1 / 34

Theory of Evolution

Theory of Evolution. Chapter 16. What is evolution?. Evolution. Idea of Evolution. Charles Darwin (1809-1882) English naturalist Took a trip around the world on a ship called H.M.S. Beagle Mostly fascinated with the Galapagos Islands

minda
Download Presentation

Theory of Evolution

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. Theory of Evolution Chapter 16

  2. What is evolution? • Evolution

  3. Idea of Evolution • Charles Darwin (1809-1882) • English naturalist • Took a trip around the world on a ship calledH.M.S. Beagle • Mostly fascinated with the Galapagos Islands • Best known for his theory of evolution by natural selection

  4. Darwin’s Journey • Began in 1831 • Sailed on a ship called the H.M.S. Beagle • Five year voyage sailing around the coast of SouthAmerica and Australia

  5. Observations Aboard the Beagle • Darwin collected 68 species of beetles • Wrote about the different characteristics of habitats and species that live there • Species vary globally • There are similar organisms around that world with similar ecological habitats • Ex: Rhea birds in S. America and ostriches in Africa

  6. Observation Aboard the Beagle • Species vary locally • Related animals species often occupy different habitats within a local area • Ex: Tortoise shellshape among Galapagos Islands

  7. Observation Aboard the Beagle • Species vary overtime • Some fossils of extinct animals were similar to living species • Ex: Armadillo fossils compared to modern day armadillos

  8. Darwin’s Findings • Galapagos Islands • Groups of animals vary from island to island • Ex: tortoises on each island resemble each other but differ in the shape and function of their shells • Ex: finches on each island resembled each other but differ in the shape and function of their beaks • Darwin believed these unique animals all came from a commonancestor and they changed/adapted to their environment

  9. Idea of Evolution • Evolution • Development of new types of organisms overtime • Heritable change in the characteristics within a population from one generation to the next

  10. Ideas of Darwin’s Time • Scientists thought all species were permanent and unchanging • The Earth was believed to only be a few thousand (not billions) of years old • During Darwin’s time, new research was being done to figure out the geology of the Earth

  11. Ideas that Influenced Darwin • James Hutton was a geologist in 1700’s • Made connections between mountains, valleys, and layers of rock • Believed the Earth was older than thousands of years -- a time so old for the human mind to image • The Earth changes very slowly and some layers can accumulate as the environment is changing

  12. Ideas that Influenced Darwin • Charles Lyell was a English geologist that believed the Earth’s surface continues to change • He explained that past processes that occurred are still occurring now • Ex: Volcanoes erupted in the past and still today • Published a great work called PrinciplesofGeology in 1830 that built on the work of Hutton • Darwin read this book while on his journey around the world

  13. Ideas that Influenced Darwin • Jean-Baptiste Lamarck • French naturalist that supported the idea that populations of organisms change over time

  14. Ideas that Influenced Darwin • Proposed two hypotheses: Called Theory of AcquiredTraits • Organisms could change during their lifetime by using or not using selected parts of the body • Individuals could pass these acquired traits on to their offspring • Ex: Giraffes could lengthen their neck by stretching over a period of time to get the height they needed to eat and survive and then pass the longer neck trait to their offspring

  15. Ideas that Influenced Darwin • Thomas Malthus was an English economist in the 1790s • Reasoned that if the human population grew continuously, there would not be enough resources for everyone • His reasoning explained why plants and animals produced more a high amount of offspring since a portion will not survive due to environmental factors • Ex: Maple tree produces thousands of seeds each summer • Ex: Oysters produce millions of eggs each year with the understanding that only a fraction will survive

  16. Darwin’s Ideas • Around the same time Darwin and Wallace formed theory to explain evolution • Darwin was able to publish his book first called OntheOriginofSpecies in 1858 • Book explained how evolution occurs by means of naturalselection

  17. Artificial Selection • Darwin studied animal breeders • Farmers would select to breed only trees with the largest fruit, or the cows that produce the most milk • Darwin called this process artificialselection • Nature provides the variations, and humans select hose they find to be useful and allow them to breed and pass on traits to offspring

