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Download Review of evolution - Milton High School Science
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Created by Kevin Bleier Milton High School On the Origin of Species published 1859 1) Species change (they are not fixed) 2) Selection as a mechanism for change 3) “Descent with modification” implies all species related, diverged over evolutionary time (Earth is very old) 1) Competitive force 2) Genetic variety 3) Selection 4) Generations of continued selection chapter 16.2 Requirement 1: competitive force something is making it hard for individuals to survive 1) Competition within a species for resources (too many organisms) 2) Competition between species (predation / parasitism, etc) Requirement 2: genetic variety (everyone has different traits) Must be genetic (so traits potentially passed on to offspring) We have spent time here in fall – how do organisms generate genetic variety? Result 1: selection Individuals are selected for if they are able to survive longer to reproduce more offspring than other individuals (they have traits that benefit them) Individuals selected against if they do not survive as well – meaning they do NOT produce as many offspring Often summarized as “survival of the fittest” Key idea there is not survival, but fittest Evolutionary fitness = how many offspring individual can produce (NOT strength, size, speed, etc) Result 2: selection over generations Those with beneficial trait must continue to out-reproduce the others Eventually, overall population starts to change (= evolution) Reduction in fish body size over 17 years off coast of South Africa Can human fishing (predation) drive evolution of fish populations over time? Big fish Small fish 54% 42% 31% 70% 69% 46% 58% 30% 1) selection competitive force 4) over 3) selection many generations 2) genetic variety 1) Competitive force 2) Genetic variety 3) Selection 4) Generations of continued selection Darwin had many influences to help develop his idea for evolution Other scientists also believed that species changed over time – alternative hypotheses for evolution from Lamarck Not supported Supported by evidence Genetic variation Individuals with beneficial variations reproduce more Population evolves, NOT individuals Individuals change by use and disuse Individuals pass acquired changes in life to offspring Individuals evolve because they “want” change Darwin read other subjects for fun Lyell and geology – studies proposing that Earth is much older than previously thought (now enough time for evolution) Malthus and economics – growing human population might lead to mass starvation and competition for food (leads to ideas about competitive force) chapter 16.1 1) 2) 3) Species change (they are not fixed) Species changed from common ancestry over evolutionary time (implying a much older Earth) Selection as a mechanism for change chapter 16.2 Darwin observes organisms with slight differences Ex: Galápagos finches with different beaks Adapted to eat different food sources Darwin also finds fossils of organisms unlike any that live today Ex: giant sloth in Argentina (modern armadillos and sloths related, but MUCH smaller) From “AIDS: Evolution of an Epidemic” http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/hl/ Resistance to antibiotic medicines in some species of pathogenic bacteria We have only seen this recently (first wide use of antibiotic penicillin in 1940s) Open books to p. 484 1) 2) 3) Species change (they are not fixed) Species changed from common ancestry over evolutionary time (implying a much older Earth) Selection as a mechanism for change Homo = _______ Same evolutionary history (same bone structures) Different functions in different environments Genes and proteins with important cell functions have been largely unchanged in evolutionary history Ex: Protein involved in cell division (cytokinesis) Embryo stage of development shows similarities in many animals (then divergence) Respiration / photosynthesis pathways Mitosis pathways (eukaryotes) …and more! Proteins involved are very similar, unchanged for billions of years of life’s history “use it or lose it” “use it or lose it” A species does not always have to add something new, it can evolve by LOSING traits as well Great example: tapeworm 1) 2) 3) Species change (they are not fixed) Species changed from common ancestry over evolutionary time (implying a much older Earth) Selection as a mechanism for change Ideas for selection started with interviewing pigeon breeders = artificial selection (domesticating plants) (domesticating silver foxes) Sure Antibiotic resistance only occurs in era of antibiotics Also example of bedbug resistance to insecticide chemicals 1) 2) 3) Species change (they are not fixed) Species changed from common ancestry over evolutionary time (implying a much older Earth) Selection as a mechanism for change Evolution does not “finish” at “perfection” Ex: Eye setup and blind spots incoming light Populations are not isolated, and often evolve in response to each other Coevolution – two species are competing to “one up” each other with adaptations ◦ Ex: predators and prey, plants and herbivores chapter 16.3 Fake homology new species some similarities begin to develop in same environment common ancestor True homology different ancestries Special case of divergent evolution when many niches available European mole (mammal) Australian mole (marsupial) similar adaptations to live underground but very different ancestries Gradualism Slow, even change throughout history vs. punctuated equilibrium Long periods of no change with bursts of rapid change Radiometric dating – half-life of radioactive atoms is very reliable, like a clock ticking Half-life: how long it takes for half of any size sample to become stable (some take millions of years, some thousands of years) Relative dating – using commonly found fossils to estimate age of new fossil chapter 19.2 1) Competitive force makes it hard to