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Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
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Page 1: Biology evolution class 4-2-14 CH22 Darwin.pptx

Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

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The Influence of Darwin’s Contemporaries

• Gradualism & geology (Hutton) – changes in the Earth can take effect through the cumulative effect of slow processes

• Uniformitarianism – (Lyell) the same geologic processes that exist today, existed in the past and occur at the same rate as in the past

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Georges Cuvier & Paleontology• Cuvier (1769-1832) began the study

of fossils in strata (layers) of rock• Observations:

The older the rock layer the greater the variation of the fossils from contemporary animals

From one layer to the next certain species disappeared and new species emerged

• Conclusion: extinctions are a common part of life

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Influence of Thomas Malthus • Malthus was an economic scholar

who wrote a paper titled The Principle of Population (1798)

• He stated that individuals in a population produce many offspring, but only a few survive the rest are eaten, diseased, frozen, starved, unmated or infertile

• He reasoned that this was beneficial for the stability and success of a population

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Darwin’s Trip on the Beagle

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• 1831- 1836 trip on the Beagle • Argentina – Darwin’s first significant

discovery in a region rich in fossils called Punta Alta

Darwin found fossils of 9 mammals unknown or little known to science

4 species of giant sloths; Megatherium was found to be the size of an elephant

Also found an extinct horse, giant rodent and the shell of a giant Armadillo

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6 foot+ armadillo found in Florida; lived about 10,000 to 11,000 years ago

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Eremotherium skeleton , National Museum ofNatural History,Washington, D.C.

Giant Sloth

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• Several other fossils were also found in Argentina

• Importance of fossil findings: Darwin noticed that the plants and animals had developed adaptations and were similar to known species, but not identical

• Darwin also noticed that the living species he encountered resembled other species on the continent more closely than in similar climates on different continents

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Galapagos Islands• The islands are an archipelago of

volcanic islands and are geologically young

• Importance: when volcanic islands form they are initially devoid of life

• Islands become colonized as organisms make their way from the nearest mainland to the island

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What Darwin Learned on the Islands• He found species that didn’t exist

anywhere else; he reasoned that the animals became geographically isolated on the islands and change

• Darwin also discovered that each species changed from island to island; Darwin reasoned that this resulted from adaptation of each species to a given island’s characteristics

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Above: GalapagosMockingbird

Right: San Cristobalmockingbird

Above: EspanolaMockingbird

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The finches of the Galapagos Islands diversified after an initial colonization from the mainland to exploit different food sources on different islands.

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Formulation of Darwin’s Theory• Observations from HMS Beagle trip• Question: Could a new species arise

from an ancestral form?• Hypothesis: Organisms that stray to

new habitats diversify and change• Experiments: not traditional

experiments; examined specimens and made inferences

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Logic of Darwin’s Theory (as stated

by Ernst Mayr)

• Observation 1: For any species, population sizes would increase exponentially if all individuals that are born reproduced successfully

• Observation 2: Populations tend to remain stable in size

• Observation 3: Resources are limited• Inference 1: Overproduction of

individuals leads to competition for resources; only a fraction survive

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• Observation 4: Members of a population vary; no 2 are exactly alike

• Observation 5: The variation is heritable

• Inference 2: Survival favors individuals who inherit traits giving them higher fitness and greater reproductive success

• Inference 3: The unequal ability of individuals to survive and reproduce leads to a gradual change in the population, with favorable characteristics accumulating over generations

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Two Points of Darwin’s Theory1. Descent with modification (Darwin’s

term for evolution) – new species descend from ancestral species by the accumulation of modifications as POPULATIONS adapt to new environments

2. Natural Selection (mechanism of evolution) – individuals that are best suited for survival, live to reproduce and pass on their genes; DIFFERENTIAL REPRODUCTIVE SUCCESS

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Population Variation

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Six Evidences for Evolution1.Artificial Selection2.Anatomical Homologies3.Fossil Record4.Biogeography5.Embryological Homologies6.Molecular Homologies