  18. Evolution by Natural Selection • Mechanism from descent with modification • 1. Struggle for Existence • Organisms produce more offspring than can survive • Ex: grasshoppers lay over 200 eggs at a time, but only a fraction survive • 2. Variation and Adaptation • Traits vary within a species and their environment called adaptations • These adaptations help increase ability to survive • Ex: Mimicry with coral snake and scarlet snake

  19. Natural Selection (cont’d) • 3. Survival of the Fittest • Organisms best adapted for an environment will survive best and reproduce • The ability for an organism to reproduce and pass on adaptations • 4. Natural Selection • Process by which organisms with variations most suited to their local environment survive and leave more offspring • Organisms choose their mate based on desired traits

  20. Common Descent • Idea that every species must have descended by reproduction from pre-existing species that arrange over time • Ex: finch beaks at Galapagos • All species – living and extinct – are descended from ancient common ancestors

  21. Transitional Species • Organisms with features that are between hypothesized ancestors

  22. Age of the Earth & Fossils • Noted that fossils of extinct animals resembled living species • Relative Age • Age compared to other fossils in order of old to young • Absolute Age • Using radioactive dating to get actualnumber age

  23. Age of the Earth and Fossils • Age of the Earth • Geologists are certain based on evidence via radioactive dating to indicate the Earth is about 4.5billion years old • Fossils • Remains of an organism that died long ago • Many fossils form a series that can trace back to an ancient extinct ancestor • Superposition • Idea that strata form in layers where the layers closest to the top are the younger than below

  24. Biogeography • Study of where organisms live now and where they and their ancestors lived in the past • Darwin used this method when exploring islands and observed animals vary based on their environment • Closely related but Different • Darwin believed that the finches of the Galapagos all came from a common ancestor in the mainland • Over time, natural selection produced a variation of species of finches • Distantly Related but Similar • Darwin noted that organisms that are distantlyrelated and inhabit similar environments have similar qualities

  25. Anatomy and Embryology • Anatomy: study of the body • Embryology: study of development • Homologous structures • Anatomical structures that originated from the same common ancestor • Ex: bones in arms of humans, penguins, alligator and bat • Related structure but function may differ

  26. Anatomy and Embryology • Analogous Structures • When structures have similar function, but did not develop the same way • Ex: wings of bat vs. bird • Vestigial Structures • Organs that no longer serve a function in an organism • Ex: human tail bone, appendix

  27. Anatomy and Embryology • Embryology • Similar patterns of embryological development provide further evidence that organisms have descended from a common ancestor • Many animals look similar during development and produce homologous tissue

  28. Genetics and Molecular Biology • At the molecular level, the geneticcode and homologous molecules provide evidence of common descent

  29. Phylogeny • Relationships among groups of organisms • Can make a “tree” of animals evolved • Trunk of the tree would represent species that are closely related • Branches represent a separate population or lineage

  30. Caribbean Anole Lizard • Found in the Caribbean islands of Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, and Puerto Rico • Each lizard species body type differs by their habitat • Ex: stocky body and long legged lizards are best adapted for tree truck environments, slender bodies and long tails are best adapted for grassy environments • Hypothesis #1: An ancestral anole species specialized for living on twigs originally lived on one island and later migrated to other islands OR • Hypothesis #2: Each twig-dwelling species evolved independently on each island from distant ancestor anole species

  31. Evolution in Action • Biologists tested the hypothesis by comparing DNA from the various species • DNA evidence supported hypothesis 2that each lizard evolved independently on each island • Convergent Evolution • Process by which different species evolve similar traits • Ex: twig-dwelling species came from different ancestors but evolved similar adaptations to their environment

  32. Divergence & Radiation • Divergence evolution • Process by which the descendants of a single ancestor diversify into species that each fit different parts of the environment • Ex: All breeds of dog share a common ancestor with wolves

  33. Divergence & Radiation • Adaptive Radiation • Pattern of diversity when a new population in a new environment undergoes divergent evolution

  34. Coevolution • Evolution is on-going and many species may evolve together • Coevolution • When two or more species have evolved adaptations to each other’s influence • Ex: • Predator/Prey Interactions • Introduction of new species • Creating antibiotics

More Related