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1 Apply Concepts How would Hutton and Lyell explain the formation of the Grand Canyon 2 Review What is an acquired characteristic and what role did Lamarck.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Apply Concepts How would Hutton and Lyell explain the formation of the Grand Canyon 2 Review What is an acquired characteristic and what role did Lamarck."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Apply Concepts How would Hutton and Lyell explain the formation of the Grand Canyon 2 Review What is an acquired characteristic and what role did Lamarck think they played in evolution 3 Review What is artificial selection Infer Could artificial selection occur without inherited variation- explain 4 Draw conclusions How did Malthus influence Darwin Writing Imagine you are Malthus in the year Write a newspaper article that explains your ideas about the impact of a growing population on society and the environment

2 Ch 16 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
16.2 Ideas that shaped Darwin’s Theory

3 Lamarck’s Evolutionary Hypotheses
Organisms could change during their lifetimes by selectively using or not using various parts of their bodies Individuals could pass these acquired traits on to their offspring.

4 Black-necked stilt could have acquired long legs because it began to wade in deeper water looking for food. As the bird tried to stay above the water’s surface, its legs would grow a little longer It acquired longer legs.

5 Darwin wasn’t the first to suggest species could change over time
His grandfather Erasmus Patrick Mathew came up with ideas of Natural Selection in 1831 Published in “Naval Timber and Arboriculture” “Anyhow one may be excused in not having discovered the fact in a work on ‘Naval Timber’” Darwin.

6 Evaluating Lamarck’s Hypotheses
We know that Lamarck’s hypotheses were incorrect in several ways Organisms don’t “strive” to get better Traits acquired by individuals during their lifetime cannot be passed on to offspring Or can they Bacteria and recombinant DNA.

7 Artificial Selection Nature provides the variations, and humans select those they want or find useful Plant and animal breeders Over time this would produce trees with even bigger fruit and cows that gave even more milk.

8 Helped Darwin Darwin put artificial selection to the test by raising and breeding plants and fancy pigeon varieties.

9 Darwin had no idea how heredity worked or what caused heritable variation
He did know that variation occurs in wild species He recognized that natural variation provided the raw material for evolution.

10 Ch 16 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
16.3 Darwin Presents His Case

11 “On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life” was published in November of 1859 First printing was 1250 copies, 15 schillings each sold out on the first day Never been out of print since.

12 Natural Selection Occurs when:
More individuals are born than can survive (the struggle for existence) There is natural heritable variation (variation and adaptation) There is variable fitness among individuals (survival of the fittest).

13 The Struggle for Existence
If more individuals are produced than can survive, members of a population must compete to obtain food, living space, and other limited necessities of life Came from reading Malthus.

14 Variation and Adaptation
Individuals have natural variations among their heritable traits Some of those variants are better suited to life in their environment than others Adaptation Heritable characteristic that increases an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in its environment.

15 Adaptations

16 Survival of the Fittest
Fitness How well an organism can survive and reproduce in its environment Individuals with adaptations that are well-suited to their environment can survive and reproduce Individuals with characteristics that are not well- suited to their environment either die without reproducing or leave few offspring.

17 Natural Selection Process by which organisms with variations most suited to their local environment survive and leave more offspring Darwin’s mechanism for evolution The environment - not a farmer or animal breeder - influences fitness.

18 Steps of Natural Selection
There is a population with variation not only cup lip, but body size, eye color, etc… Some variations prove favorable.

19 Steps of Natural Selection
3. Those with favorable variation produce more offspring (why), and their offspring share their favorable trait (why) 4. Over time, each new generation has a greater percentage of individuals with the favorable trait until the whole population has it.

20 From generation to generation, populations continue to change as they become better adapted, or as their environment changes Natural selection acts only on inherited traits because those are the only characteristics that parents can pass on to their offspring.

21 Grasshoppers can lay more than 200 eggs at a time, but only a small fraction of these offspring survive to reproduce.

22 This population includes yellow and green body color.

23 Green is camouflaged, green grasshoppers have higher fitness and so survive and reproduce more often than yellow grasshoppers do.

24 Green grasshoppers become more common than yellow grasshoppers in this population over time because more grasshoppers are born than can survive.

25 Natural selection does not make organisms “better”
Adaptations don’t have to be perfect Natural selection also doesn’t move in a fixed direction.

26 If local environmental conditions change, some traits that were once adaptive may no longer be useful, and different traits may become adaptive If environmental conditions change faster than a species can adapt to those changes, the species may become extinct.

27 Common Descent All species - living and extinct - are descended from ancient common ancestors Every organism alive today is descended from parents who survived and reproduced.

28 Ch 16 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
16.4 Evidence of Evolution

29 The fields of geology, physics, paleontology, chemistry, and embryology, did not have the technology or understanding to test Darwin’s assumptions during his lifetime Genetics and molecular biology didn’t exist.

30 In the 150 years since Darwin published On the Origin of Species, discoveries in all these fields have served as independent tests that have supported Darwin’s ideas about evolution.

31 Biogeography Study of where organisms live now and where they and their ancestors lived in the past.

32 Closely Related but Different
Biogeography of Galapagos species suggested that populations on the island had evolved from mainland species Natural selection on the islands produced variations among populations that resulted in different, but closely related, island species.

33 Distantly Related but Similar
Rhea, Ostriches, and Emus Differences in body structures provide evidence that they evolved from different ancestors Similarities provide evidence that similar selection pressures had caused distantly-related species to develop similar adaptations.

34 The Age of Earth and Fossils
Fossils form series that trace the evolution of modern species from extinct ancestors.

35 The Age of Earth Evolution takes a long time
Hutton and Lyell argued that Earth was indeed very old, but couldn’t determine just how old Geologists use radioactivity to establish the age of certain rocks and fossils which indicates the Earth is about 4.5 billion years.

36 Recent Fossil Finds Since 1859 MANY more fossils have been found
Page

37 Limb structure suggests that these animals could both swim in shallow water and walk on land.

38 The hind limbs were short and probably not able to bear much weight
Spent most of their time in water.

39 Streamlined body and reduced hind limb
Streamlined body and reduced hind limb. suggest it spent its entire life swimming in the ocean.

40 Retain reduced pelvic bones and some even upper and lower limb bones
No longer play a role in locomotion.

41 Comparing Anatomy and Embryology
Homologous structures adapted to different purposes as the result of descent with modification from a common ancestor.

42 Homologous Structures
Similar structures that may serve different functions in various organisms.

43

44 Analogous Structures Body parts that share a common function, but not structure Wing of a bee and a wing of a bird.

45 Vestigial Structures Inherited from ancestors, but have lost much or all of their original function due to different selection pressures Hipbones of bottlenose dolphins Wings of flightless cormorant .

46 Embryology Early developmental stages of many vertebrates look very similar Same groups of embryonic cells develop in the same order and in similar patterns to produce many homologous tissues and organs in vertebrates.

47 Life’s Common Genetic Code
All living cells use information coded in DNA and RNA to carry information from one generation to the next and to direct protein synthesis.

48 Homologous Molecules Many different organisms share homologous proteins Hox gene.

49 Like any scientific theory, evolutionary theory is constantly reviewed as new data are gathered
There is significant uncertainty about exactly how life began Questions that remain are about how evolution works - not whether evolution occurs.

50 Competition and environmental change drive natural selection
Traits that don’t matter much under one set of environmental conditions became adaptive as the environment changes during a drought.


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