposed crust o Sedimentary rocks - small rock particles form from weathering/erosion and are moved to other locations by wind and water where they collect and are transformed by heat and pressure over time o ~8% of the total crust volume o 50-55% of the exposed crust 1. Metamorphic rocks - igneous or sedimentary rocks that undergo heat and pressure after they are buried and transform into new kinds of rocks o ~25% of the total crust volume o 25-30% of the exposed crust Radiocarbon/Radiometric Dating o Knowing the rate of decay of radioactive elements and analyzing the presence of the radioactive isotope and it’s daughter isotopes within a fossil or rock layer allows for estimates of time frames in which the layers were formed/ the fossil organisms may have been alive. o Half Life - the amount of time required for half of the radioactive element’s atomic nuclei to decay o Carbon: C12 & C14isotopes: When the organism dies, stable C12 persists, but unstable C14 decays to N14 at a constant rate and is slowly lost from the fossil To measure the amount of radiocarbon left in a fossil, scientists burn a small piece to convert it into carbon dioxide gas, radiation counters are used to detect the radiation given off by decaying C14 as it turns into nitrogen. More time = less C14 present; proportion of C12 to C14 = age of fossil. Principle of faunal succession: noted that different rock strata contain particular types of fossilized flora and fauna, and that these fossil forms and communities succeed each other in a specific and predictable order that can be identified over wide distances Vocabulary: 1. Neptunism: Noachian Flood or similar global floods formed all rock strata; developed into Catastrophism 2. Plutonism: volcanic activity formed most rock strata formation with sedimentation as a secondary process; developed into Uniformitarianism. The geologic theory that the rocks forming the Earth were formed “in fire” by 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. volcanic activity, with a continuing gradual process of weathering and erosion wearing away rocks, which were then deposited on the sea bed, reformed into layers of sedimentary rock by heat and pressure, and raised again. It proposed that basalt was solidified molten magma. [The theory was first proposed before 1750, by Abbé Anton Moro who had studied volcanic islands], and was subsequently developed by James Hutton as part of his Theory of the Earth published in 1788. Uniformitarianism: the theory that changes in the earth's crust during geological history have resulted from the action of continuous and uniform processes the can be observed by humans around the globe, the action of weather, erosion, water flows, volcanic and earthquake activities. Catastrophism: the theory that changes in the earth's crust during geological history have resulted chiefly from sudden violent and unusual events. Continental Drift: the radical early 20th century concept of gradual movement of the continents across the earth's surface through geological time advocated for by Alfred Wegener, Leon Crozait, and others; it was finally accepted in the 1960s by the discovery of the mechanism of plate techtonics. Plate Techtonics - a geological theory of global tectonics, which explains continental drift, in which the lithosphere is divided into a number of crustal plates, each of which moves slowly on the plastic asthenosphere abnd underlying molten mantle of the earth more or less independently to collide with, slide under, or move past adjacent plates. Vicariance: the geographical separation of a population or community of taxa, typically by the formation of a physical barrier such as a mountain range or river, ocean or desert, resulting in a pair of closely related populations or communities; a concept proposed by Leon Crozait. Dispersal: the movement of animals over great distances (via flying or swimming) from one land mass to another across an inhospitable barrier of some sort. IMPORTANT PRINCIPLES OF GEOLOGY Uniformitarianism - central principle; the processes acting on the earth's surface today are the processes that have always acted and are enough to explain all the changes on the earth's surface over time, origin of strata, etc. Stratigraphy – the discipline within geology that deals with the origin, composition, distribution, arrangement and succession of strata/layers of rock. Original Horizontality - any tipping or bending of strata layers had to occur later Superposition - young rocks and fossils are on top of older ones Intrusive relationships- when volcanic materials penetrate sedimentary strata it is younger Inclusions - new strata may surround older material Cross-Cutting Relationships - strata breaks up and faults form which fill with rocks which are younger than the rocks of the fractured strata Fauna Succession - fossils change through time and give relative ages to strata; fossils deeper into crust are older Correspondence in age can be from radiometric or geometric dating or index fossils or other means. Index Fossil - a widely distributed fossil, of narrow range in time, regarded as characteristic of a given geological formation and biological community, used especially in determining the age of related formations. Geo-magnetism - the earth's magnetic field reverses from time to time and can be detected in newly formed igneous rock when iron containing crystals orient according to the magnetic field as they cool and crystalize; a phenomenon that can be used to date rock strata. Continental Drift - a theory stating that the Earth's continents have been joined together and have moved away from each other at different times in the Earth's history. The theory was first proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912. While his general idea of continental movement eventually became widely accepted, his explanation for the mechanism of the movement has been supplanted by the theory of plate tectonics. Plate Tectonics - a theory of geology in which the lithosphere is divided into a number of crustal plates, each of which moves on the plastic asthenosphere more or less independently to collide with, slide under, or move past adjacent plates. Lithosphere - the solid part of a celestial body (such as the earth); specifically, the outer part of the solid earth composed of rock essentially like that exposed at the surface, consisting of the crust and outermost layer of the mantle, and usually considered to be about 60 miles (100 kilometers) in thickness Pangaea – Mesozoic supercontinent of some 300 to 200 Mya, proposed by Wegener; composed of northern Laurasia and southern Gondwana Laurasia – northern supercontinent from the breakup of Pangaea composed of North America, Greenland, Europe and Asia (except India) Gondwana – southern supercontinent from the breakup of Pangaea composed of South America, Africa, India, Australia, and Antarctica Panbiogeography - originally proposed by the French-Italian scholar Léon Croizat (1894–1982), is a cartographic (mapping) approach to biogeography that basically plots distributions of a particular taxon or group of taxa on maps and connects the disjunct distribution areas or collection localities together with lines called tracks; Croizat’s data supported the hypothesis of continental drift. Disjunct Distribution - the geographic distribution of a taxon that has two or more groups that are related but widely separated from each other geographically; the causes are varied and might demonstrate either the expansion or contraction of a species range or the development of a barrier which separated demes. Vicariance - a biogeographic process, originally proposed by the French-Italian scholar Léon Croizat, by which the geographical range of an individual taxon, or a whole biota, is split into discontinuous parts by the formation of a physical or biotic barrier to gene flow or dispersal. Vicariant Distribution - the geographic distribution of a taxon, any of several closely related species, races, etc., each of which exists in a separate geographical area, their ranges assumed to have originated from a single ancestral population that became subdivided by barrier formation, at the large scale of geological events, e.g., plate techtonics, to the small scale of river or stream formation, lakes shrinking into isolated ponds, forests being fragmented into clumps by drought-induced grassland formation, etc. Chapter 3: The Origin of Molecules and the Nature of Life People: John Burdon (1892-1964) Sanderson [J.B.S.] Haldane British Harold Urey & Stanley Miller (1893-1981) & (1930-2007) American Aleksandr Ivanovich Oparin (1894-1981) Russian John Desmond Bernal (1901-1971) British Biologist and mathematician who independently proposed (1928) a similar hypothesis that conditions on the primitive Earth favored chemical reactions that synthesized organic compounds from inorganic precursors: biopoiesis “primordial organic soup” Physical chemists who conducted experiments beginning in 1953 that simulated hypothetical conditions present on the early Earth and supported abiogenesis by demonstrating that an "organic soup" could form spontaneously from the second reducing atmosphere Biochemist/botanist who wrote The Origin of Life (1924/1936) proposing Abiogenesis produced some prebiotic protocell precursors from the mixture of gelatin and gum arabic coacervates studied biochemistry and enzymology of plant cells coined the term Biopoesis: Sidney Walter Fox (1912 - 1998) American Carl Woese (1928-2012) American Walter Gilbert Concepts: (1932-present) American Stage 1: The origin of biological monomers Stage 2: The origin of biological polymers Stage 3: The evolution from molecules to cell found that under certain conditions proteinoids assembled into microscopic spherical balls, which they referred to as proteinoid microspheres, experimental models of hypothetical ancient abiogenetically produced protocells Microbiologist who defined archae Wrote The Genetic Code (1967) an early advocate for the RNA World He proposed the three domain classification of living organisms 1986 – coined the term “RNA World” Oparin & Fox experiments o Demonstrated how the phosopholipid bilayer of cells could arise through abiogenesis o Fox and Harada demonstrate the polymerization of “proteinoids” exposed to high heat; when water was added to these cross-branched polymers amino acids, proteinoid microspheres (globular droplets in the water solution which can coalesce or bud if disturbed) were formed. Miller-Urey Experiments o Formed amino acids, sugars, lipids, building blocks for nucleic acids, etc. o Supported that biomolecules could form from abiotic factors in lab Coacervate - an aggregate of colloidal droplets (lipids and proteins) held together by electrostatic attractive forces; these structures exhibit a few characteristics of living cells: outer boundary, osmotic swelling and shrinking, budding and binary fission, streaming movement of internal particles Possible sites for the origin of the fist biomolecules of Earth: o Hydrothermal vents, volcanoes, marine clays, tidal pools, bare hot lave splashed with the water of the early ocean's organic soup. o carbonaceous meteorites Bada and Miller's “sub-ice organic gazpacho” theory (ice as a catalyst for abiosynthesis reactions) o Amino acids of extraterrestrial (?) origin Primordial Organic Soup - a term introduced by Soviet biologist Alexander Oparin and English scientist John Burdon Sanderson Haldane. In 1924, Oparin proposed a theory of the origin of life on Earth through the transformation, during the gradual chemical evolution of particles/molecules that contain carbon, in the primordial soup. Biochemist Robert Shapiro has summarized the "primordial soup" theory of Oparin and Haldane in its "mature form" as follows: [1] Early Earth had a chemically reducing atmosphere. [2] This atmosphere, exposed to energy in various forms, produced simple organic compounds ("monomers"). [3] These compounds accumulated in a "soup", which may have been concentrated at various locations (shorelines, oceanic vents etc.). [4] By further transformation, more complex organic polymers – and ultimately life – developed in the soup. o Phospholipids (of an appropriate length) can spontaneously form lipid bilayers, a basic component of the cell membrane. o The polymerization of nucleotides into random autocatalytic RNA molecules might have resulted in self-replicating ribozymes (RNA world hypothesis). autocatalytic RNA molecules - RNA molecules which can use ribonucleotide monomers to synthesize additional copies of themselves as well as, possibly, catalyzing other synthetic reactions to make other RNAs or proteins; thought to be the main catalysts of the protocells of the RNA World. o Natural Selection pressures for catalytic efficiency and diversity result in ribozymes which catalyze peptidyl transfer (hence formation of small proteins), since oligopeptides complex with RNA to form better catalysts. Thus the first ribosome is born, and protein synthesis becomes more prevalent. o Proteins outcompete ribozymes in catalytic ability, and therefore become the dominant biopolymer. Nucleic acids are restricted to predominantly genomic use for polypeptide primary structure blueprints (DNA), regulatory functions (DNA & RNA) and as participants in protein synthesis (transcription and translation). Biopoesis: o Stage 1: The origin of biological monomers o Stage 2: The origin of biological polymers o Stage 3: The evolution from molecules to cells RNA World Hypothesis - Alexander Rich, Leslie Orgel, Francis Crick, and Carl Woese proposed the RNA World hypothesis around 1982 stating that the first chemical world was an RNA World (RNA can catalyze like enzymes and replicate like DNA) DNA replication - During S phase of the Cell