Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Evidence of Evolution Chapter 11. 11.1 Impacts/Issues Reflections of a Distant Past  Events of the ancient past can be explained by the same physical,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Evidence of Evolution Chapter 11. 11.1 Impacts/Issues Reflections of a Distant Past  Events of the ancient past can be explained by the same physical,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Evidence of Evolution Chapter 11

2 11.1 Impacts/Issues Reflections of a Distant Past  Events of the ancient past can be explained by the same physical, chemical, and biological processes that operate in today’s world

3 From Evidence to Inference  Scientists infer from evidence that an asteroid impact near the Yucatán 65 million years ago caused the mass extinction of dinosaurs  Mass extinction Simultaneous loss of many lineages from Earth

4 From Evidence to Inference  Barringer crater, Arizona

5 Pioneers of Biogeography  Late 1800s: Charles Darwin, Alfred Wallace and other naturalists observed patterns in where species live, how they might be related, and how natural forces might shape life  Biogeography Study of patterns in the geographic distribution of species and communities

6 Biogeography  Wallace and Darwin thought similarities in birds on different continents might indicate a common ancestor

7 Biogeography  Some plants that lived in similar climates on different continents had similar features, but were not closely related

8 Comparative Morphology  Naturalists studying body plans were confused by vestigial body parts with no apparent function  Comparative morphology Scientific study of body plans and structures among groups of organisms

9 Vestigial Body Parts

10 Geology  Identical rock layers in different parts of the world, sequences of similar fossils, and fossils of giant animals with no living representatives also puzzled early naturalists

11 Confusing Discoveries  Taken as a whole, findings from biogeography, comparative morphology, and geology did not fit with prevailing beliefs of the 19 th century  Increasingly extensive observations of nature led to new ways of thinking about the natural world

12 Comparative pelvic anatomy

13 11.3 A Flurry of New Theories  Nineteenth-century naturalists tried to explain the accumulating evidence of evolution  Georges Cuvier proposed that catastrophic geologic forces unlike those of the present day shaped Earth’s surface (catastrophism)  Jean-Baptiste Lamarck proposed that changes in an animal over its lifetime were inherited

14 Evolution  Naturalists suspected that environmental factors affected affect a species’ traits over time, causing changes in a line of descent  Evolution Change in a line of descent (in a line from an ancestor)

15 Voyage of the Beagle  1831: Charles Darwin set out as a naturalist on a five-year voyage aboard the Beagle  He found many unusual fossils and observed animals living in many different environments

16 Darwin and the Voyage of the Beagle

17 Lyell’s Theory of Uniformity  Darwin was influenced by Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology, which set forth the theory of uniformity – in contrast to catastrophism  Theory of uniformity Idea that gradual repetitive processes occurring over long time spans shaped Earth’s surface

18 Shared Traits  Darwin collected fossils of extinct glyptodons, which shared traits with modern armadillos

19 Limited Resources  Thomas Malthus observed that: A population tends to grow until it begins to exhaust environmental resources—food, shelter from predators, etc When resources become scarce, individuals must compete for them  Darwin applied these ideas to the species he had observed on his voyage

20 Fitness  Darwin realized that in any population, some individuals have traits that make them better suited to the environment than others, and therefore more likely to survive and reproduce  Fitness The degree of adaptation to an environment, as measured by an individual’s relative genetic contribution to future generations

21 Adaptation  Adaptive traits that impart greater fitness to an individual become more common in a population over generations, compared with less competitive forms  Adaptation (adaptive trait) A heritable trait that enhances an individual’s fitness

22 Natural Selection  Darwin concluded that the process of natural selection, through variations in fitness and adaptation, is a driving force of evolution  Natural selection Differential survival and reproduction of individuals of a population that vary in the details of shared, heritable traits

23 Great Minds Think Alike  Alfred Wallace, the “father of biogeography”, proposed the theory of natural selection in 1858, at the same time as Darwin  Darwin published On the Origin of Species the following year, in which he described descent with modification, or evolution

24 Alfred Wallace  The codiscoverer of natural selection

25 Principles of Natural Selection

26 The Galapagos Islands

27 11.4 About Fossils  Fossils Physical evidence of organisms from the past Hard fossils include mineralized bones, teeth, shells, spores and other hard body parts Trace fossils include footprints, nests, trails, feces and other evidence of activities

28 Fig. 11-7a, p. 202 A A 30-million-year-old fossil of Elomeryx. This small terrestrial mammal was a member of the same artiodactyl group that gave rise to hippopotamuses, pigs, deer, sheep, cows, and whales.

