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Descent with Modification

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Systems Integration Last modified by: Donald Glassman Created Date: 11/12/2004 4:03:42 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Descent with Modification


1
Descent with Modification
2
Title page from The Origin of Species
Published November 24, 1859
3
Theory
  • Because of the difference between the scientific
    and common usage of the word theory , many people
    fail to appreciate the extensive evidence that
    supports most scientific theories. For example,
    nearly every scientist accepts the theory of
    evolution as fully supported scientific truth
    all species change with time, new species are
    formed and older species die off.. Although
    evolutionary biologists debate the details of how
    evolutionary processes bring about these changes,
    very few scientists doubt that the theory of
    evolution is essentially correct.
  • Moreover, no scientist who has tried to cast
    doubt on the theory has ever devised or conducted
    a study that disproves any part of it
  • Unfortunately confusion about the usage of the
    word theory has led to endless public debate
    about supposed faults and inadequacies in the
    theory of evolution

4
Two Big Themes
  • Species evolved from ancestral species and were
    not specifically created as is
  • Natural Selection is the mechanism that could
    account for evolutionary change

5
Aristotle
Scala naturae He saw a range of complexity of
living things and attempted to arrange them on a
ladder of complexity
6
Creationist-essentialist dogma
  • Natural Theology

DOGMA The established belief or doctrine held by
a religion, ideology, or organization thought to
be authoritative and not to be disputed.
For natural theologians, adaptations of organisms
were evidence that the Creator had designed every
species perfectly for a particular purpose
7
Linnaeus
Father of Taxonomy Developed the Binomial
nomenclature system
"God creates, Linnaeus disposes"
(17071778)
8
Georges Cuvier (1769-1832)
Founded science of Paleontology. The fossil
record provided evidence that the Earth had seen
a succession of flora and fauna. Geology revealed
that the Earth was ancient.
9
Castastrophism
  • Catastrophism theory that major changes in the
    Earths crust are the result of catastrophic
    events rather than from gradual processes of
    change
  • Cuvier used catastropism to explain appearance of
    new species in more recent rock that were absent
    in older rock by
  • Periodic catastrophes result in mass extinctions
  • After extinctions, the region is repopulated by
    different species immigrating in from other areas.

10
Fossils of trilobites, animals that lived in the
seas hundreds of millions of years ago
11
James Hutton (1726-1797)
  • Father of modern geology. He saw the Earth as a
    living machine, immensely old and powerful with "
    ...no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an
    end."
  • Gradualism. Principle that profound change is the
    cumulative product of slow continuous processes

12
Strata of sedimentary rock at the Grand Canyon
13
Formation of sedimentary rock and deposition of
fossils from different time periods
14
Jean Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829),
Believed that evolution was driven by an innate
tendency toward increasing complexity
(perfection)
15
Lamark
  • Lamarks proposed mechanism of change
  • Use and Disuse
  • The body parts used extensively to cope with the
    environment become larger and stronger, while
    those not used deteriorate
  • Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • The changes an organism acquired during its
    lifetime could be passed along to its offspring

16
The historical context of Darwins life and ideas
DARWIN
17
Charles Darwin in 1859, the year The Origin of
Species was published
Darwin Video
1809 -1882
18
Darwin as an ape
19
The Voyage of HMS Beagle
Darwin (age 22) left England in 1831 for a 5-year
round-the-world voyage as ship naturalist
20
Galápagos finches
2 populations of a species could be isolated in
different environments and diverge as each
adapted to local conditions. Over many
generations, the two populations could become
dissimilar enough to be designated as separate
species.
21
Origin of Species
  • Descent with Modification
  • There is unity in life with all organisms related
    through descent from some unknown ancestral
    population that lived in the remote past.
  • Modifications (adaptations) accumulated over
    millions of years, as descendents from this
    common ancestor moved into various habitats

22
Descent with modification elephant lineage
23
Origin of Species
  • Natural Selection
  • I have called this principle, by whicheach
    slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the
    term Natural Selection. Charles Darwin from
    "The Origin of Species
  • Artificial selection has been and continues to be
    extensively practiced by humans

24
Artificial selection
  • All these vegetables have been selected from a
    single species of wild mustard.
  • By selecting different natural variations in
    particular plant parts plant breeders have
    obtained very different end results

