Title: Evolution
1Evolution
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3Formation of the Earth
- Sun formed first
- Earth
- Formed through accretion
- Many collisions, much heat
- Basically a liquid ball
4Earth
- Age
- gt 4 billion years
- Have only recorded history for 1/700,000 of this
time period - How do we determine what happened long ago
- Geologic History (sedimentary rock)
5Dating the earth
- Radiometric dating
- Use rate of decay of radioactive isotopes of
certain elements (halflife) - C-14 vs. C-12 5,230
years - (this ratio is known for living animals and is
stable) - Good for up to 60,000 years
- Uranium 235 704,000,000 years
- Potassium 40 1,250,000,000 years
- Uranium 238 4, 500,000,000 years
6Other ways to date rock
- Rock Layers
- Each rock layer and structure records an event
(uplifting, deposition, erosion) - Sedimentary rock is deposited horizontally
- Oldest on bottom, youngest on top
- Fragments within a rock (clasts) are older than
material surrounding it. - Igneous intrusions and geologic structures
(faults, folds
7Other ways to date rocks
- Index Fossils
- Life forms evolve in a definite and non-repeating
order - Index fossils
- Use to age date rock from different regions
- Widely distributed, short geologic lifespan,
preservable hard parts.
8Why are fossils important?
- Fossils are among the most valuable sources of
information about the Earth's history. They tell
us about the organisms that lived on Earth from
the time of the oldest fossils, about 3.8 billion
years ago, to the present. By studying fossils we
can learn not only about the creatures and plants
of the distant past, but how they grew, what they
ate, how they interacted, and many aspects of
their behavior.
9Economic Use of Fossils
- Fossils are one of the most useful aids to
finding oil, because oil tends to accumulate in
the pores of particular rock layers. - Rocks of different ages contain different
fossils. Study of microscopic fossils brought up
in chips of rock during drilling of wells has led
to many major oil and gas discoveries. - Also, the oil itself is derived from fossil
remains of ancient organisms.
10Additional Benefits
- Knowledge about how life evolved on earth and
about diseases, both ancient and modern. - Understanding of past climates, including ice
ages and warm periods - Study of the catastrophic extinction of the
dinosaurs and many other life forms provide new
insight into the impact of ET organisms to
evolution - Physical and chemical changes in fossils that
lived during times of drastic climatic change
helps us understand the implications of the
changes (ie global warming) we are causing in our
own environment.
11What was the environment
- All elements present, but what compounds had
formed? - Oparin and Haldane 1920s
- NH3, H2, water, methane (CH4)
- More complex molecules formed due to heat and
lightning and UV radiation
12How were organic compounds made?
- Miller and Urey 1950s
- Closed glass apparatus that formed a continuous
system - In this simulated system amino acids formed
- But..what about life?
13Making Life
- Cell like structures
- Microspheres
- Coacervates
- Droplet groups containing aa, lipid and sugars
- Have some life qualities, but no heritability
14Origin of Heredity
- Cech- 1980s
- RNA takes on many forms
- RNA can act as a catalyst (like protein)
- Ribozymes
- Theory.
- May have started life in an RNA world
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16Ribozymes
- Can as a catalyst
- To speed up other reactions
- For their own replication
- Competition
- Different RNA molecules compete for the same
resources (bases) - Some better than others at linking
- Efficiency ? survival of the fittest
- Self replicating systems of RNA have been created
-
17From RNA to life
- Mineral templates to which organic molecules
attach - Replicating RNA evolve inside microspheres or
coacervates - RNA might act to direct assembly of structures
18The First Cells
- NO DIRECT EVIDENCE, only inferences
- Little or no O2,
- Size and shape of procaryotes
- Environment full of small organic molecules
(food) - THEREFORE.. Anaerobic, heterotrophic, prokaryotes
19THEN WHAT
- Organic molecules become scarce due to growing
population of heterotrophs - RESULT autotrophs would have the advantage
- BUT first autotrophs did NOT use the sun.
