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Evolution by Natural Selection

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Title: Evolution by Natural Selection


1
Evolution by Natural Selection
  • AP Biology
  • Chapter 22

2
Whos this Darwin guy anyway?
  • Wrote On the Origin of Species by Means of
    Natural Selection
  • Supported idea of evolution not so new, really.
  • Proposed mechanism that explained how evolution
    could occur. This WAS new Natural Selection
  • Said Natural Selection led to Evolutionary
    Adaptation

3
Natural Selection Defined
  • Natural Selection a population can change over
    generations if individuals that possess certain
    heritable traits leave more offspring than other
    individuals.

4
Natural Selection leads to Evolutionary Adaptation
  • Evolutionary Adaptation an accumulation of
    inherited characteristics that enhance organisms
    ability to survive and reproduce in specific
    environments.

5
Evolution
  • The processes that have transformed life on Earth
    from its earliest forms to the vast diversity of
    today.
  • Change in kinds of species over time on Earth.
  • Text a change over time in the genetic
    composition of a population

6
Before Darwin
  • Darwin was NOT the first person to suggest
    evolution of life on Earth
  • Several Greek philosophers believed in a gradual
    evolution of life
  • None explained HOW such evolution might occur
  • However, Aristotle (whose ideas greatly
    influenced Western science) believed each life
    form to be perfect and permanent.

7
The View in Darwins Time
  • Earth was a few thousand years old
  • Earth was populated by unchanging forms of life
    that had been individually made during a single
    week in which the Creator also formed the entire
    Universe.

8
Laying the Groundwork for DarwinScientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Linnaeus
  • Father of Taxonomy
  • Binomial system
  • Developed system for grouping similar species
    into increasingly general categories
  • Kingdom, phylum, class, order, etc.
  • For Linnaeus, this grouping did not imply
    evolutionary relationships, but it became an
    important point in Darwins arguments later on.

9
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Study of fossils
  • Remains or traces of organisms from the past
  • Most found in sedimentary rock
  • Paleontology study of fossils
  • Largely developed by Georges Cuvier
  • 1769-1832
  • French

10
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Cuvier
  • Developed the science of Paleontology
  • Documented the succession of fossil species in
    the Paris Basin.
  • Said each layer (stratum) of rock has unique
    fossil species
  • Said that the deeper (older) the stratum, the
    more different the fossils are from modern life
  • From stratum to stratum, new species appear and
    others disappear.

11
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Cuvier, however, was NOT an evolutionist
  • He advocated catastrophism
  • Each boundary between strata corresponded to some
    catastrophe such as a flood or drought
  • The catastrophe destroyed species living in the
    area at the time
  • Change in species in next strata was due to new,
    immigrating species repopulating the area after
    the catastrophe

12
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Hutton
  • Founder of Modern Geology
  • Said different landforms could be explained by
    processes we can currently observe operating in
    the world - Not necessarily epic catastrophes
  • Example Canyons are formed by rivers cutting
    down through rocks
  • Example sedimentary rocks with marine fossils
    were made in oceans as sediment and dead sea life
    fell to the bottom

13
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Hutton also said that the Earth was much older
    than was believed by most at the time
  • Said the earth was many millions of years old
    rather than 6000 years old as was believed by
    most at the time.

14
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Hutton explained Earths features by the theory
    of gradualism
  • The profound changes in Earth are the result of
    slow but continuous processes over a long period
    of time.
  • In direct contrast with catastrophism

15
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Lyell
  • The leading geologist during Darwins Era
  • Incorporated Huttons ideas of gradualism into a
    theory called uniformitarianism
  • Geological processes have not changed throughout
    Earths history.
  • Example The forces that build and erode
    mountains are the same today as they were in the
    past.

16
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Charles Darwin was especially influenced by the
    work of Hutton and LyellEspecially
  • Ancient Earth
  • Dramatic effects of slow, subtle processes

17
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Lamarck
  • NOT the first to come up with the idea that life
    had changed over time
  • WAS the first to suggest how this might occur
  • Unfortunately for him, his idea was wrong, and it
    is for this that he is rememberd.