25
Origin of Species
  • Natural Selection
  • Darwin's theory of evolutionary selection holds
    that variation within species occurs randomly and
    that the survival or extinction of each organism
    is determined by that organism's ability to adapt
    to its environment

26
Natural Selection
  • Observation 1
  • All species have such great fertility that their
    population size would increase exponentially if
    all individuals that are born would reproduce
    successfully
  • Observation 2
  • Most populations are normally stable in size
    except for seasonal fluctuations
  • Observation 3
  • Natural resources are limited

27
Natural Selection
  • Inference 1
  • Production of more individuals then the
    environment can support leads to a struggle for
    existence among individuals of a population, with
    only a fraction of offspring surviving each
    generation

28
Natural Selection
  • Observation 4
  • Individuals of a population vary extensively in
    their characteristics no 2 individual are
    exactly alike
  • Observation 5
  • Much of this variation is heritable

29
Natural Selection
  • Inference 2
  • Survival in the struggle for existence is not
    random, but depends in part on the hereditary
    constitution of the surviving individuals. Those
    whose inherited characteristics fit them best to
    their environment are likely to leave more
    offspring than less fit individuals.
  • Inference 3
  • This unequal ability of individuals to survive
    and reproduce will lead to a gradual change in a
    population, with favorable characteristics
    accumulating over the generations

30
Natural Selection
  • Natural selection is this differential success in
    reproduction, and its product is adaptation of
    organisms to their environment
  • Environmental editing
  • The environment favors some variations over others

31
Validations of the Darwinian view of life
  • Direct observations of evolutionary change

32
Evolution of insecticide resistance in insect
populations
1.Spraying of poisons to kill insects favors
survival/reproductive success of insects with
inherent (genetic) resistance to the poisons 2.
Resistant individuals survive and pass along the
gene for resistance to offspring. 3. Addition
applications of the same insecticide are less
effective and the frequency of resistant insects
in the population grows
Natural Selection in action
33
Natural Selection In Galapagos Finches
34
Evolution of drug resistance in HIV
35
Validations of the Darwinian view of life
  • The Fossil Record The succession of fossil
    forms linking modern life to ancestral forms. New
    missing links are discovered regularly to
    complete the picture.
  • Fossil evidence shows the chronology of the
    appearance of vertebrates as
  • Fishes ? amphibians ? reptiles ? birds ? mammals

36
Whale evolution from terrestrial ancestor
37
Validations of the Darwinian view of life
  • Comparative anatomy
  • Homologous structures (structures that are
    similar because of a common ancestry)
  • Example Forelimbs of mammals are constructed of
    the same skeletal elements. The basic similarity
    is the consequence of descent from a common
    ancestor and that the limbs have been modified
    (DESCENT WITH MODIFICATION) for different
    functions.
  • Vestigial organs (historic remnants of structures
    that had important functions in ancestors)

38
Homologous structures anatomical signs of
descent with modification
39
Vestigial structures
40
Convergent evolution
Closely related organisms share characteristics
because of common descent. Some distantly related
organisms can resemble each other due to
Convergent Evolution
Sugar glider (Australian marsupial) and Flying
Squirrel (N. American placental mammal)
41
Validations of the Darwinian view of life
  • Biogeography geographic distribution of
    species. Species tend to be more closely related
    to other species from the same area than to other
    species with a similar way of life but living in
    different areas.

42
Validations of the Darwinian view of life
  • Comparative embryology
  • Closely related organisms go through similar
    stages in their embryonic development
  • Example of embryonic homology- gill slits
  • Form gills in fish
  • Form Eustachian tube in humans

43
Validations of the Darwinian view of life
  • Molecular biology
  • Siblings have a greater similarity in their DNA
    and proteins than do 2 unrelated people.
  • Similarly, 2 species that are closely related
    have a greater of their DNA and proteins in
    common than more distantly related species

44
Molecular Data and the Evolutionary Relationships
of Vertebrates
45
Evolution is not a theory
  • Evolution. The conclusion that species change,
    that life has evolved is a historical fact.
    Evidence for which is everywhere.
  • Darwins theory of natural selection as the means
    by which the evolution occurs is a theory.
  • It is strong and unifying explanation which has
    stood the test of time and much experimentation.
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