Cycle, the hereditary material (DNA) of cells must be copies so that at cell division daughter cells receive nearly exact copies of the parent cell DNA; the process is complex, requiring helicases, RNA Primase, DNA replicases, deoxyribo-nucleotide triphosphate monomers and other molecular helpers; the process is semi-conservative. The RNA primer formed by RNA Primase must be removed and replaced before DNA synthesis is completed. These shorts pieces of primer RNA may be considered vestigial features retained from the ancestral RNA World. Semiconservative replication – the reactions in which a doublestranded molecule of DNA separates into two single strands each of which serves as a template for the formation of a complementary strand that together with the template forms a complete molecule. Transcription - The synthesis of RNA molecules from DNA sequences/blueprints using RNA synthetases and other molecular helpers and ribo-nucleotide triphosphate monomers. In the case of the production of mRNA which carries the blueprints for polypeptide chains, the mRNA will be further processed with the addition of a 5' cap and poly-A tail, and if the mRNA is in a Eukaryote, the processing will also include excision of introns from a pre-mRNA and the splicing of exons to form the final mRNA product. mRNA processing in eukaryotes requires that pre-mRNA undergo excision of introns, noncoding mRNA base sequences, and splicing of exons, amino acid coding sequences, in order to generate a functional mRNA. Excision and splicing is not required for prokaryotic mRNA because prokaryotic gene sequences contain no introns. All mRNAs require the addition of a 5’ cap and a poly-A tail. 5' End Capping - Post-transcriptional processing of the 5' end of the RNA product of DNA transcription comes in the form of a process called the 5' cap. At the end of transcription, the 5' end of the RNA transcript contains a free triphosphate group since it was the first incorporated nucleotide in the chain. The capping process replaces the triphosphate group with another structure called the "cap". The cap is added by the enzyme guanyl transferase. This enzyme catalyzes the reaction between the 5' end of the RNA transcript and a guanine triphosphate (GTP) molecule. The cap is formed through a 5'-5' linkage between the two substrates such that the GTP molecule is oriented in the opposite direction as the other nucleotides in the RNA transcript chain. Once in place, the cap plays a role in the ribosomal recognition of messenger RNA during translation into a protein. Prokaryotes do not have a similar cap because they use other signals for recognition by the ribosome. The Poly A Tail - Post-transcriptional RNA processing at the opposite end of the transcript comes in the form of a string of adenine bases attached to the end of the synthesized RNA chain. This string of adenines is called the "poly A tail". The addition of the adenines is catalyzed by the enzyme poly (A) polymerase, which recognizes the sequence AAUAAA as a signal for the addition. The reaction proceeds through mechanism similar to that used for the addition of nucleotides during transcription. The poly A tail is found on most, but not all, eukaryotic RNA transcripts. Among other possible functions, the poly A tail serves to delay the catalysis of the mRNA protein blueprints by RNA degrading/recycling enzymes Translation - The synthesis of a polypeptide chain coded for by a DNA blueprint at a ribosome using tRNAs to carry specific amino acids into place in the growing chain. For this to happen, a specific tRNA with a triplet nitrogenous base anticodon must allign with a triplet base codon on the mRNA. Then the amino acid on the tRNA in the A site on the ribosome is transferred to the growing polypeptide chain at the P site until the stop codon is reached and the completed polypeptide chain is released from the ribosome. RNA molecules - the several classes of RNA molecules that participate in protein synthesis: rRNA molecules combine with ribosomal proteins to form ribosomal subunits which bind to form functional ribosomes; mRNA molecules which carry the transcribed DNA blueprint for a polypeptide chain which will be synthesized at the ribosome; tRNA molecules which carry amino acids to the ribosome for incorporation into a growing polypeptide chain with the tRNA's anticodon matching by hydrogen bonds to the mRNA codon to ensure the correct amino acids are inserted into the growing chain in the correct sequence; various types of regulatory RNAs which participate in replication, transcription, or translation to change the timing, amount, and cell location of protein synthesis. Codon Dictionary - the listing of 64 codons, nitrogenous base triplets composed of RNA bases, A, G, C, U, which represent either the Start Codon, 60 codons which represent twenty amino acids available for protein synthesis, and three Stop codons. The codons are redundant but unambiguous and the code is universal except for a few bacterial variants. The Genetic Code o The code is universal because it specifies the same 20 amino acids in all organisms with only few (bacterial) exceptions o The code is redundant because there are multiple triplet codons which code for the same AA o The code is unambiguous because any one codon codes for only one amino acid o The code is a triplet code because 3 bases represent a single AA in a codon Lac Operon - Several proteins involved in lactose metabolism in the E. coli cell. They are: ß-galactosidase - converts lactose into glucose and galactose ß-galactoside permease - transports lactose into the cell ß-galactoside transacetylase - function unknown Research with this system was greatly added by the availability of constitutive mutants. A constitutive mutant is one in which the gene product is produced continually, that is there is no control over its expression. In these mutants, the above proteins were produced all the time in comparison to the wild type where the proteins only appeared in the presence of lactose. So in these mutants, the mutation must be a gene other than those responsible for the structural genes. All of the genes involved in controlling this pathway are located next to each other on the E. coli chromosome. Together they form an operon. Another locus, elsewhere in the genome, is a regulatory gene which codes for the repressor protein. Without lactose in the cell, the repressor protein binds to the operator site and prevents the read through of RNA polymerase into the three structural genes. With lactose in the cell, lactose binds to the repressor. This causes a structural change in the repressor and it loses its affinity for the operator. Thus RNA polymerase can then bind to the promoter site and transcribe the structural genes. In this system lactose acts as an effector molecule. Without lactose in the cell, the repressor protein binds to the operator and prevents the read through of RNA polymerase into the three structural genes. With lactose in the cell, lactose binds to the repressor. This causes a structural change in the repressor and it loses its affinity for the operator. Thus RNA polymerase can then bind to the promoter and transcribe the structural genes. In this system lactose acts as an effector molecule. The evolutionary significance of the Lac Operon is that it allows the genes for lactose metabolism to be carried by all E. coli, generation after generation, but to regulate them on only in the presence of lactose (for the relatively rare E. coli generations living in the gut of baby mammals nursing on a milk diet) but not to waste energy and resources synthesizing these proteins when there is no lactose present in the environment (the majority of E. coli generations living in the gut of weaned mammals). Properties of life: Organization: Composed of one or more cells, the basic unit of life, with integrated subunits and biochemical systems inside. Metabolism: Transform energy by converting chemicals and energy into cellular components (anabolism/synthetic reactions) and decomposing organic matter (catabolism/breakdown reactions) to generate useful energy. All metabolic reactions liberate some waste heat. Homeostasis: Regulation of the internal environment to maintain a relatively constant state or dynamic equilibrium (a state of balance between continuing processes; input of matter and energy to the system are relatively equal to the output of matter and energy from the system over time). Growth: Maintain a higher rate of anabolism than catabolism to increase size and complexity and repair damage to the cell or organism. Adaptation: The ability to change over time in response to stimuli from the environment. Individuals develop and populations evolve. Response to stimuli: A change in activity (metabolism, behavior, etc.) appropriate to the change in the environment which was the stimulus. Reproduction: The ability to produce new individual cells, tissues, or organisms, either asexually, or sexually. Enzymes - Protein (or RNA) catalysts which change reaction rates by participating in reactions but remain unchanged when the reaction is over so that they may be reused enormous numbers of times. The Central Dogma: DNA RNA Protein Vocabulary: 1. Goldilocks zone: There is a relationship between star size and energy output on the one hand and planetary distance on the other that produces a zone in which planets will be likely to have water present in all three phases, vapor, liquid, and solid; the sun and Earth’s orbit is “just right” to sustain life. 2. Biopoiesis: The abiogenetic formation of living systems from inorganic precursors on the early earth, more than 3.5 billion years ago. 3. Proteinoid microspheres: spherical droplets produced in Sidney Walter Fox’s lab that represented how cells could have possibly formed via abiogenesis (protobionts, coavervate droplets); the proteinoids are proteinlike, often cross-linked (branched polymer) molecules formed abiotically from amino acids in hot acidic environments; when mixed with water these preteinoids formed microspheres with some properties similar to living cells: an outer wall, osmotic swelling and shrinking, budding, binary fission (dividing into two daughter microspheres), and streaming movement of internal particles; preteinoid microspheres are a model for a likely abiogentic protocell. 4. Thermophilic: heat loving 5. Zeolites: sponge like clay minerals that can retain and catalyze the formation of organic compounds and polymers and a possible location for abiogenesis on the early Earth. 6. Autocatalytic RNA molecules: RNA molecules which can catalyze the synthesis of other RNA molecules or polypeptide chains. They are thought to have been important in the early development of life in the "RNA World." 7. Ribozymes: a ribonucleic acid (RNA) enzyme that catalyzes a chemical reaction. The ribozyme catalyses specific reactions in a similar way to that of protein enzymes. Also called catalytic RNA, ribozymes are found in the ribosome where they join amino acids together to form protein chains. 8. Proteins: any of a class of nitrogenous organic compounds that consist of large molecules composed of one or more long chains of amino acids and are an essential part of all living organisms, especially as structural components of body tissues such as muscle, hair, collagen, etc., and as enzymes and antibodies, etc.. 9. Nucleic Acids: any of a group of long, linear macromolecules, either DNA or various types of RNA, that carry genetic information directing all cellular functions: composed of linked nucleotides. 10. Phospholipids: Any of various phosphorus-containing lipids, such as lecithin, that are composed mainly of two nonpolar fatty acids, a polar phosphate group, and a simple organic molecule such as glycerol. Phospholipids are the main lipids in cell membranes. 11. Abiogenesis: the theory that the earliest life forms on earth developed from nonliving matter more than 3.5 billion years ago. 12. Semi-conservative model of DNA replication: The normal process of DNA synthesis/replication, in which the two original anti-parallel strands of the molecule separate, and each acts as a template on which a new complementary strand is laid down by the DNA replication process. 