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Evolution 1 5 Types of Evolution • Changes in a population over time – – – – – – Natural Selection Mutations Genetic Drift Gene Flow Nonrandom mating Change in allele frequency (p’s and q’s) 2 Does the idea of evolution contradict a belief in God? • Many scientists of all religious faiths believe in both. • Some people feel evolution contradicts the literal interpretation of the Bible. 3 Earth’s Position in the Universe • 400 years ago the general thought that the earth was the center of the universe – Sun revolves around the earth – The earth does not move 4 Galileo and Corpernicus • Demonstrated scientific evidence that the sun is at the center of our solar system and the earth moves around the sun 5 Galileo and the Church • Religious leaders felt the heliocentric theory (sun at the center) was a direct contradiction to the literal interpretation of the Bible • Galileo found guilty of heresy 6 Copernican System (Heliocentral Theory) • Did not destroy peoples belief in God • Public now accepts the overwhelming evidence for the heliocentric theory 7 Theory of Evolution • Science has overwhelming evidence that all life is constantly evolving 8 Charles Darwin 1809-1882 • Proposed natural selection • Voyage on the HMS Beagle to collect fossils and wildlife samples 9 HMS Beagle 1831-1836 10 Ostrich in Africa Rhea in South America 11 12 13 Adaptive Radiation 14 Land Iguana Marine Iguana 15 Different Tortoises on Each Island 16 Natural Selection • One mechanism of evolution • Main concepts of natural selection – – – – Overproduction of offspring Inherited variation in offspring Competition Best adapted in a given environment survive and reproduce to increase their kind • They are naturally selected 17 Overproduction of Offspring • Elephants (very slow reproductive rate, longest gestation of any land animal) – If all the offspring of one elephant pair survive and all their offspring survive then: • 750 years = 19,000,000 elephants • 1200 years = Enough elephants to cover the earth! • Beetles – A handful that weighs 10 mg each – 82 weeks • 61,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 ton – The weight of the earth! 18 Variation of Offspring • Offspring of the same parents are different from each other 19 Competition • Since more individuals are born than can survive for an extended period of time, they compete for resources – Food – Living space – Mates 20 Best adapted to a given environment are selected to survive • Brown bears – Adapted to survive in Oklahoma • Polar bears – Adapted to survive in Alaska 21 Artificial Selection (Nonrandom Mating) Collie Sheltie 22 Evolution is Change • Changing alleles in a population can produce new species • Dogs have evolved from wolves • Man has artificially selected traits to produce the various dog breeds • Nature uses natural selection and other mechanisms for evolution 23 Scientific Disciplines That Give Evidence for Evolution • • • • • Paleontology Comparative anatomy Biogeography Molecular biology Others 24 Paleontology • Study of fossils – Allows us to see anatomical similarities between living species and organisms that lived in the past – Allows us to see how life has changed over time 25 Life Has Changed • Millions of species have been found that are different from life today 26 Horse Evolution 27 50 Million Years of Change 50 MYA 30 MYA 15 MYA Modern 28 Florida Museum of Natural History 29 Comparative Anatomy 30 Homologous Structures • Same structures used for different purposes 31 Homologous Structures 32 Homoplasy Analogous Structures Similar structures due to convergent evolution Convergent evolution- similar traits despite dissimilar lineage 33 Biogeographyexplains howsimilar animals in different geographic regions of the world 34 Why No Polar Bears in Antarctica or No Penguins in Arctic? 35 Why marsupials in Australia? 36 37 Molecular Biology • The study of the molecules of life including DNA and proteins 38 DNA Similarity 39 Comparing DNA • Human DNA compared to: – – – – Chimpanzee 99% same Gorilla 97.7% same Orangutan 96.3% same Another human 99.9% same 40 Comparing Protein Sequences • Many proteins in all of man are identical • Organ transplants require similar proteins in the donor and the recipient – A sibling or parent is often the best source for an organ transplant 41 Which would be the closest protein match for an organ transplant? Assuming all are alive and healthy. • A persons father • A persons great grandfather • A persons 10th great grandfather 42 Molecular Clock • The further you go back in time, the more proteins (and DNA) are different. • Differences in protein sequences and DNA can be used to estimate time when two species shared a common ancestor 43 Related Organisms • Close similarity of protein sequences indicates close relationship 44 Cytochrome C • Protein used to release energy from food • 104 amino acids • 20 of the amino acids occupy the same position in all eukaryotes 45 Comparison of Human Cytochrome C • 100 amino acids different in tuna fish • 12 amino acids different in a horse • 8 amino acids different in a kangaroo • 1 amino acid different in a monkey • Identical to chimpanzee 46 Pattern of Evolution Originally Based on Fossil Record • DNA comparisons confirm the same pattern • Protein sequences confirm the same pattern • 150 years of research by thousands of scientists demonstrate beyond doubt that life evolves. 47 Phylogenetic systematics or cladistics • The reconstruction of evolutionary histories of animals • A type of classification • Shared traits to represent evolutionary changes in organisms 48 Phylogenetic Tree/Cladograms • There are three types of phylogenetic groups (clades) of animals: • Monophyletic - A group including all the recognized descendant species of a given ancestor. • Paraphyletic - A group that does not include all the recognized descendant species of a given ancestor. • Polyphyletic - A group including some or all the descendants, but not the common ancestor of the group. 49 Cladograms continued • • • • • Branch Order - The branching pattern shows the genealogy of the organisms. The closer two organisms are to a branch, the closer their relationship. One might think of a branch as the place where a gene pool is separated. Branch Length - The length of a line on the tree represents an amount of change. The longer the line between two organisms, the greater the difference between them. The length of the line does not indicate a length of time, only the degree of change. The tip of a branch represents a group of descendent taxa (often species). The node (branch fork) represents the common ancestor of those descendents. The common ancestor will have shared characteristics with both branches. Two descendants that split from the same node are called sister groups. 50 51 The End 52