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Evolution Patterns of Multicellular Life OA- How would sexual reproduction speed up evolution? OA- How would sexual reproduction speed up evolution? • Sexual reproduction would speed up evolution because it increases variation among the offspring. Natural Selection depends upon variation and this drives the process of evolution. Most prokaryotes reproduce asexually by duplicating their DNA and splitting into two identical cells. Sexual reproduction shuffles the genes and makes new combinations. Precambrian 1. Simple anaerobic life Prokaryotes 2. Photosynthetic forms 3. Aerobic life forms and Eukaryotes 4. Multicellular forms begin to be more complex 5. Only sea life Paleozoic Era 543 to 248 Million Years Ago • Cambrian Period • Ordovician Period • Devonian Period • Carboniferous Period Cambrian Period • Cambrian Explosion • Organisms had hard parts: shells and exoskeletons • Invertebrates: jellyfish, worms, sponges • Brachiopods: two shelled – common • Trilobites - Arthropods Ordovician and Silurain Periods • Ancestors of modern Octopus and Squid • More Arthropods (first to live on land) • First vertebrates: jawless fish • First land plants- from aquatic ancestors grew in damp places Devonian Period • Vertebrates begin to invade the land • Age of Fishes: most have jaws, skeletons and scales • Ability to crawl on leglike fins but still fully aquatic ancestors to amphibians Carboniferous and Permian Periods • Life expanded to include reptiles, • Winged insects • Giant ferns and Swampy Forests • Ancient plants formed deposits in the sediment that became coal “Carboniferous” Mass Extinction • End of Paleozoic Era mass extinction • 95% of complex life including plants and animals on land and in sea. • Many fish and reptiles survived but not trilobites Mesozoic Era 1. Triassic Period 2. Jurassic Period 3. Cretaceous Period • Lasted 180 million years –Then ANOTHER mass extinction Triassic Period • Survivors of Permian Extinction became main life forms • Fish, insects, reptiles • Age of Reptiles • Mammals also appear and are the size of a mouse Jurassic Period • Dinosaurs dominate for about 150 million years • First birds – believed to be closely related to dinosaurs Cretaceous Period Flying reptiles become extinct • Turtles and crocodiles swim among fish and invertebrates • Flowering Plants Dominate land • Then ANOTHER mass extinction Cenozoic Era • Tertiary Period • Quaternary Period Tertiary Period • Climate generally warm and mild • Whales and dolphins evolve • Grazing animals • Some mammals and birds become large Quaternary Period Mammals evolve Earth’s climate cooled and a series of ice ages begin • Glacial Advance and Retreat over Europe and North America • Glaciers melt sea levels rise Patterns of Macroevolution • • • • • • 1. Extinction 2. Adaptive Radiation 3. Convergent Evolution 4. Coevolution 5. Punctuated equilibrium 6. Changes in Developmental Genes Extinction • More than 99% of all species that ever lived are now extinct • Natural Selection pressures some to adapt or become extinct • Then a burst of evolution that produce new species Adaptive Radiation • A single species evolves through Natural Selection into diverse forms • Darwin’s finches: a dozen species from a single species Convergent Evolution • Unrelated organisms that look alike • Similar environments or demands: moving through air or water, eating similar food… • Produce modified structures: wings, flippers Coevolution • Evolve together • One organism changes followed by a change in another who has a close relationship Punctuated Equilibrium • Long stable periods interrupted by brief periods of rapid change • Evolution proceeds at different rates over time • Sometimes rapidly to fill available niches like after extinctions Developmental Genes • hox genes guide development in embryo • Small changes to hox genes can cause big changes to organisms • Feet where antennae should be??? Assignment • • • • Page 434 (Prentice Hall Book) Questions 1-3 Page 440 (Prentice Hall Book) Questions 1-4