survive 2) Variety of heritable traits How is this variety generated? How does inheritance work? 3) Selection of organisms to out-reproduce others 4) Generations of out-reproduction to foster population change chapter 17.2 Variety of traits caused by genes (with different alleles) New evolution definition: When allele frequencies change in a population’s gene pool over generations R = black fur r = sandy fur rr RR rr rr rr rr rr rr Rr Rr Rr rr Rr rr rr 14 / 20 = rr = 70% Gene pool rr rr 1 / 20 = RR = 5% 5 / 20 = Rr = 25% rr rr 20 total organisms 7 / 40 R = 17.5% Rr 33 / 40 r = 82.5% Evolution = change in gene pool allele %s Ex: Lava flow creates black rock environment R = black fur r = sandy fur black fur phenotype sandy fur phenotype Genotypes # organisms initially # organisms 25 years later RR 1 12 Rr 5 8 rr 14 0 initially: R = 17.5% r = 82.5% 25 yrs: R = 80.0% r = 20.0% Natural selection chose organisms with phenotypes to survive longer and reproduce more offspring Over generations, this causes allele frequencies to shift Modern evolutionary theory identifies five total evolutionary forces (four others besides natural selection) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Natural selection Sexual selection Mutation Genetic drift Gene flow Mate choice for particular characteristics makes certain traits more prominent Mates “selecting” other mates because their phenotypes are “sexy” Increased reproduction makes trait more prominent in future generations G = boring coloration g = sexy, bright coloration Genotypes # peacocks (initially) # peacocks (25 generations later) GG 25 4 Gg 17 8 gg 3 28 Initially: R = 74.4% r = 25.6% 25 generations: R = 20.0% r = 80.0% later 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Natural selection Sexual selection Mutation Genetic drift Gene flow Raw material for any change, but causes very little change by itself Example: new recessive mutation at another gene causes albino coloration in just one mouse 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Natural selection Sexual selection Mutation Genetic drift Gene flow Any random change that shifts allele %s Evolution does NOT have to be caused by selection Especially affects small populations – may even eliminate alleles from gene pool Example: flood kills many of the mice in a population randomly R = black fur black fur phenotype sandy fur phenotype r = sandy fur Genotypes # mice before disaster # mice after disaster RR Rr rr 8 14 6 0 2 4 Before disaster: R = 53.6% r = 46.4% After disaster: R = 16.7% r = 83.3% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Natural selection Sexual selection Mutation Genetic drift Gene flow Entry of new individuals or exit of current members (their genes are flowing in or out) R = black fur r = sandy fur Genotypes # mice in desert # mice + 10 new sandy fur mice RR Rr rr 25 17 3 25 17 13 black fur phenotype sandy fur phenotype Initially: R = 74.4% r = 25.6% After migration: R = 60.9% r = 39.1% 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Natural selection Sexual selection Mutation Genetic drift Gene flow 3 types: a) Stabilizing selection b) Directional selection c) Disruptive selection a) Stabilizing selection Original population (green) shifts to favor intermediate phenotype, away from both extremes (blue) Ex: Lizards have become medium size b) Directional selection Original population (green) shifts toward one direction of a phenotype (blue) Ex: anteater populations have evolved longer tongues to reach ants c) Disruptive selection Original population (green) shifts to EITHER extreme, away from intermediate (blue) Ex: white or black limpet shells camouflage, NOT tan shells Microevolution – “small” changes within a population – chapter 17.2 Macroevolution – “large” scale change involving new species, broader groups of organisms – chapter 17.3 When do populations become so different that they are new species? Biological species concept – when male and female can make fertile offspring together If they are so different that they do not mate (or cannot mate), then they are different species chapter 17.3 Populations separated by a landform (ocean, mountain) (geographic isolation), begin to become different in genetics Eventually, they are so different that they do not mate (reproductive isolation) Diane Dodd’s fruit fly lab, 1989 1) Linnean system of groups 2) Cladistics chapter 18.1 / 18.2 Taxa – group names below to classify: (least specific) domain kingdom phylum class order family genus species (most specific) Early classifying based on structural analysis Example: illustration p. 425 chapter 18.1 Organism’s scientific name: Genus epithet Capitalize genus name, NOT species name Italicize if typing, underline if handwriting Humans: Homo sapiens 1) Misleading similarities result in mis-classifying (often due to convergent evolution) Ex: birds AND mammals have 4-chamber hearts (but little else in common) 2) Transitional organisms strain the definitions of groups Ex: Platypus – the egg-laying mammal (or should that be mammary-gland containing reptile?) Creates a system based on traits, not on group names Organizes into clades – every organism and their common ancestor who has a certain trait chapter 18.2 the lungthe / lung the amniote mammal the the jaw tetrapod clade clade derivative clade clade clade lamprey no jaws shark no air no swim sac bladder Goal: to understand the phylogeny = evolutionary history of species tuna salamander turtle no 4 legs dog common evolution of amniote mammary glands common ancestor evolution ancestor of amniotic with 4 egg legs evolution of common ancestor tetrapody legs) with an air(4 sac evolution common of ancestor air sac (swim with abladder) jaw evolution commonofancestor jaws to all these animals connection to other organisms on tree “Humans evolved from chimpanzees” Both are modern species … BOTH evolved to their modern forms from a common ancestor chimpanzees humans common ancestor other mammals, vertebrates, animals, eukaryotes, life