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Processes of Evolution Chapter 16. Overwhelming Evidence for Evolution A) From Biogeography B) From Comparative anatomy C) From Geologic discoveries.

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Presentation on theme: "Processes of Evolution Chapter 16. Overwhelming Evidence for Evolution A) From Biogeography B) From Comparative anatomy C) From Geologic discoveries."— Presentation transcript:

1 Processes of Evolution Chapter 16

2 Overwhelming Evidence for Evolution A) From Biogeography B) From Comparative anatomy C) From Geologic discoveries

3 A) Biogeography - is the science which deals with geographic patterns of species distribution and the processes that result in such patterns. Size of the known world expanded enormously in the 15th century Discovery of new organisms in previously unknown places could not be explained by accepted beliefs –How did species get from center of creation to all these places?

4 B) Comparative Morphology Study of similarities and differences in body plans of major groups Puzzling patterns: –Animals as different as whales and bats have similar bones in forelimbs –Some parts seem to have no function

5 C) Geological Discoveries Similar rock layers throughout world Certain layers contain fossils Deeper layers contain simpler fossils than shallow layers Some fossils seem to be related to known species

6 Darwin’s Voyage At age 22, Charles Darwin began a five- year, round-the-world voyage aboard the Beagle In his role as ship’s naturalist he collected and examined the species that inhabited the regions the ship visited

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8 Voyage of the Beagle

9 Galapagos Islands Isabela Darwin Wolf Pinta Marchena Genovesa Fernandia Santiago Bartolomé Rabida Pinzon Seymour Baltra Santa Cruz Santa Fe Tortuga Española San Cristobal Floreana Volcanic islands far off coast of Ecuador All inhabitants are descended from species that arrived on islands from elsewhere

10 Lyell Provided the foundation for Darwin to draw his conclusions Lyell’s Principles of Geology Subtle, repetitive processes of change, had shaped Earth Challenged the view that Earth was only 6,000 years old, to millions of years

11 Malthus - Struggle to Survive - this too shaped Darwins’ views Thomas Malthus, a clergyman and economist, wrote essay that Darwin read on his return to England Argued that as population size increases, resources dwindle, the struggle to live intensifies and conflict increases

12 Darwin put together the short term struggle for existence (Malthus) with the great geological timescale (Lyell)

13 Galapagos Finches Darwin observed finches with a variety of lifestyles and body forms On his return he learned that there were 13 species He attempted to correlate variations in their traits with environmental challenges

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15 Darwin’s Theory Survival of the fittest

16 On the Origin of Species Darwin’s book Published in 1859 Laid out in great detail his evidence in support of the theory of evolution by natural selection

17 Populations Evolve Biological evolution does not change individuals It changes a population Traits (features) in a population vary among individuals Evolution is change in frequency of traitsEvolution is change in frequency of traits

18 When does evolution not occur? No mutation Random mating Gene doesn’t affect survival or reproduction Large population No immigration/emigration When 5 conditions are met

19 Hardy-Weinberg Rule At genetic equilibrium, proportions of genotypes at a locus with two alleles are given by the equation: p 2 AA + 2pq Aa + q 2 aa = 1 Frequency of allele A = p Frequency of allele a = q

20 No Change through Generations

21 Gene Mutations Infrequent but inevitable Every gene is subject to mutation to some degree Changes the frequency of alleles in a population = EVOLUTION

22 Directional Selection Allele frequencies shift in one direction

23 Giraffes Baby giraffes in Africa Some have inherited long necks others shorter ones When food is limited only the ones with longer necks can feed The others die of starvation Now the population has individuals with longer neck alleles on average

24 Natural Selection A difference in the survival and reproductive success of different phenotypes Acts directly on phenotypes and indirectly on genotypes

25 Stabilizing Selection Intermediate forms are favored and extremes are eliminated

26 Stabilizing Selection: Another Example Weight distribution for 13,370 human newborns (yellow curve) correlated with death rate (white curve)

27 Disruptive Selection Forms at both ends of the range of variation are favored Intermediate forms are selected against

28 Balanced Polymorphism Polymorphism - “having many forms” Occurs when two or more alleles are maintained at frequencies greater than 1 percent

29 Sickle-Cell Trait: Heterozygote Advantage Allele Hb S causes sickle-cell anemia when heterozygous Heterozygotes are more resistant to malaria than homozygotes less than 1 in 1,600 1 in 400-1,600 1 in 180-400 1 in 100-180 1 in 64-100 more than 1 in 64 Malaria case Sickle cell trait

30 Genetic Drift Random change in allele frequencies brought about by chance Effect is most pronounced in small populations Sampling error - Fewer times an event occurs, greater the variance in outcome

31 Bottleneck A severe reduction in population size Causes pronounced drift Example –Elephant seal population hunted down to just 20 individuals –Population rebounded to 30,000 –Electrophoresis revealed there is now no allele variation at 24 genes

32 Founder Effect Effect of drift when a small number of individuals start a new population By chance, allele frequencies of founders may not be same as those in original population Effect is pronounced on isolated islands

33 Inbreeding Nonrandom mating between related individuals Leads to increased homozygosity Can lower fitness when deleterious recessive alleles are expressed Amish, cheetahs

34 Gene Flow Physical flow of alleles into a population Tends to keep the gene pools of populations similar Counters the differences that result from mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift Prevents the two populations forming new species!!!


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