13. Enzyme Active Site - the specific region of an enzyme where a substrate binds and catalysis takes place or where the chemical reaction occurs. Chapter 4: From Molecules to Cells and the Origin of Selection People: Sidney Fox (1912-1998) American developed membranebound microspheres from organic polymers in the laboratory Concepts: Important Transitions for Living systems: o Abiotic organic molecules – sheet/droplet membranes o Concentrating molecules – protocells o Protocells leading to the first true cells, prokaryotes First Atmosphere ― a reducing atmosphere o 4.6 to 4.2 Bya o Hydrogen and Helium lost to space because Earth's gravity is not strong enough to hold lighter gases Second Atmosphere ― a reducing atmosphere o 4.2 to ~2.3 Bya o Produced by volcanic out gassing o Gases produced were probably similar to those created by modern volcanoes (H2O, CO2, SO2, CO, S2, Cl2, N2, H2) and NH3 (ammonia) and CH4 (methane) o No free O2 (not found in volcanic gases) Third Atmosphere – the current oxidizing atmosphere o Nitrogen, Oxygen predominate o O2 from cyanobacterial photosynthesis accumulated slowly o From 3.3 to 1.8 Bya, most of the oxygen combined with metal ions, especially iron, in rocks and soils o Free oxygen (O2) only gradually accumulated in the atmosphere o Ozone (O3) layer forms gradually from collisions between O2 molecules in the upper atmosphere o Ozone blocks uv radiation which reduces mutation rates in DNA o Photosynthetic Autotrophs consume CO2 o Earth’s first organisms were most likely prokaryotic methanogens Oxygen was produced by photosynthetic cyanobacteria around 2.3 BYA Vocabulary: Abiogenesis: The study of how life originally arose on the planet, encompasses the ancient belief in the spontaneous generation of life from non living matter. Abiotically produced organic molecules: carbon based molecules such as amino acids, fatty acids, and small peptides Phospholipid: a lipid (fat) composed of a three-carbon glycerol with a phosphorous-containing polar group at one carbon and two nonpolar fatty acid groups at the other two carbons; phospholipid molecules self-assemble with hydrophilic phosphate heads facing the water solvent and hydrophobic hydrocarbon tails facing each other to form a monolayer on the surface of water and are the major structural components of cell membrane lipid bilayers Cell membrane: phospholipid bilayer with accessory lipids, e.g., glycolipids and cholesterol, and integral and peripheral proteins; the cell membrane structure is characterized by the Fluid-Mosaic Model of Membrane Structure Membranous droplet: important step in the evolution of cells; lipid vesicles that can grow by adding more fatty acids; grow large enough for concentration gradients to be established across the membrane which allowed differences to be developed between the inside and outside of vesicles Protocells: a membranous droplet; ancient life forms that can maintain their internal environments in the face of a different external environment but may lack some of the properties of living systems of the DNA/RNA/Protein World. Methanogens: early organisms that only survive in absence of oxygen; molecular fossils provide the evidence of their presence; produced high levels of methane to atmosphere beginning ~3.8 Bya Methane: CH4 greenhouse gas; helped warm the Earth by reducing the loss of heat from Earth's surface Photosynthesis: synthesis and production of organic compounds from carbon sources and water using light as the energy source; oxygen is produced when hydrogen ions are removed from water. The first photosynthetic organisms were cyanobacteria and related prokaryotes. Later, some eukaryotic lineages acquired photosynthesis from endosymbiosis. Cyanobacteria: first organisms preserved as fossils in stromatolite reefs 3.5 Bya; photosynthetic and single-celled prokaryotic organisms; produced oxygen into Earth's atmosphere and it began to accumulate 2.3 Bya Coacervate: spherical aggregation of polymers into colloidal droplets in liquid suspension formed by mixing hydrophilic and hydrophobic components in the absence of life; an aggregate of colloidal droplets (lipids and proteins) held together by electrostatic attractive forces; these structures exhibit a few characteristics of living cells: outer boundary, osmotic swelling and shrinking, budding and binary fission, streaming movement of internal particles. Microspheres: formed by heating then cooling protein polymers in the lab; tiny and has a double bounding membrane; absorb chemicals selectively from medium. Molecular selection: competition among catalytic systems for substrates (resources). Protocell selection: competition among vesicle populations for substrates (resources). Malthusian selection: when energy or raw materials are in limited supply; Malthus originally predicted that humans would outstrip their ability to provide themselves with food because human reproduction increase is exponential while food production is geometric. Geometric growth has a constant rate of change - the increases per time period are constant. Exponential growth is where the rate of change is itself increasing. Living systems: have parts that are heterogeneous and specialized, include a variety of internal mechanisms, contain diverse organic molecules (including nucleic acids and proteins), grow and develop, reproduce, repair themselves when damaged, have a metabolism, exhibit environmental adaptation, construct the niches that they occupy. First Living System: protocells that had some sort of catalyzed metabolism with a functional inheritance system (RNA or DNA) to code for the catalysts, whether RNA or protein. Prokaryotes: unicellular, single circular DNA and plasmids for heredity, no cytoplasmic membrane-bound organelles, prokaryotic cytoskeleton and ribosomes, most have a rigid external cell wall, asexual reproduction and various forms of gene recombination, i.e., horizontal gene transfer. Fermentative Anaerobes: bacteria and archaebacteria that consumed simple organic nutrient compounds from the "organic soup" of the early oceans; many lineages of such anaerobes and facultative anaerobes still exist today but few eukaryotes exhibit this lifestyle. Heterotroph: An organism that is unable to synthesize its own organic carbonbased compounds from inorganic sources, hence, feeds on organic matter produced by, or available in, other organisms. Heterotrophs are the consumers in the food chain, particularly the herbivores, carnivores and omnivores. All animals, some fungi and most bacteria are heterotrophs. They are not capable of producing their own food. Therefore, they obtain their energy requirements by feeding on organic matter or another organism. An organism is heterotroph if it obtains its carbon from organic compounds. If it obtains nitrogen from organic compounds but not energy, it is still considered an autotroph (such as carnivorous plants). Autotroph: an organism capable of synthesizing its own food from inorganic substances using light or chemical energy. Green plants, algae, and certain bacteria are autotrophs Peptidoglycan Cell Wall: a crystal lattice structure in the bacterial cell wall that is made up of linear chains of alternating amino sugars, namely N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid, and short peptide chains of three to five amino acids (attached to the N-acetylmuramic acid). The peptide chains form cross-links between them resulting in a 3D mesh-like structure. Peptidoglycan serves a structural role in the bacterial cell wall, giving structural strength, as well as counteracting the osmotic pressure of the cytoplasm. Its degradation and synthesis is involved in binary fission during bacterial cell reproduction. Glycocalyx/Carbohydrate Capsule: complex carbohydrate/glycoprotein protective outer coat (“slime layer”) present in many bacteria which serves to resist phagocytosis by white blood cells in bacterial pathogens, e.g., Streptococcus pneumoniae. Selection: the sum of the survival and fertility mechanisms that affect the reproductive success of genotypes/phenotypes in a population of organisms. Population: basic ecological and reproductive unit of a species. Artificial selection: process of variation and selection occurring in the lab or as a consequence of artificial breeding of animals or plants, or exposure to drugs or insecticides, i.e., by any form of human intervention into breeding of organisms. Chromosomes: nuclear structures consisting of DNA and associated proteins that replicate with each cell division in Eukaryotes. Binary fission: the process of division in prokaryotes, archaebacteria, some protists and fungi. After replicating its genetic material, the cell divides into two nearly equal sized daughter cells. Mitosis: the nuclear division of cells other than germ cells in (somatic) eukaryotic cells, typically consisting of four stages, prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase, and normally resulting in two new nuclei, each of which contains a complete copy of the parental chromosomes. Also called karyokinesis. Meiosis: the type of two stage nuclear division found only in eukaryote cell lineages that produce germ cells (gametes) in which the chromosome number is typically reduced from the diploid to the haploid state. Cleavage: type of cell division that characterizes the earliest stages of the development of animal embryos; during cleavage cell divisions occurs so rapidly that there is little time for growth and daughter cells are significantly smaller than their parent cells. Prions: proteinaceous infectious particles that have alternative three dimensional configurations, a normal structure and an alternate which can induce disease. Viruses: acellular entity that can only replicate inside cells of a host organism; DNA and RNA viruses exist and may infect prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Robert A. Wilson concluded in 2005 that living systems: a) have parts that are heterogeneous and specialized b) include a variety of internal mechanisms c) contain diverse organic molecules, including nucleic acids and proteins d) grow and develop e) reproduce f) repair themselves when damaged g) have a metabolism h) exhibit environmental adaptation i) construct the niches that they occupy It is important to note that the capacity to evolve is another important criterion of life. Later, Wilson added two criteria to these nine: 1. Belonging to a reproductive lineage 2. Having minimal functional autonomy Chapter 5: Darwin and the Voyage of the Beagle Plato (428-348 BC) Greek Idealism; Organisms are imperfect representations of a pure essence, an ideal; Idealism was the prevailing philosophy in Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Greek western Europe for almost 2 millennia. His writings cover many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, poetry, theater, music, logic, rhetoric, linguistics, politics, government, ethics, biology, and zoology. He was a great mind of the time, but his legacy as an unquestioned authority held back scientific progress for centuries. He made collections of creatures, did dissections of animals, recognized different kinds of organisms. He noted the sequence of gradual organ development by observing chicken eggs and for him this supported epigenesis over preformation. He rejected pangenesis but did accept a concept of inheritance of acquired characteristics (use and disuse). He believed the world can be understood with observation and reason. He accepted a slow rate for geological change, undetectable in the lifetime of a human being He proclaimed that there was a hierarchical order of species from most imperfect to most perfect, a concept refined over the centuries as the "Great Chain of Being." Scala Naturae (Scale of Nature) which ranked things from the inorganic to humans to Gods. He saw life as progressive and goal-oriented (vitalist), and therefore thought there was no need for adaptation, since there were no random or arbitrary influences on the progression of life • Favored spontaneous generation believed species were immutable naturalist, first Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford, and the first keeper of the Ashmolean Museum believed that most fossils were not remains of living organisms but rather crystallizations of mineral salts with a coincidental zoological form mathematician and philosopher who studied comparative anatomy and fossils saw evidence in nature that suggested the universe and the living world were progressing towards a state of perfection Species may not be fixed Preformation Teleology Unfolding of a preconceived plan in a Chain of Being; a process suggesting possibility of change (evolution) Father of modern Geology, though his “uniformitarian” proposals were obscured by his difficult writing style He recognized both sedimentation and vulcanism as sources for rock strata Plutonism Responsible for the concept of deep geological time. • Robert Plot (1640-1696) English Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) German Charles Bonnet (1720-1793) Swiss James Hutton (1726-1797) Scottish Erasmus Darwin 1731 - 1802 English Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (1744-1829) French Calculated the earth to be millions of years old. Was the grandfather of Charles Darwin. One of the first proponents of evolution. Incorporated the two Laws of Nature (principle of use and disuses, Inheritance of acquired characters) in Zoonomia. Worked most of his life at the Muséum d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris. Vitalism (wrong): Organisms have an inner disposition to adapt their characteristics in response to changes in the environment (an aspect of vitalism for Lamarck but similar to the modern term developmental adaptation) hypothesized the Chain of Being or Scala Naturae as a moving “escalator” which he called Nature’s Parade = La Marche de la Nature (1597) (wrong) First organisms arose by abiogenesis (correct) Inheritance of acquired traits via use and disuse. (wrong) Proposed the continuity of species by gradual modification through time without leaving any gaps, a materialistic explanation for evolution. (correct) Lamarck did not believe in extinction: for him, species that disappeared did so because they evolved into different species. Coined the term “invertebrates”. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1748-1832) German John Henslow (1796-1861) British Robert McCormick (1800-1890) British Richard Owen (1804-1892) British Robert FitzRoy (1805-1865) English Charles Darwin (1809-1882) English writer was also a serious amateur student of botany had ideas on similarities among the structures of organisms which could demonstrate relationships, a more philosophical than biological approach. Regius professor of botany at Cambridge University who taught Darwin and recommended Darwin to travel on the H.M.S. Beagle. Navy appointed naturalist on board the Beagle. Was also the ship's surgeon. 