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Biology Slide 1 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Slide 2 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Publication of On the Origin of Species After examining all of the specimens he collected from the Galapagos Islands, Darwin realized that each island species looked a lot like a similar species on the South American mainland. Yet, the island species were clearly different from the mainland species and from one another. Slide 3 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Publication of On the Origin of Species Publication of On the Origin of Species Darwin filled notebooks with his ideas about species diversity and the evolution process. These ideas challenged fundamental scientific beliefs of his day. Eventually, Darwin published his book, On the Origin of Species. Slide 4 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Publication of On the Origin of Species In his book, Darwin: • proposed a mechanism for evolution called natural selection. • presented evidence that evolution has been taking place for millions of years—and continues in all living things. Many considered his work brilliant, while others strongly opposed his arguments. Slide 5 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection Natural Variation and Artificial Selection Darwin argued that instead of species being perfect and unchanging, there is natural variation found in all types of organisms. • Natural variation = differences among individuals of a species • Variation is present in species in nature, farm crops, and livestock. Slide 6 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection Natural Variation Slide 7 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection Some cows gave more milk than others. Some plants produced larger fruit than others. Darwin proposed that much of this variation could be inherited, or passed on to the next generation. Slide 8 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection By studying farmers and breeders, Darwin noted that they routinely used variation to improve their crops and livestock. He noted that plant and animal breeders would breed only the largest hogs, the fastest horses, or the cows that produced the most milk. Darwin termed this process artificial selection. This produced a wide range of plants and animals that looked very different from their ancestors. Slide 9 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection How is natural variation used in artificial selection? Slide 10 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection In artificial selection, nature provided the variation among different organisms, and humans selected those variations that they found useful. Slide 11 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Inherited Variation and Artificial Selection Cauliflower In artificial selection, humans select from Brussels among the naturally Sprouts occurring genetic variations in a species. This process can lead to great differences. In some cases, a single ancestral species has given rise to a variety of modern plants. Kohlrabi Broccoli Ancestral Species Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Kale Slide 12 of 41 End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Evolution by Natural Selection Darwin compared processes in nature to artificial selection. By doing so, he developed a scientific hypothesis to explain how evolution occurs. Slide 13 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection The Struggle for Existence Darwin realized that high birth rates and a shortage of life's basic needs would force organisms to compete for resources. The struggle for existence means that members of each species compete regularly to obtain food, living space, and other necessities of life. Slide 14 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection In this struggle, predators that are faster or have an effective method of hunting catch more prey. Those prey that are faster, better camouflaged, or better protected avoid being caught. The struggle for existence was central to Darwin's theory of evolution. Slide 15 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection How is natural selection related to a species' fitness? Slide 16 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Survival of the Fittest The ability of an individual to survive and reproduce in its specific environment is fitness. Darwin proposed that fitness is the result of adaptations. An adaptation is any inherited characteristic that increases an organism's chance of survival. Slide 17 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Successful adaptations enable organisms to become better suited to their environment and better able to survive and reproduce. Adaptations can be physical characteristics, such as a porcupine’s sharp quills, or more complex features, such as behavior in which some animals live and hunt in groups. Slide 18 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection The concept of fitness was central to the process of evolution by natural selection. Generation after generation, individuals compete to survive and produce offspring. Because each individual differs from other members of its species, each has unique advantages and disadvantages. Slide 19 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Individuals with characteristics that are not well suited to their environment (low levels of fitness) either die or leave few offspring. Individuals that are better suited to their environment (high levels of fitness) survive and reproduce most successfully. Darwin called this process survival of the fittest. Slide 20 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Because of its similarities to artificial selection, Darwin referred to the survival of the fittest as natural selection. In natural selection, the traits being selected for— therefore increasing over time–contribute to an organism's fitness in its environment. *Natural selection cannot be seen directly; it is observed as changes in a population over many successive generations. Slide 21 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Over time, natural selection results in changes in the inherited characteristics of a population. These changes increase a species' fitness in its environment. Slide 22 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Descent With Modification Natural selection produces organisms that have different structures, establish different niches, or occupy different habitats. As a result, species today look different from their ancestors. Each living species has descended, with changes, from other species over time. Darwin referred to this principle as descent with modification. Slide 23 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Descent with modification implies that all living organisms are related to one another. This is the principle known as common descent. According to this principle, all species—living and extinct—were derived from common ancestors. Slide 24 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evolution by Natural Selection Think of a single “tree of life” that links all living things on Earth. Slide 25 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution What evidence of evolution did Darwin present? Slide 26 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Evidence of Evolution Darwin argued that living things have been evolving on Earth for millions of years. Evidence for this process could be found in the fossil record, the geographical distribution of living