20First Autotrophs
- Archaea
- Most likely model for first autotrophs
- Unicellular
- Thrive in harsh conditions
- Many are chemosynthetic
- CO2 - carbon source
- Sulfur energy source
21Photosynthesis/Aerobic Respiration
- Cyanobacteria
- 3 billion years ago
- geologic evidence of traces of photosynthetic
activity -? Oxygen - Unicellular or Colonial
- Oxygen was toxic to many organisms at first
- Ozone formed from oxygen ? UV protection
- Ozone layer REQUIRED for existence of life on land
22Oxygen The good and the bad
- Damaging to many
- Bonding with a compound neutralized it
- Start of aerobic respiration
- Formed ozone layer
- Shield against UV
- Allowed new forms of life to form
23The First Eukaryotes
- Margulis
- Theory of Endosymbiosis
- Large prokaryotes ate smaller prokaryotes
- ? chloroplasts and mitochondria
- Chloroplasts and Mitochondria ingested
- Replicate independently
- Have their own DNA
24Theory of Evolution (Chapter 15)
- Development of new organisms from existing
organisms - Theory well supported explanation that
incorporates observations, inferences, and tested
hypotheses
25Ideas of Darwins Time
- Beginning to suspect that the earth was older
- 1800s Rock strata studied
- Fossils found
- Cuvier Catastrophism
- Sudden catastrophes causes mass extinctions
- Lyell Uniformitarianism
- Process in the past similar to now
26Ideas in Darwins Time
- Lamarck
- Simple organisms could arise from non-living
- Inheritance of acquired characteristics
- Darwin and Wallace
- Descent with modification
- Both had travelled throughout the world
- Saw similarities and differences
27Galapagos
- Great place to study evolutionwhy?
- Isolated islands
- Rapid adaptation
- Different climates on each island ? different
vegetation - Small populations
- Limited immigration/emigration
- NATURAL SELECTION CAN BE SEEN!
28Theory of Natural Selection
- Is the mechanism for descent with modification
- Reasoning Key forces that cause evolution over
time
29What are the key forces
- Overproduction ? limiting environment
- Genetic variation ? individual variation
- Variations can have strength depending on
conditions - Struggle to survive ?
- some variations more successful than others
- Competition for resources
- Differential reproduction ? those with better
adaption have more offspring - Nature changes species by selecting favorable
traits
30Fitness
- A measure of an individual s hereditary
contribution to the next generation - Adaptation can be short term or long
- Those traits that increase the fitness of
individual will become more prevalent - Change in a population over time (long term)
31Where do we find evidence ?
- Fossil Record
- Biogeography
- Anatomical evidence
- Embryological evidence
- Biochemical evidence (DNA)
32Evidence of Evolution
- The Fossil Record
- Location of fossils determines age
- Absolute age of a rock radiometric dating
- Distribution of fossils
- Transitional species ? evolving forms
33Evidence of Evolution
- Biogeography
- Study of location of organisms around the world
- Closely related organisms are on different
continents (monkeys in Africa and SA) - Unrelated animals had similar adaptations in
similar environments (even if organisms were in
distant locations) - EXAMPLES
- Most mammals in Australia are marsupials but can
have characteristics similar to cats, mice and
moles
34Evidence of Evolution
- Anatomical Evidence
- Homologous structures
- Related structure, different function
- Human, penguin, alligator, bat (forelimb)
- Analogous structures
- Unrelated structure (bat wings and butterfly
wings) but similar function - Vestigial structures
- Tailbone (humans)
- Pelvic bone (whales)
- Appendix
35Evidence of Evolution
- Embryological Evidence
- Stages of development look like other animals.
Change as further development occurs (pharygeal
slits, flippers, tail, etc)
36Evidence of Evolution
- Biochemical Evidence
- Similarity in DNA sequences
- Same Bases
- Many similar basic proteins
- MAJOR DETERMINING FACTOR NOW
37Modern Synthesis of Evolutionary Theory
- Integration of
- Theory of Natural Selection
- Genetics
- Phylogeny modeled based on the combination of
these two - Shown in Cladograms or Phylogenetic trees.