18
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Lamarck
  • Published his ideas about evolution in 1809 (the
    year Darwin was born)
  • Most remembered for the mechanism he proposed for
    HOW evolution occurred
  • It incorporated two ideas
  • Use and disuse
  • Inheritance of acquired characteristics

19
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Use and Disuse
  • Parts of the body used extensively become larger
    and stronger Blacksmiths arm
  • Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • Modifications an organisms acquires during its
    lifetime can be passed along to offspring
  • Classic Example of Larmarckian evolution
  • Giraffes long neck acquired by stretching to get
    highest leaves
  • Slightly longer necks passed on to young and so
    on

20
Laying the Groundwork for Darwin Scientists and
Ideas BEFORE Natural Selection
  • Inheritance of acquired characteristics seems
    silly to us today, but this notion was actually
    generally accepted in Lamarcks day.
  • Even so, in Lamarcks time, the question of a
    mechanism of evolution was mostly irrelevant
    because everyone believed that species were
    specially created 6000 years ago and were
    unchanging. NO theory of evolution was to be
    taken seriously.
  • In fact, Lamarck was more visionary than he is
    credited for.
  • Said evolution best explained the fossil record
    and current diversity of life on Earth
  • Recognized the great age of the Earth
  • Empahsized adaptation to the environment as the
    main product of evolution

21
Charles Darwin
  • 1809-1882
  • British Naturalist
  • Proposed the idea of evolution by natural
    selection
  • Collected LOTS of clear evidence to support his
    ideas

22
Voyage of the HMS Beagle
  • 1831- 1836
  • Travels around the world
  • Makes many observations of the natural world
  • Darwin is the ships naturalist
  • In his 20s
  • Main mission was to chart S. American Coast

23
Voyage of HMS Beagle -
  • Stopped in Galapagos Islands

24
Galapagos Islands
  • Islands of relatively recent volcanic origin
  • Most animal species on Galapagos live nowhere
    else in the world
  • BUT they DO resemble species living on mainland
    S. America.
  • Made a big impression on Darwin

25
Darwins Observation
  • It was as though the islands had been colonized
    by plants and animals that had strayed from the
    South American mainland and then diversified on
    the different islands.

26
Darwins Observation
  • The fossils interested Darwin, too.
  • Clearly not the same as living species
  • But clearly South American in their resemblance
    to living species
  • In Argentina, Darwin collected fossils of
    gigantic armor-plated beasts, megatheres, which
    were unlike anything else anywhere in the world
    nearly. Only the tank-like armadillos, which
    Darwin had also seen in South America, bore any
    resemblance to them.

27
Example Darwins Finches
  • Darwin observed 13 types of finches on the
    Galapagos that although they were quite similar,
    seemed to be different species
  • Some were unique to individual islands
  • Some were distributed on two or more islands that
    were close together.

28
Other Examples
29
Return from the Galapagos
  • Darwin returned to Great Britain in 1836 and
    started reassessing his observations from the
    voyages.
  • It occurred to Darwin that a new species could
    arise from a ancestral form by the gradual
    accumulation of adaptations to a different
    environment.

30
The Origin of Species
  • By the early 1840s, Darwin had worked out the
    major features of his theory of natural selection
    as the mechanism of evolution
  • Still, he delayed in publishing his ideas,
    evidently anticipating the uproar it would cause.

31
The Origin of Species
  • In 1858, Darwin finally published his book, The
    Origin of Species, when it became apparent that a
    younger scientist was about to publish a similar
    idea.
  • Alfred Wallace

32
The Origin of Species
  • Two Main Ideas
  • Evolution explains lifes unity and diversity
  • Natural selection is a cause of adaptive evolution

33
Descent with Modification
  • Term Darwin used in place of evolution
  • Darwin perceived unity in life with all organisms
    related through descent from some unknown
    ancestor that lived in the remote past.
  • As the descendants of that first organism spilled
    into various habitats over millions of years,
    they accumulated diverse modifications or
    adaptations that fit them to specific ways of
    life.

34
Descent with Modification
  • History of life is like a tree with multiple
    branching and rebranching from a common trunk all
    the way to the tips of the youngest twigs

35
Descent with Modification
  • At each fork, of the evolutionary tree is an
    ancestor common to all lines of evolution
    branching from that fork.
  • Closely related species such as lions and tigers
    share many characteristics because their lineage
    of common descent extends to the smallest
    branches of the tree of life.

