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Natural Selection November 9 & 10
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Do Now Grab one of our brandy-spankin’ new Trackers
Start working on today’s warm-up: Do you know anyone who looks like their mom or dad? What feature(s) does that person share with his or her parent?
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New Class Procedures Warm-up/Exit Ticket tracker Class log
If you arrive late If you leave class for any reason New class website: DrMooreScience.com
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Grades are updated Work is returned to you in your hanging file
You can (and SHOULD) make up any work that scores less than 75% of its point value
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Quiz Phones must be AWAY until EVERYONE has finished.
You must be seated. No shouting. Failure to follow these rules is an automatic 1-hour detention!!! If in doubt about the legality of an action, raise your hand and ask Dr. Moore
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Objective Explain how natural selection causes a population to evolve.
By the end of class, students will be able to: Explain how natural selection causes a population to evolve.
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Do you know anyone who looks like their mom or dad
Do you know anyone who looks like their mom or dad? What feature(s) does that person share with his or her parent?
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Natural Selection Darwin’s argument: There is variety in a population
More individuals are born than can survive The individuals that are best able to survive and reproduce will have the most offspring Offspring resemble their parents
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1. There is variation within a population
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2. Not everybody survives
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3. Those who are best able to survive produce the most offspring
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4. Offspring resemble their parents
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Over time, traits that help an organism survive and reproduce will become more common
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Over time, traits that harm an organism will become less common
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Real-life example: Rock Pocket Mice
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Rock Pocket Mice You will receive illustrations representing snapshots of the rock pocket mouse population at four different points in time. Count the number of light-colored and dark-colored mice present at each location at each moment in time. Record your counts in the spaces provided at the top of each illustration. Place the illustrations in what you think is the correct order from oldest to most recent. Indicate your order by circling the appropriate number under the illustration.
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Rock Pocket Mice Explain how you decided which illustration represents the most recent rock pocket mouse population and why you positioned the other in the sequence as you did.
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Rock Pocket Mice Sequence Oldest Second oldest Third oldest
Most recent Location A # of mice with light fur # of mice with dark fur Location B
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Rock Pocket Mice
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Rock Pocket Mice Questions
Explain why a rock pocket mouse’s color influences its overall fitness. Remember, fitness is defined by an organism’s ability to survive and produce offspring.
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Rock Pocket Mice Questions
Explain the presence of dark-colored mice at location A. Why didn’t this phenotype become more common in the population?
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Rock Pocket Mice Questions
Write a scientific summary that describes changes in the rock pocket mouse populations at location B. Your summary should include A description of how the population has changed over time An explanation of what caused the changes A prediction that describes what the population will look like 100 years in the future. Base your prediction on the trends in the data you have organized. You can assume environmental conditions do not change over the 100 years.
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Rock Pocket Mice Questions
Use the data and what you have learned about evolution to explain how mutation is a random process, but natural selection is not random.
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Two Steps to a New Trait! The trait arises in the population!
Mutation Random The trait spreads in the population! Natural selection Non-random
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DNA DNA is a code It gives instructions for building proteins
Those proteins build you!
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DNA & Darwin’s Postulates
There is variety in a population More individuals are born than can survive The individuals that are best able to survive and reproduce will have the most offspring Offspring resemble their parents
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There is variation in a population
Due to differences in DNA sequence Changes to DNA happen randomly and are called mutations.
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DNA DNA is a code It gives instructions for building proteins
Those proteins build you!
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Offspring resemble their parents
Your mom gives you half of her DNA and your dad gives you half of his DNA
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Exit ticket The ancestors of polar bears had brown fur. Using your knowledge of natural selection and genetic mutations, explain how polar bears have white fur. How did white fur first appear in the population? Why did white fur become more common?
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