38Evolution in Action
- Case Study Anole Lizards
- Evolution is ongoing
- Patterns of evolution repeat in different times
and places - Interactions between species (including humans)
affect their ongoing evolution
39Anole Lizards
- Different body types
- Correspond to the habitat in which the species
lives - Trees (long legs, thick bodies, long tails)
- Grass dwellers ( slender body, long tail)
- Twig dwellers ( thin bodies, short legs and
tails) - Did one evolve from the second (divergent
evolution) or - Did they evolve independently, but similarly
(convergent evolution)?
40Anole Lizards
- Twig dwellers are on each island
- HOWEVER Each is a unique species
- Hypotheses
- Ancestral anole species living on one island
migrated to the others (common ancestor) - Each twig-dwelling species evolved independently
from a distinct ancestral anole species
41Anolis cybotes
Anolis insolitus
Anolis pulchellus
42How do you test?
- Compare DNA from various species
- RESULT
- DNA evidence supports independent development on
each island - Each tree dweller arose from different species
but evolved similar adaptations used for similar
habitats - CONVERGENT EVOLUTION different species evolve
similar traits
43Convergent Evolution
- Australianvs. mainland
- Placental vsmarsupial
44Divergent Evolution
- Descendants of a Single ancestor diversify into
species that each fit a different part of the
environment - One body type survives in one habitat (branches),
but not another.
45Adaptive Radiation
- Divergence in high gear
- Adaptive Radiation
- New population in a new environment
- Divergent evolution to fill many parts of the
environment (Darwins Finches)
46Adaptive Radiation
47Artificial Selection
- Domestication
- Choose a preferred trait and breed for the
trait. - Color, ear length, coat, leg length, head shape,
etc. - Dog and Cat Breeds
- All dog breeds descend from East Asian wolves
- Started 15,000 years ago.
48Domestication of the Dog
- 14,000 150,000 years ago
- From the wolf (ves)
- Different interbreeding lines contributed
- Indian or Asian Wolf
- Pug, mastiff, bloodhound
- Chinese Wolf
- Many Toy breeds
- NA wolf
- Husky, Alaskan malamute
49Domestic characteristics
- Ear shape and length
- Snout shape
- Leg length
- Coat length
- Sickle tail (all domestic dogs)
- As compared to straight brush tail of wolf
- Retain Juvenile characteristics
- Bark, soft coat, large head, ears that hang down,
guarding (staying with pack), hunting dogs
(intermediate behavior)dont lead but follow - Basenjihunts like a peer,
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51Co-Evolution
- Two or more species have evolved adaptations to
each others influence - Pollen-carrying
- Camouflage
- Antibiotic resistance
Coevolution between the yucca moth and the yucca
plant. (Top) A female yucca moth (Tegeticula
yuccasella) pushing pollen into the stigma tube
of the yucca flower while visiting the flower to
deposit her eggs. (Bottom) Yucca moth larvae
feeding on seeds in the yucca fruit.
52Population Genetics (Chapter 16)
- Study of evolution from a genetics viewpoint
- Microevolution change in the collective genetic
material of a population - Population smallest unit in which evolution
occurs. Individuals DONT evolve!!!
53Observable Variation in Traits
- Size of Fish
- Count frequency of size of mature fish
- Fin length, fin shape, tail shape, coloration
- Quantitative traits (height, weight, length) tend
to show variation in a bell curve (normal curve)
54Causes of Variation
- Environmental factors
- Amount and quality of food
- Hereditary variation
- Mutation random change in gene
- Recombination reshuffling of genes due to
crossing over and independent assortment - Random pairing of gametes
55Gene Pool
- Total genetic information available in a
population - Each generation is dependent upon the gene pool
of the breeding population. - Also dependent on allele frequency
- number of a certain allele/total number of all
alleles for that gene
56Phenotype Frequency
- Individuals with a particular phenotype
- All individuals of all phenotypes
- Our lab was an example of determining frequency
of phenotypes and then determining new allele
frequency - The frequency of all expected phenotypes sums to
1
57Hardy Weinberg Genetic Equilibrium
- While frequencies CAN change from generation to
generation, they will remain the same IF - 1. No net mutations occur (alleles remain the
same) - 2. Individuals neither enter nor leave the
population - 3. The population is large
- 4. Individuals mate randomly
- 5. Selection does not occur.