19th Century Christian Catastrophist and antiDarwinist comparative anatomist who never accepted Darwinism important comparative anatomist and paleontologist who identified homologies to establish characteristic Platonic "archetypes," "ideal" body plans / bauplans for higher taxa, especially vertebrates Captain of the H.M.S. Beagle. Devout Christian who believed in Biblical creation of lfe. Darwin's primary role on the voyage was to serve as the dining companion for FitzRoy. His work as a naturalist was incidental to the purpose of the mapping voyage. Sailed on the HMS. Beagle (18311836) Galapagos finches American Trypanosomiasis, acquired while he was exploring in South America: Chagas Disease via T. infestans bite In On the Origin of Species (1859) he coined the terms Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) Austrian artificial selection, natural selection, the foundations of the principles of evolution Later added a third mechanism of evolution - sexual selection Father of Evolution - He had geologic training - focused on fossils and coral reefs, (formation by incremental growth), likened geologic distribution of organisms to geology. A dispersalist who considered that long distance dispersal explained most disjunct distributions of organisms in biogeography. The author of the ground breaking book Origin of Species which relied little on fossils, accepted uniformitarianism which gives time for gradual changes, documenting the fact that evolution has occurred. Naturalist who established that all species of life have descended over time from common ancestry, and proposed the scientific theory that this branching pattern of evolution resulted from a process that he called natural selection. Augustinian monk who provided the essential basis for understanding the material basis of biological inheritance in his genetic experiments using pea plants. Mendel hypothesized that hereditary information was represented by physical objects within the organism which could be passed to offspring; he called them “elementen.” Ernst Haeckel (1834-1919) German Mendel used genetic crosses of pea plants to establish the mathematical and statistical basis of inheritance which were formalized into his three Laws of Inheritance. Although Mendel's work was published soon after The Origin of Species, a mechanism of inheritance was not widely known until the beginning of the 20th century. 1866 – phylogenetic tree of life Promoted and popularized Charles Darwin’s work in Germany Developed recapitulation theory (ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny) Coined the term “ecology” Homology - a state of similarity in structure and anatomical position but not necessarily in function between different organisms. They may arise from a common ancestry or evolutionary origin. An example would be the forelimbs of humans and bats. These structures are described as homologous. These structures have dissimilar function but have the same fundamental skeletal structure and developmental origin. Their similarity in this regard could indicate a likely evolution from a common ancestor. Chapter 6: Darwin and Wallace’s Evolution by Natural Selection People: Empedocles (490-430 BCE) Greek • Leonardo Da Vinci Johann van Helmont (1452-1519) (1577-1644) Italian Dutch Spontaneous generation from “body part soup” and only certain combinations survived. thought life forms that adapted to “some purpose” survived while those that did not adapt would perish. Renaissance Human anatomist Physician who offered a classic recipe for the Francesco Redi (1626-1697) Italian William Harvey Marcello Malpighi Anton van Leeuwenhoek (1578-1657) (1628-1694) (1632-1723) English Itallian Dutch Edward Tyson (1650-1708) British • • Abbé Lazarro Spallazani (1729-1799) Italian William Charles Wells (1757-1817) Scottish • spontaneous generation of mice from rags and grain. Demonstrated that maggots did not arise spontaneously from rotting meat, discrediting spontaneous generation Renaissance Anatomist Renaissance Human anatomist Asserted that microscopic “beasties” growing in broth could be explained as originating from previously existing particles Founder of comparative anatomy 1680- demonstrates that porpoises are mammals 1698, he dissected a chimpanzee and the result was the book, Orang-Outang, sive Homo Sylvestris: or, the Anatomy of a Pygmie Compared with that of a Monkey, an Ape, and a Man He concluded that the chimpanzee has more in common with man than with monkeys, particularly with respect to the brain Demonstrated that bacteria would not spoil broth unless it was exposed to particles in the air, discrediting spontaneous generation In 1813 wrote a paper about a white woman with patches of black skin; in this paper, Wells reflected on racial differences among humans and discussed variation (and local adaptation) in disease resistance between different human races; this led Wells to • Thomas Robert Malthus (1766-1834) English Baron Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) French postulate a basic mechanism of natural selection (he did not use this term) for the divergence of the human races Darwin was unaware of this essay until it was brought to his attention in 1865 By reflecting on racial differences among humans, discussing variation and local adaptation in disease resistance among these varieties, Wells had postulated the basic mechanism of natural selection Political economist and demographer An Essay on the Principle of Population “Malthusian catastrophe” "The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race.” Inspired Darwin and Wallace to see competition for resources among living species. proposed a Theory of Catastrophism to explain extinct organisms Accepted some fossils as evidence of extinctions, but did not accept the concept of life evolving, in opposition to Buffon Recognized evidence of stratification of rock layers, examples of sedimentation, uplift and subsidence Recognized a Principle of Faunal Succession used to Patrick Matthew (1790-1874) Scottish Karl Ernst von Baer (1792-1876) German Heinrich Rathke (1793-1860) German assign times to geologic strata The Animal Kingdom, Distributed According to Its Organization (1817) He published the principle of natural selection as a mechanism of evolution over a quarter-century earlier than Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace who were unaware of his writings in 1859 because Matthew failed to develop or publicize his ideas Founded modern embryology in the 1820’s Extended Pander’s studies of chick embryo Discovered the notochord, the rod of dorsal most mesoderm that separates the embryo into right and left halves and which instructs the ectoderm above it to become the nervous system Discovered the mammalian egg Developed von Baer’s “Laws” of embryology Founded modern embryology in the 1820’s First to describe the vertebrate pharyngeal/branchial pouches/arches, which become the gill apparatus of fish but become the mammalian jaws and ears, and contribute to the formation of the vertebrate skull, and the origin of the vertebrate reproductive, Heinz Christian Pander (1794-1865) German Robert Chambers (1802-1871) Scottish Charles Darwin (1809-1882) English excretory, and respiratory systems Founded modern embryology in the 1820’s Discovered the three germ layers (endoderm, ectoderm, mesoderm) Also discovered the reciprocal regulatory tissue interactions among embryonic cells (induction) • Published Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (1844) • Debate and ridicule of Vestiges dissuaded Darwin from publishing his ideas on speciation for fifteen years Sailed on the HMS. Beagle (1831-1836) Galapagos finches American Trypanosomiasis, acquired while he was exploring in South America: Chagas Disease via T. infestans bite In On the Origin of Species (1859) he coined the terms artificial selection, natural selection, the foundations of the principles of evolution Later added a third mechanism of evolution - sexual selection Father of Evolution - He had geologic training - focused on fossils and coral reefs, (formation by incremental growth), likened geologic distribution of organisms to geology. A dispersalist who considered that long distance dispersal explained most disjunct distributions of organisms in biogeography. Asa Gray (1810-1888) American Moritz Wagner (1813-1887) German Joseph Dalton Hooker Louis Pasteur (1817-1911) English (1822-1895) French Alfred Russel Wallace (1823-1913) British The author of the ground breaking book Origin of Species which relied little on fossils, accepted uniformitarianism which gives time for gradual changes, documenting the fact that evolution has occurred. Naturalist who established that all species of life have descended over time from common ancestry, and proposed the scientific theory that this branching pattern of evolution resulted from a process that he called natural selection. Botanist and major adviser and supporter of Darwin Naturalist and geographer Among the first to emphasize the benefit of geographical isolation to species formation; failed in convincing his contemporaries that geographical isolation was important for speciation Botanist and major adviser and supporter of Darwin Microbiologist who in 1859 drove the final nail in the coffin of spontaneous generation with his “swan necked flasks” demonstrating that bacteria in the air are necessary for sterile broth to spoil • spent 5 years in South America, 1848-1852; the ship he was on, Helen, burned on homeward voyage along with all of his work collected over the 5 years (1854-1862) explored the east indies • Henry Walter Bates (1825-1892) English • • Thomas Henry Huxley (1825-1895) English St. George Jackson Mivart (1827-1900) English contracted malaria in the indies dispersalist Wallace wrote letters to Darwin outlining his independent conception of the theory of Natural selection (though Wallace did not use that term) proposed natural selection and evolution with Darwin but took a background role described natural selection as favoring the mating barriers among populations if hybrid inferiority occur Father of Biogeography and proposed six biogeographic realms for the earth, based primarily on animal distributions The Geographical Distribution of Animals (1876) and Island Life (1880) Went to Brazil with Alfred Russell Wallace in 18481852 Characterized Batesian mimicry systems in South American butterflies Comparative anatomist and major adviser and supporter of Darwin ("Darwin's bulldog"). Recognized the importance of phonotypic variation in populations. Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature (1863). Biologist who questioned Darwin’s work in part when he questioned the adaptive value of intermediate forms by John Thomas Gulick (1832-1923) American Ernst Haeckel (1834-1919) German Ernst Mayr (1904-2005) German/American Jacques Monod (1910-1976) French asking “What is the use of half a wing?” • Reverend, the first author to develop a theory of evolution based on random variation based on the geographic distribution of varied snails in Hawaiian valleys • Recognized that each Hawaiian valley or even region in a valley had its own snail species due to the founder effect The father of “Geographical Isolation” 1866 – phylogenetic tree of life Promoted and popularized Charles Darwin’s work in Germany Developed recapitulation theory (ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny) claiming that an individual organism's biological development, or ontogeny, parallels and summarizes its species' entire evolutionary development, or phylogeny Coined the term “ecology” Regarded as the greatest evolutionary biologist of the 20th century Biological species concept in 1942 • His last version, from 2001 states: "Species are groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups." Nobel prize winner associated with the Lac Operon, and the genetic control of enzyme and virus synthesis • Willi Hennig (1913-1976) German Edward O. Wilson (1929present) American stated that mutation provides the random noise from which selection draws out the nonrandom music Advocated for cladistics from 1950 argued that taxa/species should be classified not by overall similarities among organisms, by all "homologies," or similarities among specific structures, but rather by only those homologies that are also synapomorphies, shared derived characters only found in the members of a clade and its most recent common ancestor Harvard evolutionary biologist who studied ants Authored Sociobiology (1975), The Diversity of Life (1992) and many other books Charles Darwin (1809-1882) emphasized the following aspects of nature in his arguments in support of evolution and the mechanism of evolution by natural selection with the following elements: • Darwin extrapolated from artificial selection in agriculture and domestic and pet animal breeding • Darwin made the analogy from Malthus's concern for human populations outstripping their food resources to the competition for resources of organisms competing for resources in nature • Darwin accepted Lamarck’s theory of use and disuse • Darwin assumed differential survival and disproportionate numbers of offspring for organisms better suited to environment • Darwin deduced an evolutionary mechanism — natural selection — but was not the first person to think about transmutation of species • viewed evolution as descent with modification • when developing his theory, Darwin gave examples of artificial and natural selection to explain the mechanism of evolution; included considerable evidence from comparative anatomy and comparative embryology, and relied very little on the meager fossil record of the time • Did not emphasize discontinuous variations in his initial understanding or outlining of natural selection Vocabulary: Spontaneous Generation - The once popular but now discredited notion that living organisms arise or develop from nonliving matter; that complex, living organisms may be produced from nonliving matter in the present world, e.g., it was a popular belief that mice occur spontaneously from stored grain, or maggots spontaneously appear in meat. Preformation - a