36
Descent with Modification Darwins Finches
37
Descent with Modification
  • Most branches of evolution, even some major ones,
    are dead ends
  • About 99 of all species that have ever lived are
    extinct.
  • Explains why there are no living animals to fill
    the gap between the elephants and their nearest
    relatives today
  • Hyrax and manatee

38
Descent with Modification Descent of the
Elephant
39
Descent with Modification
  • Linnaeus unintentionally provided Darwin with a
    connection to evolution.
  • To Darwin, the natural hierarchy of the Linnean
    scheme of classification (Kingdom, phylum, class,
    etc.) reflected the branching genealogy of the
    tree of life
  • Organisms at the different taxonomic levels were
    related through descent from common ancestors

40
Darwins focus in The Origin of Species
  • Darwins focus in the his book was less on the
    actual creation of new species and more on how
    populations of species became better adapted to
    their environment through natural selection
  • Ernst Mayr, a very important modern day
    evolutionary biologist, analyzed Darwins theory
    of evolution in this way

41
Basic Ideas of Natural Selection
  • OBSERVATIONS
  • Size of a population would increase exponentially
    if all individuals that are born reproduced
    successfully
  • OVERREPRODUCTION
  • In reality, populations tend to remain more or
    less stable in size.
  • Environmental resources are limited.
  • INFERENCE
  • Production of MORE individuals than the
    environment can support leads to competition with
    only a fraction of individuals surviving each
    generation

42
Example
  • This moss produces far more spores than can
    survive its the environment.
  • New moss plants born from these spores will
    compete for resources with each other.

43
Basic Ideas of Natural Selection
  • OBSERVATIONS
  • No two individuals are exactly alike. Variation
    exists in populations.
  • Much of this variation is inheritable.
  • INFERENCES
  • Survival is not random, but depends partly on the
    hereditary make-up of surviving individuals.
    Those individuals whose inherited traits best fit
    them to their environment are more likely to
    leave offspring than less-fit individuals
  • The unequal ability of individuals to survive and
    reproduce leads to a gradual change in a
    population with favorable characteristics
    accumulating over time.

44
Example
  • These are all the same species of beetle
  • Some fairly dramatic color variations exist among
    its members
  • These color variations are heritable and are
    passed on to offspring
  • Those with coloration that best allows them to
    blend with their environment will survive to pass
    on their coloration genes to offspring.

45
Summary of Darwins Main Ideas
  • More organisms are made than can exist in a
    population
  • Called OVERREPRODUCTION - Competition results
  • Variation exists in populations
  • Variation is often inherited genetically based.
  • Natural selection occurs through interaction
    between
  • Environment
  • Variability among individuals in a population
  • Natural selection is differential success in
    reproduction
  • Better fit individuals leave more offspring
    than others
  • They pass their better fit genes on to these
    offspring and so on
  • The product of natural selection is adaptation of
    populations to their environment.

46
Artificial Selection
  • Darwin found evidence that natural selection
    might work by studying artificial selection
  • Artificial selection - The breeding of
    domesticated plants and animals

47
Artificial Selection
  • Humans have modified plants and animals over many
    generations by selecting individuals with desired
    traits as breeding stock.
  • As a result, the plants and animals we grow for
    food often bear little resemblance to their wild
    ancestors.

48
Example of Artificial Selection
  • The mustard plant is the ancestor of the common
    vegetables viewed in this photo

49
Example of Artificial Selection
  • The power of artificial selection can also be
    viewed in our pets.
  • All domestic dogs were originally bred from wolves

50
Artificial Selection - Another Example
  • Insecticide resistance
  • Works much like antibiotic resistance in bacteria
  • Bugs susceptible to the insecticide die.
  • Any bug that has a resistance gene will survive
    and reproduce
  • It also will have no competition as it does this.

51
Artificial Selection
  • Darwin reasoned that if so much change can be
    achieved in such a relatively short time frame (a
    few generations), then natural selection should
    be capable of LOTS of change over hundreds or
    thousands of generations
  • He argued that even if advantages of some
    variations were only slight, the advantageous
    variations would accumulate over time and natural
    selection would eliminate less favorable ones.

52
Gradualism
  • The importance of Lyells geologic gradualism is
    evident in Darwins work
  • Darwin envisioned life evolving by gradual
    accumulation of very small changes.
  • He proposed that natural selection operating over
    VAST spans of time could account for the entire
    diversity of life on Earth.

53
Darwins Two Main Ideas
  • Diverse life forms arise through Descent with
    Modification from ancestral species.
  • Natural Selection over VAST spans of time is how
    it happens.