58True Equilibrium is theoretical
- What disrupts equilibrium?
- Go back and look at the list
59Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium
- Mutation
- Geneflow
- genes moving from one population to another
- (immigration and emigration)
- Genetic Drift
- Change in allele frequencies due to random events
- In a small population, this can occur when ONE
individual doesnt reproduce (or thrives) - Non-random mating
- Geography, assortative mating (mate picked based
on similar traits), sexual selection (males
chosen based on certain traits)
60Natural Selection
- Generally is absent.
- Stabilizing Selection
- Average form has highest fitness
- Disruptive
- Extremes have greater fitness the average form
- Directional Selection
- Individuals with an extreme form of a trait
(one-sided) have greater fitness - Anteater with long tongue
61Continental Drift
- First proposed in 1915 by Wegener
- Idea Earth drifts atop a liquid core
- Supported by fossil record
- Same fossils on different continents
- Same strata (rock) on different continents
62How did it happen
- Pangaea
- ? Laurasia
- North America, Asia, Europe
- ? Gondwana
- South America, Africa, India, Australia, New
Zealand, Madagascar
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64Speciation
65Speciation
- What is a species?
- The Process of Speciation
- Models of Speciation
- Interesting examples of Speciation
66Speciation
- What is a species?
- The Process of Speciation
- Models of Speciation
- Interesting examples of Speciation
67What is a species?
- Morphological Species Concept
- Biological Species Concept
- Modern Species Concepts
68Morphological Species Concept
- Linnaeus invented the system of classifying
organisms in the 1800s - Classification of a species by appearance
(structure and function ie phenotype)
Domain
69Issues with Morphologic Concept
- Phenotypic variation within a species can be
huge (the dog) - Small phenotypic variation between species
(anole) exists
Looks CAN be deceiving!
70Different phenotypes same or different species
Hydrangea
71Same or Different?
72Same or different?
Western Meadowlark
Eastern Meadowlark
73Same or different?
- CONVERGENT EVOLUTION
- Same or different ancestor?
Cacti (Americas)
Euphorbia (Africa)
74Cladograms and speciation.
Common ancestor
75Defining species is complicated
- Phenotypic variation within species may make us
think that there is more than one species - Different species may look remarkably similar
76Evolution ? Speciation!
- A population can evolve without forming a new
species - Example smaller size or smaller beak from year
to year (like the beak size within a bird species
from year to year) - In this case due to food availability
77Biological Species Concept
- Most widely accepted concept.
- Species defined in terms of ability to
interbreed - DEFINITION
- Interbreeding natural populations that are
reproductively isolated from other such groups
78However, Biological Concept not always
appropriate
- Must revert to Linnaeus (morphological) system
for - extinct organisms
- asexual organisms
- some distinct species that can still interbreed
and produce viable offspring (e.g., coyotes,
wolves, and dogs)
79Modern species concepts
- If gt 5 of amino acids are different, then
consider two organisms to be of different species
80Speciation
- What is a species?
- The Process of Speciation
- Models of Speciation
- Interesting examples of Speciation
81The Process of Speciation
One species (set of interbreeding organisms)
Genetic variant spreads through part of the
species bearers of this variant must mate only
with other bearers of the same variant
Two species. Further phenotypic, behavioural and
ecological differences may evolve
82What causes this to happen
- 1. Geographic Isolation
- Canyons, mountains, water, deserts, migration
(accidental) - More common in land animals than in flying or
fish animals - Leads to Allopatric (different homelands)
Speciation
83What causes this to happen?