theory (popular from the time of the Greek natural philosopher until the 18th century and now discredited) that an individual animal or human develops by simple enlargement of a tiny fully formed organism (a homunculus) that exists in the germ cell; some believed the homunculus resided in the sperm cell, others that it resided in the egg or ovum. Epigenesis - In biology, epigenesis is the process by which plants, animals and fungi develop from a seed, spore or egg through a sequence of steps in which cells differentiate and organs form. The originator of theory of epigenesis was Aristotle in his book On the Generation of Animals. Prior to the 18th century, most scientists preferred the theory of Preformation, but with the advent of modern embryology, Epigenesis, in its modern interpretation, was accepted. Karl von Baer “Laws” General characteristics of the group/taxon to which an embryo belongs develop before the special characteristics of members of the group General structural relations are formed before the more specific structural relations appear and the most specialized features appear The form of any given embryo does not converge upon other definite embryonic forms but, on the contrary, separates itself from them last / The embryo of a given species, instead of passing through the adult stages of ancestral animals, departs more and more from them Fundamentally, the embryo of a higher animal form never resembles the adult of another ancestral animal form, but only resembles its ancestral embryo The 3 Primitive Embryonic Germ Layers - the ectoderm, the mesoderm, and the endoderm are in place at the end of gastrulation. Ectoderm gives rise to the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord); the peripheral nervous system; the sensory epithelia of the eye, ear, and nose; the epidermis and its appendages (the nails and hair); the mammary glands; the hypophysis; the subcutaneous glands; and the enamel of the teeth [Ectodermal development is called neurulation in regard to nervous tissue] Mesoderm gives rise to connective tissue, cartilage, and bone; striated and smooth muscles; the heart walls, blood and lymph vessels and cells; the kidneys; the gonads (ovaries and testes) and genital ducts; the serous membranes lining the body cavities; the spleen; and the suprarenal (adrenal) cortices Endoderm gives rise to the epithelial lining of the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts; the parenchyma of the tonsils, the liver, the thymus, the thyroid, the parathyroids, and the pancreas; the epithelial lining of the urinary bladder and urethra; and the epithelial lining of the tympanic cavity, tympanic antrum, and auditory tube Embryonic Induction: the embryonic process, the reciprocal regulatory tissue interactions among embryonic cells, in which one group of cells, the inducing tissue, directs the development of another group of cells, the responding tissue. Induction directs the development of various tissues and organs in most animal embryos; for example, the eye lens and the heart. The Theory of Recapitulation: also called the biogenetic law or embryological parallelism—often expressed using Ernst Haeckel's phrase "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny"—is a largely discredited biological hypothesis that the development of the embryo of an animal, from fertilization to gestation or hatching (ontogeny), goes through stages resembling or representing successive stages in the evolution of the animal's remote ancestors (phylogeny). Ontogeny Recapitulates Phylogeny: According to this theory, fetal development resembles ancestral forms and goes from one form to the next in chronological order. The youngest fetus resembles the oldest ancestor, and so on. However, this is not the case. While the fetuses of air-breathing animals retain gills until a certain stage, the gill stage does not necessarily resemble the adult form of any evolutionary ancestor. Instead, fetal development often resembles the developmental forms of its ancestors; the embryos of both chickens and humans resemble the embryos of fish and lizards. Natural Selection: Darwin and Wallace's primary mechanism for evolutionary change in which differential reproduction or survival of well adapted individuals living in populations of organisms which are competing for resources among themselves and with other taxa; those aspects of the successful phenotypes which are under hereditary control will be transmitted to offspring such that future generations will contain more individuals with those well adapted phenotypic traits; natural selection was characterized as analogous to similar changes in domesticated animals and plants "artificially selected" by their human breeders. Artificial Selection: The process of selection of organisms to be parents in a domestic animal or plant breeding program by humans to change one or more phenotypic characters toward some perceived goal, e.g., faster horses or more nutrient rich grains. Preadaptation: A phenotypic character that was adaptive under a prior set of environmental conditions and later provides the initial stage for the evolution of a new adaptation under a different set of conditions and from which natural selection over generations can improve the form and function of the phenotype. The ancestral fish's swim bladder was the preadaptation for the tetrapod lung; the spore-bearing leaf of an ancestral non-seed plant was the preadaptation for reproductive cone in gymnosperms; that reproductive cone was then the preadaptation for the ovary of the angiosperms. Principle of Divergence: Hypothesis developed by Charles Darwin that competition between sub-populations/demes in different locations that favors specialization and separation of the populations to the point of distinction, i.e., that over time, populations adapting to different environments will become different enough to be recognized as different taxa, first as distinct species, and if the process continues, to become different enough to be assigned to different taxa at higher levels in the classification system. This principle drew a contrast between the classification of distinct taxa defined by Linnaeus and others who saw each group originating from separate special creations and the Darwinian view of classification representing a hierarchy of descent from ever more distant into the past common ancestors. Microevolution - the change in allele frequencies that occurs over time within a species’s population and its demes that leads to phenotypically different varieties adapted to specific environments within the range of the species. This change is due to four different processes: mutation, selection (natural, sexual, artificial, etc.), gene flow (migration), and random genetic drift. This change happens over a relatively short (in evolutionary terms) amount of time compared to the changes termed macroevolution which is where greater differences in the population occur. Macroevolution - Evolution happening on a large scale, above the level of a species, over geologic time resulting in the divergence of taxonomic groups. Microevolutionary processes over time may lead to speciation or adaptive radiation, which is macroevolution. Macro and microevolution describe fundamentally identical processes on different scales. Biogeography is the study of the distribution of species and ecosystems in geographic space and through (geological) time. Organisms and biological communities often vary in a regular fashion along geographic gradients of latitude, elevation, isolation and habitat area. Alfred Russel Wallace is considered the father of modern Biogeography. Zoogeography: The science/study of the distribution of animals in a particular region and the ecological and evolutionary explanations for such distributions. Phytogeography is the comparable science for plant distributions. Phylogeny: The evolutionary development, ancestor to descendants, and history of a species or trait of a species or of a higher taxonomic grouping of organisms; often represented as a "family tree" or cladogram. Classification: The grouping of organisms into a hierarchy of categories commonly ranging from species through genera, families, orders, classes, phyla and kingdom, each category reflecting one or more significant characters expressed in common. Different methods of classification emphasize different phenotypic characters as the most important for decision making. • • Taxonomy is the classification of organisms in an ordered system that indicates natural relationships Systematics is the science, laws, or principles of classification of organisms in an ordered system that indicates natural relationships Taxon (taxa): A taxonomic unit at any level of classification Morphological/Typological (or Essentialist, Phenetic) Species: A population of individuals that share more anatomical characters with one another than they do with any other organism; Typology is based on morphology/phenotype. Stems from the Platonic "forms" (Platonic ideal). This concept is still applied in museum research (type method) where a single specimen (type specimen and possibly some paratype specimens) is the basis for defining the species. In paleontology all you have is morphology: typology is practiced and species are defined as morphospecies (e.g., snail shells in fossil beds). Biological Species Concept: Species are groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups. Proposed by Ernst Mayr and very widely accepted for many decades. o Good for living and sexually reproducing species but meaningless for extinct organisms, and organisms that do not reproduce sexually Genetic Species: A set of organisms exhibiting similarity of DNA. Agamospecies: A set of organisms which reproduce asexually, typically representing a collection of clones, but which share common morphological and physiological characteristics and are considered as equivalent to a species. o This species concept is usefully paired with the Biological Species for sexually reproducing organisms. o Boundaries may be hard to define. o Ex: Taraxacum: a genus of dandelions, a very successful world-wide agamic complex. Ecological Species: Populations that are adapted to certain ecological niches and because of their adaptations will form discrete morphological clusters o Acknowledges the role the environment plays in controlling phenotypes Ring Species: species with a geographic distribution that forms a ring and but does not overlap at the ends; with the range, most species exhibit small hybrid range boundaries but the two opposite ends of the ring are populations that will not hybridize. Ex: Salamanders that span from Canada to Southern California Chronospecies: A fossil species which changes in morphology, genetics, and ecology over time on an evolutionary scale so that the originating species and the species it becomes would not be classified as the same species had they existed at the same point in time. o If connection is recognized both forms will be assigned to a single evolutionary species o Implies directional selection Phylogenetic / Cladistic / Evolutionary Species: A species definition in which a group of organisms that share a common ancestor and maintains its integrity with respect to other lineages, through time and space; defined by the presence of a unique set of shared derived characters / synapomorphies. o When members diverge the two populations are regarded as separate species o Most recent species definition Monophyletic: A taxonomic group united by having arisen from a single ancestral lineage, a single last common ancestor. Paraphyletic: A taxonomic grouping which includes some descendants of a single common ancestor, but not all its descendants derive from that one common ancestor or a taxon that contains lineages that do not share a common ancestor; an invalid taxonomic group from the perspective of cladistics, e.g. Class Reptilia. Polyphyletic: The presumed derivation of a single taxonomic group from two or more different ancestral lineages or last common ancestors through convergent or parallel evolution; modern taxonomists/systematists attempt to eliminate polyphyletic taxa from their phylogenies and clades. Cladistics: A mode of classification proposed by Willi Hennig in which taxa are principally grouped on the basis of their shared possession of similar characters, synapomorphies, that differ from the ancestral condition; this technique does not consider all phenotypic characters to be equally important in making taxonomic decisions. Plesiomorphy: An ancestral or primitive character, the ancestral trait state, usually in reference to a homologous character which is a derived trait state (synapomorphy) in some descendants in the lineage. When a species' trait is similar in form and function to that character in an ancestral species. Apomorphy: A feature recently derived in evolution in contrast to an ancestral character. Synapomorphy: The possession by two or more related lineages of the same phenotypic character, a shared derived character, from a different (in form or function) but homologous character in the ancestral lineage; these are the significant characteristics to use to make taxonomic distinctions using cladistics; the characteristics that distinguish one clade from another at any given taxonomic level. Sister Taxon: A group (taxon) that is the closest relative of another group (taxon); derives from the concept that each significant evolutionary step marks a dichotomous split that produces two sister taxa equal to each other in rank. Adaptive Radiation: The diversification of a single species or group of related species (or higher taxa) into new ecological or geographical zones to produce a larger number of descendant species that occupy new