* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 22: Descent w/ Modification Aristotle (384
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Chapter 22: Descent w/ Modification Aristotle (384-322 BC) Greek philosopher Viewed species as fixed & unchanging Scala Naturae – ladder arrangement; more complex organisms on higher rungs Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) Species are matched to their environment = evidence of Divine Creation Created taxonomy for classifying organisms (Binomial naming = Genus species…Homo sapiens) Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (1744-1829) French Biologist, published in 1809 Species evolve thru use & disuse of body parts & inheritance of acquired characteristics (Giraffe’s neck) Mechanisms he proposed are unsupported by evidence Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) French scientist; developed Paleontology (the Study of fossils) Old strata had different life forms than present day; species disappeared & new ones appeared Catastrophism – Each boundary b/w strata represents a catastrophe James Hutton (1726-1797) Scottish geologist Said earth’s geologic features explained by gradual mechanisms still operating today o e.g. valleys formed by rivers wearing thru rocks Charles Lyell (1797-1875) Believed in Hutton’s gradual changes Uniformitarianism o Mechanisms of change are constant over time, so today’s rate is same as past Hutton/Lyell to Darwin Most believed Earth was a few thousand years old o If rivers made canyons in slow gradual change, then Earth older If slow change works in geology, why not biology Charles Darwin (1809-1882) Studied medicine & then theology at Cambridge University After graduation, took unpaid job as naturalist on the Beagle (5 yr voyage) o Collected specimens of South American plants & animals o Observed adaptations of species that inhabited diverse environments 1844 – Darwin wrote essay on origin of species & natural selection; anticipates uproar, doesn’t publish 1858 – Gets manuscript from Alfred Russell Wallace; proposed similar theory of natural selection Darwin quickly finished The Origin of Species & published it the next year The Origin Of Species Developed two main ideas: o Descent with modification: explains life’s unity & diversity o Natural selection is a cause of adaptive evolution Darwin described 4 observations of nature & drew 2 inferences… o Observation #1 – members of a population often vary greatly in their traits o Observation #2 – traits are inherited from parents to offspring o Observation #3 – all species are capable of producing more offspring than environment can support (Malthus) o Observation #4 – owing to lack of food or resources, many of these offspring don’t survive o Inference #1 – Individuals whose inherited traits give them a higher probability of surviving & reproducing in an environment tend to leave more offspring than others Individuals that are well suited to their environment tend to leave more offspring than other individuals o Inference #2 – unequal ability of individuals to survive & reproduce will lead to accumulation of favorable traits in population over generations Over time, favorable traits accumulate in the population Steps to Evolution (Unknown to Darwin) o Mutation – DNA change Reproductive cell Spontaneous or mutagens Genetic Recombination o Natural Selection Adaptation allows organism to leave more offspring o Time – many generations pass Evolution Evidence Artificial Selection o Darwin noted that humans have modified other species o Selectively breeding individuals w/ desired traits e.g. dogs, cattle, crops Peppered Moth Populations o England (normally) has light colored trees; light moths dominant o Industrial revolution causes trees to be soot-covered; dark moths dominant HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) o Retro-virus; genetic material is RNA o Evolution of Drug-Resistant HIV Reverse transcriptase (RT) makes DNA out of HIV’s RNA genome Drug ‘3TC’ mimics cytosine (C) nucleotide Some RT enzymes pick up 3TC (instead of regular C) & DNA synthesis is blocked Problem: not all RTs are fooled by drug 3TC; pick up normal C Greater reproductive success = increase in # Population of HIV viruses has developed resistance to 3TC Fossil Record Evidence o Evidence of extinctions, new groups, & changes within groups over time o Darwin ideas predict that evolutionary transitions should leave signs in fossil record Homologous Structures o Same body part on different species that arose from a common ancestor o Mammal Forearms Same bone arrangement – shoulder to fingertips o Vestigial Structures Remnants of features that served functions in organism’s ancestors Snakes w/ parts of pelvis & hind limbs & Human’s wisdom teeth Comparative Embryology o Studies anatomical homologies of embryos Not visible in adults o Chordates – notochord, dorsal hollow nerve cord, post-anal tail, pharyngeal gill slits Molecular Homology o Genes shared among organisms inherited from a common ancestor o All organisms use DNA or RNA o Humans – Humans = 99.9% genes o Humans – Chimps = 98% o Humans – Roundworms = 50% o Many different organisms use hemoglobin; all same gene Convergent Evolution o Evolution of similar (or analogous) features in distantly related groups o Analogous Structures Similar function as another organism, but different structure Biogeography o Geographic distribution of species o Endemic species – found in only one place on Earth Island’s endemic species are closely related to species on nearest mainland or island Mass Extinctions & Adaptive Radiations Chapter 26 – Phylogeny & Trees of Life Building Phylogenetic Trees Can use morphological (body form) or molecular (DNA or protein) data Characters o Shared Ancestral Character – originated in ancestor of taxon o Shared Derived Character – evolutionary novelty unique to a particular clade o Mammal’s backbone? o Mammal’s hair? Cladistics o Groups organisms by common descent o Clade – group of species that includes an ancestral species & all its descendants Not all groupings of organisms are clades o Grouping Types Monophyletic (single tribe = clade) Ancestral species & all descendents (vertebrae in vertebrates) Paraphyletic (beside the tribe) Ancestral species & some, but not all, of descendants (ectothermy in vertebrates) Polyphyletic (many tribes) Group of various species that lack a common ancestor (endothermy in vertebrates)