- 2. Reproductive Isolation
- A barrier arises to prevent breeding between
population groups in the same area. - Can lead to Sympatric (within the same homeland)
Speciation
84How Speciation occurs
85Evidence exists for both types of speciation
- BUTmostly allopatric
- Sympatric flowers (2-4)
86Allopatric speciation
- SPACE SEPARATION
- The Grand Canyon squirrels cant fly
87Chance events influence evolution
Migration Catastrophe Penal colony
88Founder effect occurs
Due to migration of a non-representative
small population
89Sympatric speciation polyploidization
Polyploid can self fertilize? New species!
90Chromosome evolution Fused chromosomes
91Barriers to interbreeding(sympatric speciation)
- Two species have been formed if breeding is
prevented - 1) Before fertilization E.g. cant interbreed,
wrong time for pollination - 2) After fertilization E.g. offspring are
inviable or sterile (e.g., in polyploid vs.
diploid species or mule vs. donkey)
92WHAT CHANGES
- Time of breeding (day or night)
- Location of breeding (specific flower species or
island) - Preference to specific colors
- Differences in habitat (often beside each other)
93Speciation
- What is a species?
- The Process of Speciation
- Models of Speciation
- Interesting examples of Speciation
94Models of Speciation
- Gradualist Model
- Darwin thought species arose gradually and slowly
- Punctuated Equilibrium Model
- speciation occurs in quick bursts followed by
long periods of no change - Fossil record supports this model but is
incomplete
95Gradualism vs. Punctuated Equilibrium
96Speciation
- What is a species?
- The Process of Speciation
- Models of Speciation
- Interesting examples of Speciation
97Adaptive radiation of Darwins finches
Single ancestral species arrived from mainland S.
America millions of years ago, radiated into 13
species with specialized feeding habits
98Ring Species Diverge and converge
Ensantina salamanders
99Co-speciation of host and parasite
100A different look at Geology
- The rest of the slides deal with the formation of
the earth and life, and are fairly similar to
previous slides, but show some nice pictures and
talk about ongoing environmental changes. - Be sure to check out the slide set on line
dealing with Classification especially DNA
clocks!
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102Changing Environments and Evolution
103Changing environments and Evolution
- Early Earth and the Origin of Life
- Major events in the history of life
- Continental drift and life as we know it
- Present day environmental changes
104Changing environments and Evolution
- Early Earth and the Origin of Life
- Major events in the history of life
- Continental drift and life as we know it
- Present day environmental changes
105Early Earth
- Earth was formed 4,500,000,000 yrs ago
- Earth was very hot and constantly bombarded by
meteor showers from space - At this point there was no liquid water, life was
impossible - About 3,900,000,000 yrs ago, Earth was solidified
enough and cool enough for liquid water - Life apparently arose shortly thereafter
106Formation of ingredients for life
- 1950s Miller and Urey found that the input of
electrical energy could spur the creation of
organic compounds from inorganic compounds and
ocean water
107The transition from molecules to life
- the step from amino acids to replicating life is
still a mystery - biochemical clues suggest that there may have
been life on the planet as early as 3.8 billion
years ago - First fossils are 3.5 billion years old (resemble
modern day bacteria)
108Environment for early life forms
- Essentially no atmospheric O2
- Highly corrosive, destroys molecules
- Highly energetic
- Lightning, volcanic activity, UV radiation high
- Provide energy for chemical reactions
109Could life originate elsewhere?
- As our understanding of our own solar system has
increased, the hypothesis that life is not
restricted to Earth has received more attention. - Europa (a moon of Jupiter)
- may have liquid water beneath the surface and
may support life - Mars
- is cold, dry, and lifeless today, but was
probably relatively warmer, wetter, and had a
CO2-rich atmosphere billions of years ago - Mars subsurface may still be capable of having
life - Many scientists see Mars as an ideal place to
test hypotheses about Earths prebiotic chemistry
110Where did first life forms evolve?