niches; this is the common product of macro-evolutionary change. Adaptive radiations produce branched phylogenies. Phyletic Evolution: Evolutionary changes producing a single new taxon that diverged from a single ancestral lineage over the course of time; aka anagenesis; the phylogeny of phyletic evolution is a single unbranched transition from ancestor to descendant taxon. Founder Effect: The effect caused when a few individuals derived from a large population disperse to begin a new colony. Since these founders carry only a small fraction of the parental population’s genetic variability (alleles at all loci), different gene frequencies with reduced allelic variability become established in the new colony. The founders will also likely be inbred for many generations and such populations face a higher risk of extinction though they may also be able to evolve rapidly in a different environment. Bottleneck Effect: The Bottleneck Effect occurs when there is a disaster of some sort that reduces a population to a small remnant of individuals, who rarely represent the actual original genetic diversity of the initial population's gene pool. This leaves less allelic variation among the surviving individuals. The survivors will also likely be inbred for many generations and such populations face a higher risk of extinction. Vestigial Feature - A body part or organ, or a behavior or physiological pathway that is small and degenerate or imperfectly developed in comparison to one more fully developed in an earlier stage of the individual, in a past generation or ancestral species, or in closely related forms. It is a special kind of homology that can help clarify ancestor - descendant relationships. Atavism/Atavistic Feature - The reappearance in an individual of homologous characteristics of some remote ancestor that have been absent in intervening generations; a body part or organ, or a behavior or physiological pathway that is normally absent in the phenotype of a given species, but appears in a few rare individuals of the species; it may be reduced in size and function or it may have the normal size and function that it had in an ancestral species. It is a special kind of homology that can help clarify ancestor - descendant relationships. Biogeographic Realms - A large spatial region, within which ecosystems share a broadly similar biota. Eight terrestrial biogeographic realms are typically recognized, corresponding roughly to continents (Australasian, Afrotropical, Nearctic, Oceanic, Antarctic, Indo-Malayan, Neotropical, Palearctic). A Center of Origin is a proposed location, based on fossil or modern distributional evidence, for the home of the oldest common ancestor of a taxonomic group. A Center of Diversity is a region where the greatest proportion of members of the taxonomic group are present. A center of origin and a center of diversity are often the same location, or not far from one another. Biogeographic Corridor – a dispersal route that permits movement of many related species from one region to another, a route that has similar environment to the origin and destination habitats, with few or no significant barriers to the dispersing organism. Filter Bridge – a dispersal route that selectively impedes the movement of many related species from one region to another, but permits the movement of a few hardy species; a route that has different environment to the origin and destination habitats, with some barriers to the dispersing organism. Sweepstakes Dispersal – a dispersal route that only permits rare dispersal events across significant barriers to the dispersing organism so that the dispersal is likely to be rare in time. Dispersal Barrier or Ecological Barrier: An area of unfavorable habitat that separates two areas of favorable habitat; oceans or rivers for terrestrial organisms, desert or grassland for of woodland organisms, waterfalls for river/stream organisms, etc. Key Concepts Charles Darwin purposed a theory of evolution by natural selection Alfred Russel Wallace proposed a very similar theory. The two theories were communicated to a meeting of the Linnean Society on July 1 1858. Ideas of artificial selection were in the air centuries before Darwin’s time. Darwin made enormous use of artificial selection in explaining his theory. Darwin was among the first to see the significance of small, continuous variations in Nature. Darwin grappled with how selection could get started, invoking the concept of Preadaptation. The writings of the Rev. Thomas Malthus showed Darwin and Wallace how limited resources could lead to competition for these resources. Competition would result in some individuals leaving more offspring than other individuals and those parents would be the ones best adapted to the current environment. Slowly, natural selection would increase the numbers of individuals best adapted to the resources and to the environment: survival of the fittest. Darwin saw that such slow change could lead to the origin of new species. Darwin placed his emphasis on mechanisms including` geographical isolation behavior and sexual selection as necessary for speciation. Darwin initially lacked a mechanism by which phenotypic changes could be inherited and so proposed a form of pangenesis without the support of data. Publication of the On the Origin of Species in 1859 revolutionized understanding of the relationships between organisms and how organisms arise and change through geologic time. On the Origin of Species initiated widespread public discussion concerning science and the place and role of science in society. Darwin elaborated an evolutionary mechanism – natural selection – but was not the first think about selection in relation to living organisms. Darwin continuously referred to natural selection and artificial selection through combinations of: o The ease of effecting change via artificial selection, o The vastness of geological time, o The application of the geological principle of uniformitarianism by which present day processes could be extrapolated back in time, o Identification of a natural selector – the pressure of continuously limited resources – and with brilliant intuition Many more individuals of each species are born than can possibly survive. Consequently, there is a recurring struggle for existence. Any individual that varies however slightly in any way that is advantageous will have a better chance of surviving, of being naturally selected, and of leaving offspring. 1844-1855 Darwin documented variation in nature; during this time Darwin did not publish a single word on his theory of evolution; the arrival of Alfred Russel Wallace's letter prompted the presentation and then publication of Darwin's ideas. The evolutionary principle can be summarized: o Excess reproduction + limited resources →competition, which, because of natural heritable variation and natural selection allows those individuals best adapted to pass their existing characters to the next generation. o Changing environments + hereditary variation + natural selection results in the modification of existing characters or the origin of new characters that become established and spread throughout a population/species. Phylogeny happened; Classification did not happen but is a way to arrange or order the results of evolution. Taxonomists call each unit of classification, whether it be a particular species, genus, order or whatever a taxon and give it a distinctive name. Darwin’s approach accounted for the evolution of a particular species in time, critics argued that it did not easily account for the multiplication of species in geographical space or geologic time. Natural selection is the idea that species that develop adaptations that are favorable for their environment will pass down those adaptations to their offspring. Eventually, only individuals with those favorable adaptations will be more likely to survive and leave the most offspring in the next generation and that is how the species changes over time, or evolves through speciation. In the 1800s, after Darwin first published his book On the Origin of Species, a British economist Herbert Spencer used the term "survival of the fittest" in relation to Darwin's idea of natural selection as he compared Darwin's theory to an economic principle in one of his own books. This interpretation of natural selection caught on and Darwin himself even used the phrase in a later edition of On the Origin of Species. Clearly, Darwin used the term correctly as it was meant when discussing natural selection. However, nowadays this term is often misunderstood when used in place of natural selection. A majority of the general public may be able to describe natural selection as "survival of the fittest". When pressed for a further explanation of that term, however, the majority will answer incorrectly. To a person not familiar with what natural selection really is, "fittest" means the best physical specimen of the species and only those in the best shape and best health will survive in nature; they miss the necessity of increased reproductive success. This is not always the case. The individuals that survive are not always the strongest, fastest, or smartest. Therefore, "survival of the fittest" may not be the best way to describe what natural selection really is as it applies to evolution. Darwin did not mean it in these terms when he used it in his book after Herbert first published the phrase. Darwin meant "fittest" to mean the one best suited for the immediate environment and therefore able to leave proportionally more offspring in the next generation than those less well suited for the immediate environment. This is the basis of the idea of natural selection. The individual of the population only needs to have the most favorable traits to survive in the environment. It should follow that individuals who have the favorable adaptations will live long enough to pass down those genes to their offspring. Individuals lacking the favorable traits, in other words, the "unfit," will most likely not live long enough to pass down the unfavorable traits and eventually those traits will be bred out of the population. The unfavorable traits may take many generations to decline in numbers and even longer to disappear completely from the gene pool. This is evident in humans with the genes of fatal diseases that are still in the gene pool even though they are unfavorable for the survival of the species. Darwin’s Theory in Brief: 1. Individuals within species are variable. Not all members of the same species are alike in structure and function. Some of these variations are passed on to offspring. 2. In every generation, more offspring are produced than can survive. Reproductive rates are geometric. The capacity of all organisms to reproduce is infinitely greater than the capacity of the world to sustain them. 3. The limited resources of the world and the infinite power of reproduction lead to a competition for resources or a “struggle for existence” between individuals within species. 4. The survival and reproduction of individuals are not random: the individuals who survive and go on to reproduce, or who reproduce the most, are those with the most favorable variations. Those which die have less favorable variations. The survivors are naturally selected; a process of natural selection, analogous to the artificial selection practices of animal and plant breeders, in which the environment determines who lives and who dies. This results in a survival of the fittest. 5. Those creatures that are most fit and survive will live to produce young that resemble themselves, so that a particular successful variety is preserved. The evolution of the eye. An example of historical science and evolutionary biology that refutes that anti-scientific argument of irreducible complexity. Any photoreceptor of any degree of complexity would be of benefit to the organism that has it. Each stage in the evolution of the photoreceptor/eye would serve as a preadaptation with features that could be acted upon by natural selection to further improve the structure. Chapter 7: Darwin, Mendel, and Theories of Inheritance People: Hippocrates (460-370 BC) Greek Physician, Father of Medicine, who proposed the concept of Pangenesis which Darwin Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) Moravian / Austrian Francis Galton (1822-1911) English August Weismann (1834-1914) German Walther Flemming (1843-1905) German Edouard-JosephLouis-Marie van Beneden (1846-1910) Belgian Hugo de Vries (1848-1935) Dutch reworked as a mechanism of inheritance founder of modern genetics Monk/Friar who developed three fundamental principles of heredity from his pea plant studies Darwin’s cousin Disproved pangenesis by transfusing blood between rabbit strains and demonstrating that the offspring did not acquire phenotypic traits from the strains that donated the blood. coined the term “eugenics” in 1883 Ernst Mayr considered him the most respected evolutionary biologist of his generation after Darwin. His series of experiments cutting off the tails of mice disproved the inheritance of acquired characteristics His Germ Plasm Theory stated that (in a multicellular organism) inheritance only takes place by means of the germ cells—the gametes. Biologist who discovered chromosomes and mitosis in 1880 Founder of cytogenetics discovered that each species has a fixed number of chromosomes he also discovered the formation of haploid cells during cell division of sperm and ova (meiosis) in 1887 Botanist who continued Darwin’s idea of pangenes as the particulate units of inheritance which de Vries Wilhelm Johannsen (1857-1927) Danish William Bateson (1861-1926) British Theodor Boveri (1862-1915) German Wilhelm Weinberg (1862-1937) German described in his