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Earth History: Organic Evolution
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Natural Theology: Philosophy that saw adaptations in organisms as evidence that God designed each species for a special purpose.
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Catastrophism: idea that boundaries in rock strata correspond to catastrophic events in Earth’s history. Purposed by Georges Cuvier
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin:
A Shift in thinking Paradigm Shift a change from one way of thinking to another. In the 18th century there was a shift from catastrophism to gradualism
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Gradualism: idea that profound change is the cumulative product of a slow continuous process Proposed by James Hutton
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Uniformitarianism: The idea that the same laws of nature and the same Earth processes that affect the planet now, are the same ones that have always affected the planet.
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Today most geologists combine catastrophist, gradualist and uniformitarianist standpoints, They take the view that Earth’s history is a slow, gradual story punctuated by occasional natural catastrophic events that have affected Earth and its inhabitants
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Taxonomy: branch of Biology that deals with naming and classifying organisms Proposed by Carolus Linnaeus For Linnaeus, grouping organisms into these taxons implied no evolutionary relationship between them. He was simply trying to reveal God's plan. Ironically, Linnaeus's scheme does indeed reflect the evolutionary kinships of a great many plants and animals.
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Lamarck’s Evolutionary Theory: During their lifetimes, organisms arquire new characteristics as a results of their interactions with the environment. Looked at evolution as an accumulation traits that were passed to offspring Ex: Giraffes’ necks
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
It was these ideas that facilitated Darwin’s evolutionary theory Gradualism / Catastrophism Unifomaitrianism Taxonomy Lamarckian Evolution
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Ideas Around the Time of Darwin
Darwin made two points in his book, “The Origin of Species” Present forms of species evolved from ancestral species The mechanism for evolution was natural selection Over time Darwin’s theory has been modified / updated / etc.
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Evolutionary Theory Evolution: change in a gene pool over time
Two Types Microevolution Macroevolution
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
Microevolution: generation to generation change in a population’s gene pool Causes Small population size Isolation Mutation Nonrandom mating Natural Selection
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
Small population size – in small populations big changes can result by random chance The loss or gain of one individual has a big impact on the gene pool Founder effect Bottleneck effect
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
Isolation – no migration; no gene flow Behavioral, temporal, mechanical, etc
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
Mutation – genes are altered Most mutations are lethal Beneficial mutations will proliferate
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
Nonrandom mating – certain traits are picked above others Sexual selection Male-male contests Deer Mate choice
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Evolutionary Theory: Microevolution
Natural Selection – the environment selects certain organism for survival
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Evolutionary Theory: Macroevolution
Macroevolution: the accumulation of small changes that eventually lead to new species What is a species? Classified by physical appearance Classified by ability to interbreed and produce viable fertile offspring Classified by DNA Other
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Evolutionary Theory: Macroevolution
Speciation: origin of species due to evolutionary process Causes: Geographical barriers Reproductive barriers Adaptive radiation
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Evolutionary Theory: Macroevolution
Geographical barriers the most common form of speciation, occurs when populations of a species become geographically isolated. When populations become separated, gene flow between them ceases. Over time, the populations may become genetically different in response to the natural selection imposed by their different environments.
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Evolutionary Theory: Macroevolution
Reproductive barriers Speciation occurs when populations of a species that share the same habitat become reproductively isolated from each other. Different species of bowerbird construct elaborate bowers and decorate them with different colors in order to woo females. The Satin bowerbird (left) builds a channel between upright sticks, and decorates with bright blue objects, while the MacGregor’s Bowerbird (right) builds a tall tower of sticks and decorates with bits of charcoal. Evolutionary changes in mating rituals, such as bower construction, can contribute to speciation.
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Evolutionary Theory: Macroevolution
Adaptive radiation - Adaptive radiation describes closely related species that look very different, as a result of having adapted to widely different ecological niches
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Evolutionary Theory: Macro v. Micro
Microevolution – little debate Actually observed Ex: Antibiotic resistance
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Evolutionary Theory: Macroevolution
Macroevolution – much debate Inferred from evidence Ex: Finches
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Branching v. Linear Evolution
Linear Evolution one species evolves into a new species Branching Evolution all present day species sharing a common ancestor Populations of species at some point are isolated, experience different pressures from the environment , and “branch off” from the ancestral lineage
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Branching Evolution
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Branching v. Linear Evolution
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Branching Evolution It is generally thought the reason few transition fossils are found is because evolution takes place in “short” spurts Many years of no change followed by relatively few years of rapid change.
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Summary Vocabulary (handout) Ideas around the time of Darwin Evolution
Population / natural selection / adaptation / isolation / extinction Ideas around the time of Darwin Shift in thinking Evolution Micro Causes Macro Speciation Branching vs. Linear Evolution Punctuated Equilibrium
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