54
Some Points to Keep in Mind
  • A population is the smallest unit that can evolve
  • Evolution can only be measured as changes in
    relative proportions of different variations in a
    population over generations
  • INDIVIDUALS CANNOT EVOLVE
  • ONE critter with a new trait does NOT mean a new
    species has evolved.

55
Some Points to Keep in Mind
  • Natural Selection can ONLY work with HERITABLE
    variations
  • Variation acquired within a lifetime due to an
    organisms experiences cannot be inherited.
  • Thus, natural selection cannot act on such
    variation

56
Some Points to Keep in Mind
  • Natural Selection is situational
  • This means that environments vary
  • What might be a groovy adaptation in one
    environment could be a real drag in some other
    environment.

57
Example of Natural Selection Darwins Finches
  • Darwin hypothesized that the different beaks
    found in the different Galapagos Finches are
    evolutionary adaptations to different food
    sources.

58
Darwins Finches the Medium Ground Finch
  • Medium Ground Finches on Daphne Major (a
    Galapagos Island) use their strong beaks to crush
    seeds.
  • The seeds they like are small seeds that are
    produced in abundance in wet years.

59
Darwins Finches the Medium Ground Finch
  • In dry years, all seeds are in short supply
  • Finches must resort to eating both small and
    large seeds.
  • Larger seeds are more difficult to crush.

60
Darwins Finches the Medium Ground Finch
  • Scientists observed that the average beak depth
    (size) in the finch population changes over the
    years.
  • During drought average size increases
  • Size decreases again during wet years

61
Darwins Finches the Medium Ground Finch
  • Beak size is an inherited trait
  • Scientists attribute changes in beak size to
  • Big beaks are better at cracking big seeds in dry
    periods
  • Small beaks are more efficient at working with
    little seeds in wet periods

62
Darwins Finches the Medium Ground Finch
  • The studies of the Medium Ground Finch reinforce
    that
  • Natural selection is situational whats good in
    one environment may not be so good in another

63
Darwins Finches the Medium Ground Finch
  • Also important is that beak evolution of these
    finches does not result form the inheritance of
    an acquired characteristic
  • The environment did not create these beaks
    (remember the blacksmith and his arm)
  • Instead the environment acted on the different
    types of beaks present in the population at
    certain times.
  • The proportion of thicker-beaked finches
    increased during dry periods because those
    individuals with thicker beaks transmitted their
    genes to more offspring than the thin-beaked
    birds.

64
Evidence for Evolution
  • Comes from 5 major areas
  • Biogeography
  • Fossil Record
  • Comparative Anatomy
  • Comparative Embryology
  • Molecular Biology

65
Biogeography
  • The geographical distribution of species
  • Islands have lots of species unique or native to
    the island itself
  • However they are closely related to species of
    the nearest mainland or neighboring island
  • This causes some questions to arise

66
Biogeography
  • Two islands that have very similar environments,
    but that are in very different parts of the world
    SHOULD be populated with closely related species,
    but they are not.
  • Instead they are populated by species related to
    those on the nearest mainland where the
    environment is often quite different from the
    island.

67
Biogeography
  • Tropical animals of South America are more
    closely related to species found in the South
    American desert.
  • Why arent they more closely related to other
    tropical animalssay in Africa? The environment
    is certainly more similar there

68
Biogeography
  • Why are there not very many placental mammals
    found in Australia? Is Australia inhospitable to
    placental mammals?
  • No. Introduced placental mammals have exploded in
    number there
  • The unique Australian fauna evolved on that
    continent in ISOLATION from places where
    placental mammals lived.

69
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70
Biogeography
  • All of these biogeographical patterns make little
    sense if species were individually placed in
    suitable environments.
  • These patterns make sense if we find modern
    species where they are because they evolved from
    ancestors that inhabited these regions or other
    regions at least somewhat nearby.

71
The Fossil Record
  • Shows fewer species and more simple species in
    most ancient rocks more species of increasing
    complexity in more recent rocks.
  • This succession of fossil forms is in agreement
    with other evidence for evolution
  • Biochemistry, molecular biology and cell biology
    all say that prokaryotes are the ancestors of all
    life.
  • This means that prokaryotes should precede
    eukaryotes in the fossil record.
  • They do. The oldest known fossils are
    prokaryotes.