Intracellular Pangenesis (1889) Mutation Theory of Evolution Saltationism Worked with the primrose Oneothera lamarckiana Independently rediscovered Mendel’s work in 1900 Botanist and geneticist who coined the terms gene (to replace pangene), genotype, and phenotype He demonstrated that not all phenotypic variation is controlled by genes, that some variation is not heritable Geneticist and Evolutionary Biologist who coined the terms genetics and allelomorph (later shortened to allele) Emphasized the distinctions between continuous and discontinuous variation in phenotypes and studied other aspects of phenotypic variation He was an early Saltationist Biologist who discovered the chromatin, the centrosome, and independent discovery which led to the Boveri-Sutton Chromosome Theory of Inheritance. He proposed carcinogenesis was the result of aberrant mitoses and uncontrolled growth caused by radiation, physical or chemical insults or by microscopic pathogens. Physician who was one of the founders of mathematical genetics Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium – 1908 Weinberg pioneered in studies of twins Carl Correns (1864-1933) German Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866-1945) American William E. Castle (1867-1962) American Erich von Tschermak (1871-1962) Austrian Reginald Punnett (1875-1967) British Walter Sutton (1877-1916) American Botanist and geneticist who independently rediscovered Mendel’s work in 1900 He also discovered cytoplasmic inheritance Geneticist, embryologist and evolutionary biologist who worked with Drosophila melanogaster first to associate a specific gene with a specific chromosome He established techniques for mapping genes on chromosomes and observed the importance of recombination in heredity (linkage and crossing over) He was an early Saltationist and rejected Darwinian sexual selection He opposed the Eugenics movement Zoologist, one of the founders of mathematical genetics The first to use Drosophila melanogaster in genetics experiments He trained Sewall Wright Botanist who independently rediscovered Mendel’s work in 1900 He was a major influence in agriculture and plant breeding in Austria One of the founders of mathematical genetics He invented the Punnett Square for calculating monoand di-hybrid crosses He argued for rapid, not gradual, evolution of mimicry patterns in butterflies Geneticist and physician His theory that the Mendelian laws of inheritance could be Oswald Avery (1877-1955) CanadianAmerican Godfrey H. Hardy (1877-1947) British Richard Goldschmidt (1878-1958) German American Paul Kammerer (1880-1926) Austrian Colin MacLeod (1909-1972) CanadianAmerican applied to chromosomes at the cellular level of living organisms led to the BoveriSutton Chromosome Theory of Inheritance Physician who used enzymes to eliminate the various classes of biological polymers, one at a time He, McLeod and McCarty (1944) demonstrated that DNA was the “transforming factor” first identified by Griffith Mathematician, one of the founders of mathematical genetics Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium, a basic principle of population genetics, he developed independently from Wilhelm Weinberg in 1908 Geneticist who was the first to integrate genetics, development, and evolution He advocated a non-Darwinian origin of species and higher taxa The Material Basis of Evolution (1940) Goldschmidt advanced a model of macroevolution through macromutations known as the "Hopeful monsters" hypothesis He was a Saltationist Biologist who advocated for a modern form of inheritance of acquired characteristics and may represent an early identification of what today would be called the effect of epigenetics on heredity His life is depicted in The Case of the Midwife Toad, by Arthur Koestler (1971) Medical researcher who used enzymes to eliminate the various Maclyn McCarty (1911-2005) American Francis Crick (1916-2004) British Arthur Kornberg (1918-2007) American Rosalind Franklin (1920-1958) English James Watson (1928present) American classes of biological polymers, one at a time He, Avery, and McCarty (1944) demonstrated that DNA was the “transforming factor” first identified by Griffith Physician and geneticist who used enzymes to eliminate the various classes of biological polymers, one at a time He, Avery, and MacLeod (1944) demonstrated that DNA was the “transforming factor” first identified by Griffith Later he became an expert on Streptococcal diseases Molecular biologist and neuroscientist who was codiscoverer of the DNA double helix structure with James Watson Contributed to the deciphering of the genetic code Biochemist who isolated the first DNA polymerizing enzyme, now known as DNA polymerase I (1956) Won Nobel prize in 1959 first in vitro synthesis of E. coli DNA in 1968 Made many other contributions to enzymology and DNA replication studies Chemist and X-ray crystallographer whose data provided key information for Watson and Crick in discovering the DNA double helix structure She was also a pioneer in studying viral structure Molecular biologist, geneticisy and zoologist who was codiscoverer of the DNA double Carl Woese (1928-2012) American J. Craig Venter (1946present) American helix structure with Francis Crick He also contributed to cancer research First head of the Human Genome Project Microbiologist who defined archae Wrote The Genetic Code (1967) an early advocate for the RNA World He proposed the three domain classification of living organisms Biotechnologist who sequenced the first genome of Haemophilus influenza in 1995 Complete sequence of human genome independent of The Human Genome Project – 2006 His company created he first cell with a synthetic genome – 2010 Vocabulary: Both Darwin and Lamarck believed in evolution and both offered mechanisms to explain evolutionary change. To explain why some features disappeared, Lamarck invoked use and disuse and the inheritance of acquired characters as opposed to Darwin who proposed artificial selection, natural selection, and later, sexual selection as mechanisms. The old concept of blending inheritance (the expression in offspring of phenotypic characters (as pink flower color from red and white parents) intermediate between those of the parents) sets variation and inheritance in opposition. Blending inheritance in a now discarded theory in which the genetic material of offspring was held to be a uniform blend of that of the parents which produces offspring with intermediate phenotypes to the parents. Organismal evolution relies on two fundamental aspects of genetics or biological inheritance: constancy and variation. Constancy resides in the observation that like produces like. Constancy has the evolutionary significance that all life processes depend on the transmission of hereditary information from previous generations. In contrast, variation resides in the observation that like can produce unlike. The source of hereditary variation was not well understood until the 20th century. Phenotypic Variation, the small differences in phenotype that exist between individuals, can be described as being either discontinuous or continuous. Discontinuous variation - This is where individuals fall into a number of distinct Phenotypic classes or categories, and is based on features that cannot be measured across a complete range. Individuals either have the characteristic or they don't. Blood groups are a good example: you are either one blood group or another - you can't be in between. Such data is called discrete (or categorical) data. The number of peas in a pod or the number of kernels on an ear of corn or the number of scales on the belly of a snake are also examples. Discontinuous variation is controlled by multiple alleles of a single gene/locus or a small number of genes. The environment may have little effect on this type of variation. Mendel chose this sort of variation to study in his experiments. Continuous variation - In continuous variation there is a complete range of measurements from one extreme to the other, and so individuals do not separate into discrete phenotypic classes. Height is an example of continuous variation individuals can have a complete range of heights, for example, 1.6, 1.61, 1.62, 1.625 etc., meters high. Other examples of continuous variation include: weight; hand span; tooth size; milk yield in cows. Continuous variation is the combined effect of many genes (known as polygenic inheritance) and is often significantly affected by environmental influences. Milk yield in cows, for example, is determined not only by their genetic make-up but is also significantly affected by environmental factors such as pasture quality and diet, weather, and the comfort of their surroundings. When plotted as a histogram, these data show a typical bellshaped normal distribution curve, with the mean (= average), mode (= biggest value) and median (= central value) all being the same. Mendelian factors and the distribution of chromosomes during meiosis formed the foundation for the new science of genetics. Lamarckian inheritance - The discredited concept that somatic phenotypic changes which develop in an individual's lifetime from some sort of use / disuse action in a particular environment can be passed to offspring so that offspring will be likely to demonstrate the phenotype to a greater degree without having to experience the same lifetime of use or disuse. This inheritance of acquired characteristics was the main driver of evolutionary change according to JeanBaptiste Lamarck and accepted by Darwin and many of his contemporaries. Lamarck incorporated two ideas into his theory of evolution, in his day (Age of Enlightenment) considered to be generally true: (1) Use and Disuse, (2) Inheritance of acquired traits Use and disuse – Individuals lose or have diminished phenotypic characteristics they do not require (or use) during their own lifespan and enhance phenotypic characteristics that are useful during their own lifespan. Inheritance of acquired traits – Individuals inherit the modified phenotypic traits of their parents which have been modified by use or disuse during the parent's lifetime. Blending inheritance - The discredited theory that inheritance of traits from two parents produces offspring with characteristics that are intermediate between those of the parents. Isolation - the complete separation of some local populations or demes from others of the same species; the separation may be due to a variety of circumstances: geography, season, behavior, etc. It is more likely that an adaptive character trait could be maintained if those individuals expressing it were isolated from other members of the species. Most Darwinian taxonomists emphasize the importance of isolation in increasing the speed of evolutionary changes. Reproductive isolation is the key feature of Ernst Mayr's Biological Species Concept. Intraspecific variation - the range of change or difference in condition, amount or level of some aspect or aspects of the phenotypic characters of the individuals in the populations that comprise a particular species. Mendel’s exceptional contribution to science was to demonstrate that organisms have a distinct hereditary system (now known as the genotype), which transmits biological characteristics through discrete units ("elementen," now known as genes and alleles) that remain undiluted in the presence of other genes and alleles. Mendel developed two fundamental principles of heredity: the principle of segregation, and the principle of independent assortment gene - the hereditary controller of a phenotypic trait; the DNA sequence that codes for a particular polypeptide chain or protein. genotype - the alleles present at one or more loci in an individual. If the two alleles are identical, then the genotype is homozygous; if the two alleles are different, then the genotype is heterozygous. locus - the physical location of a gene along the length of a DNA molecule. allele - the different forms of a gene at a give locus, these different forms control some of the variation seen in the phenotype under the control of the gene (some of the variation in phenotype may also be controlled by environmental factors). Dominant trait / allele - a form of a gene and the phenotype that it controls which will be expressed if the diploid individual receives either one (heterozygous) or two copies of the allele (homozygous) from its parents. Recessive trait / allele - a form of a gene and the phenotype that it controls which will be expressed only if the diploid individual receives two copies of the allele (homozygous) from its parents. Incomplete dominance - A kind of gene expression occurring in heterozygotes in which the the relationship among alleles is neither dominant or recessive; it can be thought of as a dosage effect, fully expressed when the allele is in the homozygous state, but only partially expressed in the heterozygous state and usually resulting in an offspring with an intermediate phenotype. A typical example of incomplete dominance is the color of the flower in which R symbolizes an allele for red pigment production and r is the alternative allele for no pigment production (an allele for a defective enzyme which cannot transform a colorless precursor into red pigment). In incomplete dominance, the heterozygous plant carrying both alleles, Rr, will not be able to produce enough red pigment and therefore will appear pink. (Synonym: partial dominance) Codominance - A condition in which the alleles of a gene pair in a heterozygote are fully expressed thereby resulting in offspring with a phenotype that is neither dominant nor recessive. A typical example showing codominance is the ABO blood group system. For instance, a person having A allele and B allele will have a blood type