29 Fig. 11-7b, p. 202 B Rodhocetus, an ancient whale, lived about 47 million years ago. Its distinctive ankle bones point to a close evolutionary connection to artiodactyls. Inset: compare a Rodhocetus ankle bone (left) with that of a modern artiodactyl, a pronghorn antelope (right).

30 Fig. 11-7c, p. 202 C Dorudonatrox, an ancient whale that lived about 37 million years ago. Its artiodactyl-like ankle bones (left) were much too small to have supported the weight of its huge body on land, so this mammal had to be fully aquatic.

31 11.5 Putting Time Into Perspective  Transitions in the fossil record, found in characteristic layers of sedimentary rock, became boundaries for great intervals of the geologic time scale  Geologic time scale Chronology of Earth history Correlates with evolutionary events

32

33 Drifting Continents, Changing Seas  Theory of continental drift Earth’s continents were once part of a single supercontinent that split up and drifted apart Explains how the same types of fossils can occur on both sides of an ocean  Pangea Supercontinent that formed about 237 million years ago and broke up about 152 million year ago

34 Plate Tectonics: A Mechanism of Continental Drift  Theory of plate tectonics Earth’s outer layer of rock is cracked into plates Slow movement rafts continents to new positions over geologic time Where plates spread apart, molten rock wells up from deep inside the Earth and solidifies Where plates collide, one slides under the other and is destroyed

35 Plate Tectonics

36 Gondwana  Certain fossils of ferns and reptiles that predate Pangea are found in similar rock layers in Africa, India, South America, and Australia – evidence of an even earlier supercontinent  Gondwana Supercontinent that formed more than 500 million years ago

37 Impacts on Evolution  Evidence suggests that supercontinents have formed and broken up at least five times  The resulting changes in the Earth’s surface, atmosphere, waters and climates have had profound impacts on evolution

38 11.6 Similarities in Body Form and Function  Similarities in structure of body parts are often evidence of a common ancestor  Homologous structures Similar body parts that reflect shared ancestry May be used for different purposes in different groups, but the same genes direct their development

39 Morphological Divergence  A body part that appears very different in appearance may be quite similar in underlying aspects of form – evidence of shared ancestry  Morphological divergence Evolutionary pattern in which a body part of an ancestor changes in its descendants (homologous structures)

40 Fig. 11-12, p. 208 pterosaur chicken penguin stem reptile porpoise bat human elephant Morphological Divergence Among Vertebrate Forelimbs

41 Morphological Convergence  Some body parts look alike in different lineages, but did not evolve in a common ancestor  Analogous structures Similar structures that evolved separately in different lineages  Morphological convergence Evolutionary pattern in which similar body parts evolve separately in different lineage

42 Morphological Convergence

43 Fig. 11-13d, p. 209 Insects BatsHumansCrocodilesBirds wings limbs with 5 digits

44 Comparative Embryology  Embryos of related species tend to develop in similar ways  Similarities in patterns of embryonic development are the result of master genes (homeotic genes) that have been conserved over evolutionary time

45 Comparative Embryology

46 Fig. 11-14a, p. 210

47 Fig. 11-14b, p. 210

48 Fig. 11-14c, p. 210

49 Fig. 11-14d, p. 210

50 Fig. 11-14e, p. 210

51 11.7 Biochemical Similarities  Each lineage has unique characters that are a mixture of ancestral and novel traits, including biochemical features such as the nucleotide sequence of DNA  We can discover and clarify evolutionary relationships through comparisons of nucleic acid and protein sequences


Download ppt "Evidence of Evolution Chapter 11. 11.1 Impacts/Issues Reflections of a Distant Past  Events of the ancient past can be explained by the same physical,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google