species, homologous structures of living organisms, and similarities in early development. Slide 27 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution The Fossil Record Before Darwin’s time, it was known that fossils were the remains of ancient life, and that different layers of rock had been formed at different times in Earth’s history. Darwin saw fossils as a record of evolution. Darwin proposed that the Earth was millions (rather than thousands) of years old. Slide 28 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Over this time, countless different species appeared on Earth, lived for a time, and then disappeared. By comparing fossils from older rock layers with fossils from younger layers, scientists could document that life on Earth has changed over time. What did these organisms gradually evolve? Slide 29 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Geographic Distribution of Living Species Darwin wondered how the organisms he observed and collected in the Galápagos became similar, yet distinctly different species. Could the island finches have changed over time, as populations in different places adapted to different local environments? Slide 30 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Darwin decided that all Galápagos finches could have descended with modification from a common mainland ancestor. Slide 31 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Remember the puzzle about different species being found in Argentina and Australia even though they had similar grassland ecosystems? Darwin’s theory was that species now living on different continents had each descended from different ancestors. Slide 32 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution However, because some animals on each continent were living under similar ecological conditions, they were exposed to similar pressures of natural selection. Because of these similar selection pressures, different animals ended up evolving certain features in common. Slide 33 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Beaver Similar, but unrelated species: Muskra t The existence of similar but unrelated species was a puzzle to Darwin. Later, he realized that similar animals in different locations were the product of different lines of evolutionary descent. Here, the beaver and the capybara are similar species that inhabit similar environments of North America and South America. The South American coypu also shares many characteristics with the North American muskrat. Slide 34 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Homologous Body Structures Further evidence of evolution could be found in living animals. By Darwin’s time, researchers had found striking similarities among the body parts of vertebrates (animals with backbones). Reptiles, birds, and mammals had similar bone structures, but different functions—as seen in their arms, wings, legs, or flippers. Slide 35 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Homologous Structures Turtle Alligator Bird Mammal Ancient, lobefinned fish Slide 36 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Each of these limbs has adapted in ways that enable organisms to survive in different environments. Despite these different functions, however, these limb bones all develop from the same clumps of cells in growing embryos. Slide 37 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Structures that have different mature forms but develop from the same embryonic tissues are called homologous structures. Homologous structures provide strong evidence that all four-limbed animals with backbones have descended, with modification, from common ancestors. Similarities and differences in homologous structures help biologists group animals according to how recently they last shared a common ancestor. Slide 38 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Not all homologous structures serve important functions. The organs of many animals are so reduced in size that they are just vestiges, or traces, of homologous organs in other species. These organs are called vestigial organs. Why not get rid of them? Vestigial organs may not affect an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce; natural selection would not eliminate them. Slide 39 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Human vestigial organs: Slide 40 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Similarities in Embryology The early stages, or embryos, of many animals with backbones are very similar. The same groups of embryonic cells develop in the same order and in similar patterns to produce the tissues and organs of all vertebrates. These common cells and tissues produce homologous structures. Slide 41 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Evidence of Evolution Similarities in Embryology Slide 42 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Summary of Darwin's Theory Summary of Darwin's Theory Individual organisms differ, and some of this variation is heritable. Organisms produce more offspring than can survive, and many that do survive do not reproduce. Because more organisms are produced than can survive, they compete for limited resources. Slide 43 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Summary of Darwin's Theory Individuals best suited to their environment (highest level of fitness) survive and reproduce most successfully. These organisms pass their heritable traits to their offspring. Other individuals die or leave fewer offspring. This process of natural selection causes species to change over time. Slide 44 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Darwin Presents His Case Summary of Darwin's Theory Species alive today are descended with modification from ancestral species that lived in the distant past. This process, by which diverse species evolved from common ancestors, unites all organisms on Earth into a single tree of life. Slide 45 of 41 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall End Show 15-3 Click to Launch: Continue to: - or - Slide 46 of 41 End Show Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 15-3 The scientist who motivated Darwin to publish On the Origin of Species was a. Alfred Russel Wallace. b. Charles Lyell. c. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. d. Thomas Malthus. Slide 47 of 41 End Show Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 15-3 Differences among individuals of a single species are referred to as a. artificial selection. b. genetic variation. c. survival of the fittest. d. environmental adaptation. Slide 48 of 41 End Show Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 15-3 Changes that increase a species' fitness in its environment over time are due to a. the principle of common descent. b. the geographic distribution of that species. c. natural selection. d. habitat selection. Slide 49 of 41 End Show Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 15-3 An inherited characteristic that increases an organism's chance of survival is called a(an) a. homologous structure. b. vestigial organ. c. adaptation. d. analogous structure. Slide 50 of 41 End Show Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 15-3 Evidence used by Darwin to support the idea of evolution included all the following EXCEPT a. fossils that demonstrate change over time. b. the genetic mechanism by which useful traits are inherited. c. the geographic distribution of living things. d. the presence of many homologous structures in plants and animals. Slide 51 of 41 End Show Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall END OF SECTION