- Previously assumed to be on the surface of the
ocean - Now, it is thought that life evolved in
hydrothermal vents in the deep ocean where no
photosynthesis takes place - sulphide-rich water and heat provided the
necessary elements for lifes reactions
111Deep Sea vents
112Changing environments and Evolution
- Early Earth and the Origin of Life
- Major events in the history of life
- Continental drift and life as we know it
- Present day environmental changes
- Early Earth and the Origin of Life
- Major events in the history of life
- Continental drift and life as we know it
- Present day environmental changes
113A clock analogy for Lifes History
- Major events are
- Photosynthesis
- Multicellularity
- Invasion of land
- Humans (come into the picture a few minutes to
1200)
114The Evolution of Photosynthesis
- Photosynthesis Using sunlight to create
carbohydrate from CO2 - First photosynthetic organisms used Hydrogen
sulphide (combination of old and new) and
created sulphur as a by-product - Modern day photosynthesis uses only CO2 and water
and produces O2 as by-product
115Oxygen changed the world
- Over the next 3 billion years, the oceans became
saturated with O2 - organisms that could not tolerate O2 went extinct
(or became very rare and restricted to O2-free
environments) - 800 million years ago, O2 starts seeping into
atmosphere creating the ozone layer
116Ozone layer allows life on land
- By 400 million years ago, O2 levels were
approximately at modern levels - Ozone layer blocks the UV radiation, which causes
mutations, allowing organisms to invade land
117Early changes in the environment
118Cambrian Explosion of multicellular organisms
- Earliest known fossils of multicellular
organisms, 600 mya - 540-505 mya huge diversity of organisms present
in the fossil record - Best fossils displaying Cambrian explosion are in
the Burgess Shales in the Canadian Rockies
119Determining the Earths History
120Fossils of Early life forms
- microscopic
- found in 3.4 billion year-old rock
121Cambrian fossils
122Other well-preserved fossils
123Other well-preserved fossils
124Other well-preserved fossils
125Changing environments and Evolution
- Early Earth and the Origin of Life
- Major events in the history of life
- Continental drift and life as we know it
- Present day environmental changes
126Continental Drift
- continents ride across the surface of Earth,
propelled by powerful volcanic forces - explains some basic patterns of similarity and
dissimilarity of flora and fauna
127Pangaea
- Until 200 mya, all continents were clustered
together at tropical latitudes - As plates of Pangaea broke off, each plate
carried a different set of life forms
128The Drifting of Continents
129Australia and Antarctica
- Have been isolated from the other continents for
the longest time - Resulted in them having the most unique flora and
fauna - e.g., marsupials
130Unique flora and fauna of Australia
131Changing environments and Evolution
- Early Earth and the Origin of Life
- Major events in the history of life
- Continental drift and life as we know it
- Present day environmental changes
132Recent Ozone changes
- Human activities have
- increased ozone in the troposphere
- decreased ozone in the stratosphere
-
Good ozone (protects Earth from UV radiation)
Bad ozone (reactive gas)
133Increases in tropospheric ozone
- By-products of burning fossil fuels (e.g., oil.
gas) react with oxygen to make O3 - O3 reacts with chlorophyll in plants, detrimental
to growth
134Decreases in stratospheric ozone
- CFCs, HCFCs and other chemicals react with O3
to make O2 - decrease in O3 increases UV radiation ? higher
rates of cancer (in humans and other mammals),
reproductive failure in birds and lizards, damage
to plants, etc.
