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Evolution: Descent with Modification

Evolution: Descent with Modification. Theory. a theory accounts for many observations and data and attempts to explain and integrate a great variety of phenomena. Darwin Introduces a Revolutionary Theory.

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Evolution: Descent with Modification

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  1. Evolution: Descent with Modification

  2. Theory • a theory accounts for many observations and data and attempts to explain and integrate a great variety of phenomena

  3. Darwin Introduces a Revolutionary Theory • A new era of biology began on November 24, 1859, the day Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection • The Origin of Species focused biologists’ attention on the great diversity of organisms

  4. Darwin • Darwin made two major points in his book: • Many current species are descendants of ancestral species • Natural selection is a mechanism for this evolutionary process

  5. Resistance to the Idea of Evolution • The Greek philosopher Aristotle viewed species as fixed and unchanging: ScalaNaturae • The Old Testament holds that species were individually designed by God and therefore perfect

  6. Resistance to the Idea of Evolution • Carolus Linnaeus interpreted organismal adaptations as evidence that the Creator had designed each species for a specific purpose • Linnaeus was a founder of taxonomy, the branch of biology concerned with classifying organisms

  7. Fossils, Cuvier, and Catastrophism • The study of fossils helped to lay the groundwork for Darwin’s ideas • Fossils are remains or traces of organisms from the past, usually found in sedimentary rock, which appears in layers or strata • Paleontology, the study of fossils, was largely developed by French scientist Georges Cuvier • Cuvier advocated catastrophism, speculating that each boundary between strata represents a catastrophe

  8. Gradualism • Gradualism is the idea that profound change can take place through the cumulative effect of slow but continuous processes • Geologists Hutton and Lyell perceived that changes in Earth’s surface can result from slow continuous actions still operating today • This view strongly influenced Darwin’s thinking

  9. Lamarck’s Theory of Evolution • Lamarck hypothesized that species evolve through use and disuse and the inheritance of acquired traits • The mechanisms he proposed are unsupported by evidence

  10. Charles Darwin • During his travels on the Beagle, Darwin collected specimens of South American plants and animals • He observed adaptations of plants and animals that inhabited many diverse environments • stop at the Galápagos Islands near the equator west of South America

  11. Charles Darwin • Darwin perceived adaptation to the environment and the origin of new species as closely related processes • From studies made years after Darwin’s voyage, biologists have concluded that this is indeed what happened to the Galápagos finches

  12. Cactus eater. The long, sharp beak of the cactus ground finch (Geospizascandens) helps it tear and eat cactus flowers and pulp. Seed eater. The large ground finch (Geospizamagnirostris) has a large beak adapted for cracking seeds that fall from plants to the ground. Insect eater. The green warbler finch (Certhideaolivacea) used its narrow, pointed beak to grasp insects.

  13. Charles Darwin • The Origin of Species, an essay on the origin of species and natural selection was published in 1859 • Darwin developed two main ideas: • Evolution explains life’s unity and diversity • Natural selection is a cause of adaptive evolution

  14. Darwin • descent with modification • perception of the unity of life • all organisms are related through descent from an ancestor that lived in the remote past • In the Darwinian view, the history of life is like a tree with branches representing life’s diversity

  15. Natural Selection and Adaptation • Evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr has dissected the logic of Darwin’s theory into three inferences based on five observations • Observation #1: For any species, population sizes would increase exponentially if all individuals that are born reproduced successfully • Observation #2: Populations tend to be stable in size, except for seasonal fluctuations • Observation #3: Resources are limited • Inference #1: Production of more individuals than the environment can support leads to a struggle for existence among individuals of a population, with only a fraction of their offspring surviving

  16. Observation #4: Members of a population vary extensively in their characteristics; no two individuals are exactly alike • Observation #5: Much of this variation is heritable • Inference #2: Survival depends in part on inherited traits; individuals whose inherited traits give them a high probability of surviving and reproducing are likely to leave more offspring than other individuals • Inference #3: This unequal ability of individuals to survive and reproduce will lead to a gradual change in a population, with favorable characteristics accumulating over generations

  17. Natural Selection • Natural selection is differential success in reproduction from interaction between individuals that vary in heritable traits and their environment • an increase over time in adaptation of organisms to their environment • If an environment changes over time, natural selection may result in adaptation to these new conditions

  18. Homology • Homology is similarity resulting from common ancestry • Homologous structures are anatomical resemblances that represent variations on a structural theme present in a common ancestor

  19. Homology, Biogeography, and the Fossil Record • Comparative embryology reveals anatomical homologies not visible in adult organisms

  20. Biogeography • Darwin’s observations of biogeography, the geographic distribution of species, formed an important part of his theory of evolution • Some similar mammals that have adapted to similar environments have evolved independently from different ancestors • Analogous structures

  21. Convergent Evolution: similar problem, similar solution

  22. Fossil Record • The succession of forms observed in the fossil record is consistent with other inferences about the major branches of descent in the tree of life • The Darwinian view of life predicts that evolutionary transitions should leave signs in the fossil record • Paleontologists have discovered fossils of many such transitional forms

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