1 / 36

DARWIN’S THEORY

DARWIN’S THEORY. SC B-5: THE STUDENT WILL DEMONSTRATE UNDERSTANDING OF BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION & THE DIVERSITY OF LIFE. Inquiry Activity. Page 368 in book Page 35 in notebook work in pairs When you have calculated your average length put it on board so class average can be calculated

knox
Download Presentation

DARWIN’S THEORY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DARWIN’S THEORY SC B-5: THE STUDENT WILL DEMONSTRATE UNDERSTANDING OF BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION & THE DIVERSITY OF LIFE

  2. Inquiry Activity Page 368 in book Page 35 in notebook work in pairs When you have calculated your average length put it on board so class average can be calculated Also record length of your shortest bean and longest bean: What is the range of the bean length?

  3. CN: PAGE 112 NOTEBOOK TOPIC: Darwin’s theory of Evolution EQ: What inferences did Darwin make about Natural Selection from his observations?

  4. DEFINITIONS EVOLUTION: process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms THEORY: well-tested explanation that unifies a broad range of observations

  5. Charles Darwin Englishman born in 1809 After graduating in 1831 from University took job as a naturalist on H.M.S. Beagle & traveled around the world

  6. Darwin’s Voyage

  7. Darwin During his travels, Darwin made numerous observations & collected evidence that led him to propose a revolutionary hypothesis about the way life changes over time.

  8. Darwin’s Observations Plants & animals remarkably well-suited to their surroundings Different organisms lived in same type of ecosystem Example: grasslands of Europe + rabbits but grasslands in Australia - rabbits

  9. Fossils: preserved remains or evidence of an ancient organism

  10. Darwin studied fossils from different continents & noted that some resembled organisms still living & some unlike any creature he had ever seen

  11. Galapagos Islands Small group of islands off Ecuador Climates varied from hot & dry to rain forest Each had different flora & fauna

  12. Galapagos Animals

  13. Darwin’s Hypothesis Darwin noticed that characteristics of many animals & plants varied noticeably among different islands and hypothesized that they had a common ancestor

  14. Contemporary Ideas that shaped Darwin’s Ideas • 1785: James Hutton 1st to present idea that Earth is much older than Bible would indicate • Looked at layers of sedimentary rock with fossils of sea creatures now on mountain top • Looked at geological processes that shape Earth • Reasoned that processes seen today same in past

  15. Origins of Evolutionary Thought Malthus: 1798 Predicted human population will grow faster than the space & food supplies needed to sustain it

  16. Origins of Evolutionary Thought • Lamark: 1809 • proposed hypothesis of inheritance of acquired traits: • if parent became very accurate with bow & arrow after years of practice  any child born after would also be very accurate with bow & arrow

  17. Lyell: wrote Principles of Geology (Darwin read 1st vol. while on the Beagle) Said must explain past events in terms of processes observed now Lyell’s work influenced Darwin 2 ways: 1. He asked himself: If Earth can change over time why not living organisms? 2. He realized it would take very long time for change to be obvious

  18. Origins of Evolutionary Thoughts Wallace: 1858 Naturalist working in Malaysia wrote Darwin speculating on mechanism of evolution by natural selection  induced Darwin to publish Origin of the Species in 1859

  19. The Origin of the Species Darwin returned to England in 1836 and reviewed his observations & notes but did not publish his book for 25 yrs Darwin proposed a mechanism for evolution that he called: natural selection

  20. Artificial Selection One of Darwin’s most important insights was that members of each species vary from one another in important ways. Darwin argued that these small variations were very important using breeders as example

  21. Artificial Selection Humans choose the natural variations in a species that they found useful and used selective breeding to enhance the traits desired.

  22. Evolution by Natural Selection • Struggle for Existence: members of each species compete for available food, living space, mates • Predators that are faster, better nourished, survive longer, more likely to reproduce more thus passing on those traits that made them faster • Prey that are slightly better at camouflage less likely to be eaten, more likely to reproduce

  23. Survival of the Fittest Darwin reasoned that a key factor in struggle for existence was how well-suited an individual is to its environment Fitness: the ability of an individual to survive & reproduce in its specific environment

  24. Adaptations • Adaptation: any inherited characteristic that increase’s an organisms chances of survival • Can be: • Anatomical (structure of organism) • Physiological (function of organism) • Behavioral

  25. Adaptations

  26. Survival of the Fittest Darwin referred to survival of the fittest as natural selection Over time the variants in traits that offer an advantage will have increasing incidence in population

  27. Descent with Modification • Term used by Darwin to explain why species today look different from their ancestors: • A successful species will just reproduce, always with some variation in traits until a new stressor appears which will give an advantage to some variations and a disadvantage to others • Variations that give advantage will then become more prevalent in population; others will decrease in #’s

  28. Common Descent Descent with modification implies all living things have a common ancestor

  29. Evidence of Evolution: 4 sources 1. Fossil Record 2. Distribution of Species Dating & comparing fossil shows progression of species over long periods of time Many species have disappeared Continental Drift helps explain why similar organisms on different continents

  30. Continental Drift

  31. Evidence of Evolution 3. Homologous Structures Darwin noticed striking similarities in vertebrates (also seen in plants & algae) Vestigial Structures: homologous structure that have been reduced in size, no longer serve a purpose (appendix)

  32. Evidence of Evolution 4. Embryology Many vertebrate embryos go through stage where they look very similar to another species

  33. Summary of Darwin’s Theory 1. individual organisms differ & some of this variation is inheritable. 2. organisms produce more offspring than can survive & many that do survive don’t reproduce 3. because there are more organisms than can survive they must compete for limited resources 4. individuals best suited to their environment will survive & reproduce passing their successful traits on (causes species to change over time) 5. species today all descended from common ancestors

  34. Darwin’s Theory Strengths Weaknesses Most of Darwin’s hypotheses have been confirmed Is considered by many to be the “grand unifying theory of life sciences” Still does not explain how life began New information always coming to light: theories change over time

More Related