72
The Fossil Record
  • More evidence The chronological appearance of
    the different classes of vertebrate animals in
    the fossil record.
  • Fossil fishes predate all other vertebrates.
  • Next in the fossil record we see amphibians,
    reptiles, mammals and birds
  • This is consistent with the history of vertebrate
    descent as revealed by many other types of
    evidence (anatomy, molecular, etc.)

73
The Fossil Record
  • Vertebrate Fossil Record, cont.
  • If all species had been created individually at
    the same time, all vertebrate classes would make
    their first appearance in the fossil record in
    rocks of about the same age.
  • This is NOT what is actually observed.

74
Vertebrate Evolution
75
The Fossil Record
  • Transitional Forms
  • The Darwinian view predicts that evidence of
    transitional forms should be in the fossil record
  • Transitional forms fossils that link older
    fossils to modern species
  • Example a series of fossils documents the
    changes in skull shape and size that occurred as
    mammals evolved from reptiles.

76
The Fossil Record Transitional forms continued
  • In the past few years, researchers have found
    fossilized whales that link our modern aquatic
    mammals with their ancient land ancestors.

77
The Fossil Record Transitional forms - Whale
78
Comparative Anatomy
  • Species grouped in the same taxonomic category
    (mammals, for example) have lots of anatomical
    similarities
  • Many of the same bones make up the forelimbs of
    humans, cats, whales and bats.
  • The forelimbs of ALL these organisms have vastly
    different functions
  • It makes no sense that best way to design a bats
    limb for flying and whales fin for swimming would
    be to make them from the same bones
  • The more likely explanation is that all these
    animals had some common ancestor with these same
    bones and they have become modified for different
    functions over years.

79
Comparative Anatomy Vertebrate Forelimbs
80
Comparative Anatomy
  • Homologous structures
  • Similar characteristics that are the result of
    common ancestry
  • Bat wing and human forelimb (etc.)

81
Comparative Anatomy
  • Vestigial organs
  • Structures of marginal, if any, importance to the
    organism.
  • Historical remnants of structures that had
    important functions in ancestors.
  • Example Vestigial hindlimbs and pelvis in
    whales.

82
Comparative Anatomy
  • Vestigial organs, cont.
  • Vestigial organs are evidence of natural
    selection. It would be wasteful to continue to
    provide blood, nutrients, etc. to an organ that
    no longer had a major function i.e., hind limbs
    on totally aquatic animals.
  • Natural selection would tend to favor individuals
    with a reduced form of such organs

83
Comparative Embryology
  • Closely related organisms go through similar
    stages in their embryonic development.
  • Example All vertebrate embryos go through a
    stage in which they have gill pouches on the
    sides of their throats.

84
Comparative Embryology
  • At the earliest stages of development,
    similarities between fish, frogs, snakes, birds,
    humans and all vertebrates are much more evident
    than differences
  • It is not until development progresses that the
    original structures begin to diverge to take on
    the characteristics of their classes.
  • Comparative embryology reveals homologies not
    visible in adult forms

85
Comparative Embryology
  • Fish gill pouches develop into gills
  • Terrestrial vertebrates gill pouches become
    other things
  • Eustachian tubes that connect middle ear with
    throat in humans
  • Comparative embryology is often able to establish
    homology in structures (like gill pouches) that
    become so altered in later development that their
    common origin is not apparent in the adult forms.

86
Molecular Biology
  • Perhaps the bottom line in the discussion of
    evidence of evolutionary relationships among
    organisms is DNA.
  • Darwinian logic predicts that closely related
    organisms would share similar DNA (and proteins
    the products of genes).
  • This premise is commonly used in DNA analysis in
    humans paternity, forensics, etc.

87
Molecular Biology
  • Darwin speculated that ALL forms of life are
    related to some extent through branching descent
    from the earliest organisms.
  • DNA and protein analysis supports this claim.
  • Even humans and bacteria share at least some
    proteins (hence genes) in common.
  • Example cytochrome c is a protein found in the
    electron transport chain in cellular respiration
    of all aerobic organisms.

88
Molecular Biology
  • Hemoglobin analysis of several vertebrates
    confirms the relationships of these vertebrates
    to each other. The more closely related, the
    more amino acids in hemoglobin are the same.

89
Molecular Biology
  • A common genetic code is overwhelming evidence
    that all life is related.
  • The language of the genetic code has been passed
    along through all branches of the tree of life
    ever since the codes inception in an early life
    form.
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