AB because both the A and B alleles are codominant with each other and both are expressed independently in the phenotype. Principle of segregation - alleles of a single gene at a locus are discrete entities that segregate from each other into gametes; they do not blend even when found in heterozygous individuals. Principle of independent assortment - allele pairs belonging to two or more genes at different loci separate independently during the formation of gametes. This means that traits are transmitted to offspring independently of one another. This principle of independent assortment of genes always applies when the loci are on different chromosomes and may also apply if the loci are far enough apart (>50map units) on the same chromosome. In practice, the manifestation of Mendel's laws is seen by characteristic ratios of phenotypic classes, such as 3:1 in monohybrid crosses of heterozygous parents and 9:3:3:1 in dihybrid crosses of heterozygous parents. Further, the Mendelian principles just stated include the simple assumption that one allele is dominant to the other allele. In the time since Mendel's original experiments, we have come to learn that there are extensions to Mendelian principles, including the fact that some alleles are incompletely dominant or co-dominant, that some genes have multiple allele systems (more than two different alleles at a single locus within the gene pool), that some genes are sex-linked, and that some pairs of genes do not assort independently because they are physically linked on a chromosome. Gene Penetrance - the proportion of individuals of a specified genotype that show the expected phenotype under a defined set of environmental conditions. Saltations – jumps; large discontinuous phenotypic changes in organisms or parts of organisms which are caused by macromutations (alleles that individually cause large dramatic changes in phenotype). During the Mutationist/Saltationist period of biology (1900 - ~1930), saltations/macromutations were thought to be the main driver of macroevolutionary change. Pangenesis – Aristotle had proposed the theory of Pangenesis, which was adopted with variations by later biologists, including Darwin, which held that particles (called pangenes or gemmules) produced by all tissues of the body of a parent migrate from somatic tissues to reproductive tissues and are incorporated into its eggs or sperm. Darwin’s “provisional hypothesis of pangenesis:” “The chief assumption is that all the units of the body, besides having the universally admitted power of growing by self-division, throw off minute gemmules which are dispersed through the system . . . “But we have further to assume that the gemmules grow, multiply, and aggregate themselves into buds and the sexual elements; their development depending on their union with other nascent cells or units. They are also believed to be capable of transmission in a dormant state, like seeds in the ground, to successive generations.” Gemmules – Darwin’s idea of control particles for phenotypic traits shed by the cells of tissues and organs of the body and carried (in the bloodstream or by some other means) to the reproductive organs where they accumulate into germ cells or gametes; this is an aspect of the pangenesis hypothesis. Another names for the gemmules was pangenes. Germ plasm theory – only the reproductive tissues transmit the heredity factors of the entire organism; changes (mutations) that occur in nonreproductive (somatic) tissues are not transmitted to gametes and therefore not to offspring. Chromosome Theory of Inheritance - The unifying theory that chromosomes are linear sequences of genes and that inheritance patterns may be generally explained by assuming that genes are located in specific sites/loci on chromosomes. Extranuclear inheritance – traits that do not follow a nuclear pattern of inheritance but rather transmit through the cytoplasm of the egg; the best known examples are the transmission of organelle genes, those of the mitochondria and chloroplasts. Sex-linked genes – genes that are localized to the X chromosome of the XY (sex chromosome) system or to Z of the ZW (sex chromosome)system. Sex-linked genes are more easily expressed in the heterogametic sex (XY males or ZW females) because they only receive one allele per gene at all their loci on their sex chromosome. Gene linkage is the tendency of alleles that are located close together on a DNA molecule (plasmid, chromosome, etc.) to be inherited together during cell divisions. In the division I meiosis phase of sexual reproduction, synapsis causes homologous chromosomes to form tetrads. If chromosome breaks occur within the tetrad and are followed by improper DNA repair, some alleles may be swapped from one parent DNA molecule to another (from maternal to paternal DNA or vice versa). This is termed crossing-over and it is a major source of recombination of genes (alleles at particular loci) during gamete formation (at Meiosis I Prophase and Metaphase). This is of evolutionary significance because some changes in phenotype can occur from the same genotype if phenotypic expression depends on particular alleles being on the same DNA molecule (cis configuration) versus being on two different homologous DNA molecules (trans configuration). Eugenics - the science of improving a human population by controlled breeding to increase the occurrence of desirable heritable characteristics; developed largely by Francis Galton as a method of improving the human race, it fell into disfavor only after the perversion of its doctrines by the Nazis. Positive Eugenics - the study of or belief in the possibility of improving the qualities of the human species or a human population, especially by encouraging reproduction by persons presumed to have inheritable desirable traits. Negative Eugenics - the study of or belief in the possibility of improving the qualities of the human species or a human population, especially by discouraging reproduction by persons having genetic defects or presumed to have inheritable undesirable traits. Gene recombination - The process of forming new allelic combination in offspring by exchanges between genetic materials (as exchange of DNA sequences between DNA molecules from different individuals, even from different species). This process is a natural process, sometimes also called gene transfer. Different mechanisms are used by asexual or sexual species. In sexually reproducing organisms, it is usually the result of crossing over between homologous chromosomes during meiosis and since the changes are passed from parent to offspring, it is termed vertical gene transfer. In asexually reproducing organisms, it is usually the result of transformation (acquisition of naked DNA from the environment), conjugation (the one-way transfer of of DNA sequences, part or all of a bacterial genome, usually part of the main circular DNA, but sometimes plasmids, through a conjugation tube (“sex pilus”) from a donor strain to a recipient strain of bacteria) or transduction (transfer of a DNA sequence from one cell to another by a virus vector) and since these alleles are passed from one cell or organism to another mature cell or organism in the environment,, it is termed horizontal gene transfer. For many organisms, especially mammals, sex determination is associated with chromosomal differences between the two sexes. In the XY sex determination system common in many plants and animals, one typically observes XX females and XY males, with the Y chromosome often smaller and mostly inactive, except for male determining and male-fertility genes. In the ZW sex determination common in some leopidopterans and birds, one typically observes ZW females and ZZ males. Other species may use the ratio of sex chromosomes to autosome sets or the presence of particular sex determination genes distributed among the autosomes to determine sex. Sex-Linked Genes - A gene located on a sex chromosome, the X-chromosome in XY systems and the W-chromosome in XW systems. The single allele on the sex chromosome in the heterogametic sex (XY males or ZW females) will be expressed in the phenotype of the heterogametic individuals. Haplo-Diploidy Sex Determination – the unusual genetic method of sex determination Hymenoptera, the Order of insects that includes the bees, ants and wasps. Males are haploid while females are diploid. Female Hymenoptera come about in the usual way, with a sperm from a male fertilizing a female's egg. One set of chromosomes comes from the father, the other from the mother, yielding a diploid daughter. Males, on the other hand, have a mother but no father. Environmental sex determination occurs when the sex of one or both of the male and female individuals is developed because of sensitivity to agents such as temperature or hormones or social group organization or body mass, or age, etc. Temperature Dependent Sex Determination - a type of environmental sex determination in which the temperatures experienced during embryonic/larvae development determine the sex of the offspring; seen in all crocodilians, most turtles, a few lizards and rare birds. Protandry – A form of environmental sex determination in which animals, e.g. many reef fish species, develop into males first in their life cycle, and then later, if the right environmental stimulus in presented, transform into females later in their life. One advantage to protandry could be reaching a large size before becoming an egg laying female and needing to have large energy reserves to produce yoik rich eggs. Protogyny – A form of environmental sex determination in which animals, e.g. many reef fish species, develop into females first in their life cycle, and then later, if the right environmental stimulus in presented, transform into males later in their life. One advantage to protandry could be reaching a large size before becoming a male and having to compete with other males for access to females. Parthenogenesis is a form of asexual reproduction in animals in which females produce eggs that develop without fertilization. DNA replication is the process by which DNA makes a copy of itself during cell division. 1. The first step in DNA replication is to ‘unzip’ the double helix structure of the DNA molecule. 2. This is carried out by an enzyme called helicase which breaks the hydrogen bonds holding the complementary bases of DNA together (A with T, C with G). 3. The separation of the two single strands of DNA creates a ‘Y’ shape called a replication ‘fork’. The two separated strands will act as templates for making the new strands of DNA. 4. One of the strands is oriented in the 3’ to 5’ direction (towards the replication fork), this is the leading strand. The other strand is oriented in the 5’ to 3’ direction (away from the replication fork), this is the lagging strand. As a result of their different orientations, the two strands are replicated differently: Leading Strand: 5. A short piece of RNA called a primer (produced by an enzyme called primase) comes along and binds to the end of the leading strand. The primer acts as the starting point for DNA synthesis. 6. DNA polymerase binds to the leading strand and then ‘walks’ along it, adding new complementary nucleotide bases (A, C, G and T) to the strand of DNA in the 5’ to 3’ direction. 7. This sort of replication is called continuous. Lagging strand: 5. Numerous RNA primers are made by the primase enzyme and bind at various points along the lagging strand. 6. Chunks of DNA, called Okazaki fragments, are then added to the lagging strand also in the 5’ to 3’ direction. 7. This type of replication is called discontinuous as the Okazaki fragments will need to be joined up later. 8. Once all of the bases are matched up (A with T, C with G), an enzyme called exonuclease strips away the primer(s). The gaps where the primer(s) were are then filled by yet more complementary nucleotides. 9. The new strand is proofread to make sure there are no mistakes in the new DNA sequence. 10. Finally, an enzyme called DNA ligase seals up the sequence of DNA into two continuous double strands. 11. The result of DNA replication is two DNA molecules consisting of one new and one old chain of nucleotides. This is why DNA replication is described as semiconservative, half of the chain is part of the original DNA molecule, half is brand new. 12. Following replication the new DNA automatically winds up into a double helix. Primase is an enzyme that creates a primer on a DNA strand by adding RNA nucleotides to the strand according to the DNA template sequence. This process occurs during DNA Replication and may represent a biochemical vestige of the RNA World. The Genetic Code is the set of rules by which hereditary information encoded in genetic material (DNA or RNA sequences) is translated into proteins (amino acid sequences) by living cells. Specifically, the code defines a mapping between tri-nucleotide sequences called (triplet base) codons and amino acids; every triplet of nucleotides in a nucleic acid sequence specifies a single amino acid. The code is unambiguous because any one codon always codes for the same amino acid. The code is degenerate because several codons (codon synonyms) may represent a single amino acid. The codons are found in mRNA molecules. The DNA sequence is a base compliment to the mRNA codon and is found on the sense strand of the DNA gene. The code is termed universal because most organisms have exactly the same set of codon to amino acid relationships though there are some exceptions to that relationship. The genome (all the structural and regulatory genes) of an organism is inscribed in DNA, or in some viruses in RNA. The portion of the genome that codes for a polypeptide chain or protein or an RNA is referred to as a gene.