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Download Chapter 22: Descent w/ Modification Aristotle (384
		                    
		                    
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					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 o Binomial naming = Genus species; e.g. 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 o Study of fossils  Old strata had different life forms than present day; species disappeared & new ones appeared  Catastrophism o Each boundary b/w strata represents a catastrophe  Fossils o Remains or traces of organisms from past o Usually in sedimentary rock  Strata – layers of rock o Others study of fossils laid groundwork for Darwin’s ideas 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 o i.e. Today’s rate same as past  Strongly influenced Darwin’s thinking 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 Adaptation  Traits of organisms that enhance survival & reproduction  Maladaptive Trait – negative trait Timeline  1844 – Darwin wrote essay on origin of species & natural selection; anticipates uproar, doesn’t publish  1858 – Gets manuscript from Alfred Russell Wallace; proposed theory of natural selection similar to Darwin’s  Darwin quickly finished The Origin of Species & published it the next year The Origin Of Species o Developed two main ideas:  Descent with modification: explains life’s unity & diversity  Natural selection is a cause of adaptive evolution o Descent with Modification  Idea that all organisms are related thru descent from an ancestor that lived in remote past  ‘Evolution’ not used in 1st ed.  History of life is like a tree w/ branches representing life’s diversity o Artificial Selection  Darwin noted that humans have modified other species  Selectively breeding individuals w/ desired traits  e.g. dogs, cattle, crops o Darwin described 4 observations of nature & drew 2 inferences…  Observation #1 – members of a population often vary greatly in their traits  Observation #2 – traits are inherited from parents to offspring  Observation #3 – all species are capable of producing more offspring than environment can support (Malthus)  Observation #4 – owing to lack of food or resources, many of these offspring don’t survive  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  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 o Environmental Change  3 Responses… o Adapt o Migrate o Go extinct o Steps to Evolution  Mutation – DNA change  Reproductive cell  Spontaneous or mutagens  Natural Selection  Adaptation allows organism to leave more offspring  Time – many generations pass o Common Misconceptions  ‘Survival of fittest’ = ‘Survival of strongest’  Organisms match environment & environments change  Traits evolve b/c they are needed or wanted  Differences in traits must first be present  Individuals evolve  Populations evolve, NOT INDIVIDUALS o Summary  Genes mutate  Individuals are selected for/against  Populations evolve o Selection Types  Stabilizing Selection  Middle ground favored  Directional Selection  One extreme favored  Disruptive Selection  Both extremes favored o Evidence?  Peppered Moth Evolution  England (normally) has light colored trees; light moths dominant  Industrial revolution causes trees to be soot-covered; dark moths dominant  Endler’s Guppies  Studied effects of predators on wild guppy populations o Brightly colored males are more attractive to females  Also more vulnerable to predation  Killifish eat only colorless juvenile guppies o Adults in killifish pond tend to be brightly colored  Cichlids prey on adults (esp. bright colored) o Adults in cichlid pond tend to be drab colored  HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)  Retro-virus; genetic material is RNA  Has just 3 enzymes o Reverse Transcriptase – make RNA into DNA  No error correction, rapid mutations o Integrase – integrates viral DNA into host DNA o Protease – cuts 3 polypeptides; makes them active  Evolution of Drug-Resistant HIV o Reverse transcriptase (RT) makes DNA out of HIV’s RNA genome o Drug ‘3TC’ mimics cytosine (C) nucleotide o Some RT enzymes pick up 3TC (instead of regular C) & DNA synthesis is blocked o Problem: not all RTs are fooled by drug 3TC; pick up normal C  Greater reproductive success = increase in # o Population of HIV viruses has developed resistance to 3TC  Fossil Record Evidence  Evidence of extinctions, new groups, & changes within groups over time  Darwin ideas predict that evolutionary transitions should leave signs in fossil record  Paleontologists have discovered fossils of many transitional forms  Homology  Similarity resulting from common ancestry  Structural, Embryological, & Molecular  Homologous Structures o Same body part on different species that arose from a common ancestor o Mammal Forearms  Same bone arrangement – shoulder to fingertips  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  Vestigial Structures o Remnants of features that served functions in organism’s ancestors o Snakes w/ parts of pelvis & hind limbs o Wisdom teeth  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  Evolution of similar (or analogous) features in distantly related groups  Analogous Structures o Similar function as another organism, but different structure Biogeography  Geographic distribution of species  Endemic species – found in only one place on Earth  Islands often have endemic species that are closely related to species on nearest mainland or island (e.g. Galapagos)  Pangaea – all continents connected o Began breaking apart 200 million years ago o 20 million years ago, continents were w/in a few hundred km of where they are today o Continental drift – slow movement of continents over time  Understanding drift & modern distribution of species allows predictions of when & where groups evolved Chapter 26 – Phylogeny & Trees of Life Phylogeny  Evolutionary history of a species or group of related species  Systematics – classifies organisms & determines evolutionary relationships o Use fossil, molecular, & genetic data to infer relationships Taxonomy  Ordered division & naming of organisms o Uniformity across languages  Binomial Naming (Genus species) o Pantera pardus (leopard); Lutra lutra (European otter); Didelphis virginiana (Virginia opossum); Pinus virginiana (Virginia pine tree)  Hierarchical Classification o Linnaeus – group species in increasingly broad categories o Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species  Taxon – taxonomic unit at any level of hierarchy o 2 Kingdoms to 3 Domains  Early taxonomists classified all species as plants or animals  Five kingdoms – Plantae, Fungi, Monera, Protista, & Animalia  Three-domains – Bacteria, Archaea, & Eukarya  Supported by data from many sequenced genomes Phylogenetic Tree  Represents a Hypothesis about evolutionary relationships  Does NOT show when species evolved, how closely organisms are related, or how much genetic change occurred in lineage o Just patterns of descent  Shouldn’t be assumed that taxon evolved from taxon next to it  Reading Trees o Each branch point represents divergence of two species o Sister Taxa – groups sharing an immediate common ancestor o Polytomy – branch from which 2+ groups emerge o Root – branch representing last common ancestor of all taxa in tree How does Systematics work?  Molecular Systematics o Use DNA & other molecular data to determine evolutionary relationships  rRNA used for very old relationships (slow mutation)  mtDNA used for more recent relationships (fast mutation)  Characters o Shared Ancestral Character – originated in ancestor of taxon o Shared Derived Character – evolutionary novelty unique to a particular clade o Mammals backbone & hair?  Cladistics o Groups organisms by common descent o Clade – group of species that includes an ancestral species & all its descendants o Clades can be a part of a larger clades o 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)
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            