135Summary
- Life began on Earth 3.5 bya
- The evolution of photosynthetic organisms
resulted in the formation of the ozone layer,
paving the way for life on land - Continental drift has played a large part in
shaping the modern day distribution of organisms - Changes in the environment are happening today at
a rapid pace
136Classification of Organisms
- Based on natural similarities
- Structure
- Function
- DNA and RNA
- TAXONOMY
- Science of describing, naming and classifying
organisms
137Classification - History
- Linnaean system
- Based on form and structure
- Seven levels
- K,P,C,O,F,G,S
- Binomial Nomenclature
- Genus species or Genus species
- InitiallyTWO kingdoms
- Plantae and Animalia
138Kingdoms and Domains
The three-domain system
Bacteria
Archaea
Eukarya
The six-kingdom system
Bacteria
Archaea
Protista
Plantae
Fungi
Animalia
OLD KINGDOMS
The traditional five-kingdom system
Monera
Protista
Plantae
Fungi
Animalia
139Systematics
- Evolutionary Classification
- Combines
- Fossils
- Comparative homologies
- Comparative sequencing of DNA/RNA
- Cladistics
- Molecular clocks
140What does each provide
- Fossils
- Time context
- Changes in life through sedimentary rock
- Eras defined by changes in fossils
- Comparative Homologies
- Feature shared due to common ancestor
- MUST be tested (could be convergent)
141What does each provide?
- Cladistics
- Evolutionary relationships
- Primitive (common to all) characteristics
- Derived (appear in some but not all members)
- Derived provide the clues!
- Principle of Parsimony
- Molecular clocks
- Average time for a set number of mutations is
predictable - Allows estimation of time
142Phylogeny
- Phylogenies trace patterns of shared ancestry
between lineages - Similarly, each lineage has common ancestors.
143Clades and Cladograms
- Grouping that includes a common ancestor and all
the descendants (living and extinct) of that
ancestor. - Using a phylogeny, it is easy to tell if a
group of lineages forms a clade.
144Nested Hierarchies
- Groups of related organisms share sets of similar
characteristics - The number of shared traits increases with
relatedness.
- Snakes and lizards more closely related to one
another than to the other animals represented. - However, at a more inclusive level, snakes,
lizards, birds, crocodiles, whales, camels,
chimpanzees and humans all share some common
traits since they have a common ancestor.
145Dichotomous Keys
- Dichotomous keys versus evolutionary
classification - Dichotomous keys contain pairs of contrasting
descriptions. - After each description, the key directs the user
to another pair of descriptions or identifies the
organism. - Example 1. a) Is the leaf simple? Go to 2
b) Is the leaf compound? Go to 3 - 2. a) Are margins of the leaf jagged? Go to 4
b) Are margins of the leaf smooth? Go to 5
146Archaebacteria vs. Eubacteria
- Bacteria
- Archaebacteria
- Cell wall
- RNA polymerases resemble eucaryotic enzymes
- Have introns in some genes
- Eucaryota
- Protista (Protoctista)
- Not Animalia (no blastula)
- Not Plantae (embryo within maternal tissue)
- Not Fungi (no spores) and have cilia and flagella
- Not Monerans (have nucleated cell, live in water,
formed from symbiogenesis
147SO
I. Bacteria (19) Most of the Known Prokaryotes Division (Phylum) Proteobacteria N-Fixing Bacteria Division (Phylum) Cyanobacteria Blue-Green Bacteria Division (Phylum) Eubacteria True Gram Posive Bacteria Division (Phylum) Spirochetes Spiral Bacteria Division (Phylum) Chlamydiae Intracellular Parasites
II. Archaea (16) Prokaryotes of Extreme Environments Kingdom Crenarchaeota Thermophiles Kingdom Euryarchaeota Methanogens Halophiles Kingdom Korarchaeota Some Hot Springs Microbes
III. Eukarya (35) Eukaryotic Cells Kingdom Protista (Protoctista) Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Animalia
148What are viruses???
- Not in any kingdom
- No membrane-bound organelles
- No ribosomes (organelle site of protein
synthesis), - No cytoplasm (living contents of a cell),
- No source of energy production of their own.
- No self-maintenance metabolic reactions of living
systems. Viruses lack cellular respiration,
ATP-production, gas exchange, etc. - Do reproduce, but at the expense of the host
cell. Only capable of reproduction within living
cells.
149Phylogenetic Diagram
150Phylogenetics
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