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Evidence #1: Artificial Selection• Artificial selection is the selective

breeding of plants, livestock and pets; has been done for generations

• Darwin set up a pigeon breeding loft at his home and began breeding pigeons in order to study the variation that existed in the pigeon population

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Pigeon BreedingPigeon breeding was a common hobby in Darwin’s time with individuals seeking new and unique varieties

Pigeons breeders developed around 200 different varieties of pigeons from the rock pigeon

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Artificial Selection in Plants

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Darwin’s conclusion based on artificial selection:

Darwin reasoned that if humans could so dramatically alter a species in a few generations then it seemed logical that nature could dramatically alter a species over hundreds or thousands of generations

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Evidence #2: Anatomical Homologies• Definition – similarities in structural

characteristics result from two organisms sharing a common ancestor

• Reason for the observed differences in the structural features: altered features are not novel, but are modifications and adaptations of a previously existing structure

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Two Types of Anatomical Homologies

1.Homologous Structures – structural features in organisms that are a variation based on a common structural theme

2.Vestigial organs or structures – structures present in an animal that serve no functional purpose, but exist as a remnant from an ancestor

Example: appendix in humans or pelvis in snakes

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Vestigial Organs• Example: snakes – have remnants

of legs and a pelvic girdle

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Arrector Pili Muscles

“Goose Bumps”

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Homologous Structures

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Evidence #5: Embryological Homologies

• Related organisms share certain embryological similarities during development that serve different functions in the adults

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•H

aeckl’s

Em

bry

os

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http://www.millerandlevine.com/km/evol/embryos/Haeckel.html

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Evidence #6 Molecular Homologies• Genetic code is universal among

organisms• All living organisms share a lot of

similarities in their DNAHumans and chimps – there is only a 1%

difference in their genetic make-upHumans and bacteria actually have

many genes in commonHumans and bananas share 50% of their

DNA

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Specific Types of Molecular Homologies

1.Atavisms

2.Pseudogenes

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Atavisms• Atavisms – anatomical structures

that sometimes appear in an organism, but serve no functional purpose

• Example: humans still contain the same genes that mice use to produce a tail, but only occasionally are these genes expressed resulting in a baby born with a small, nonfunctional tail

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Pseudogenes• Pseudogenes are genes that are

permanently silenced in the genome• Humans have 2,000 pseudogenes out of

our 20,000 – 30,000 genes• Example: Gene to make Vitamin C

Humans contain the gene that is used to make Vitamin C from glucose, but it is inactivated by a mutation

The exact same gene and mutation is also found in primates

Other mammals also contain the nonmutated version of the gene and produce Vitamin C

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Where Embryological and Molecular Homologies

Overlap

HOX genes

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Hox Genes

• Hox genes are a family of segmentation genes that code for transcription factor proteins that regulate embryonic development

• These genes are conserved across most species and contain a a 180 nucleotide sequence called the homeobox

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Hox Genes Function• When Hox genes are translated

the homeobox sequence forms a region of the protein called the homeodomain

• The homeodomain allows the protein to bind to the DNA and initiate transcription of genes involved in embryonic development

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Conservation ofHOX Genes

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Why is the fact that HOX genes are found in many

species important to evolution?

Answer: It demonstrates that it is NOT the appearance of new genes that results in

increasing complexity, but it is the result of the duplication

of existing genes

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How do these genes become duplicated?

Answer: Errors during crossing over in Prophase I of meiosis

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Chromosomal Abnormalities 1. Deletion – only a portion or

fragment of the chromosome is lost

2. Duplication – a fragment deleted from one chromosome is attached to another chromosome resulting in extra copies of that chromosomal segment

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Question: Do we see evidence that natural

selection is still occurring?

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Evolution of Drug Resistant HIV

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Examples of Natural Selection

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Important Points about Natural Selection

1. Occurs through interactions between individual organisms & their environment; individuals DO NOT themselves evolve; populations evolve

2. Only amplifies or diminishes current variations in alleles; acquired characteristics do not get passed on to offspring

3. It is situational; environmental factors vary and may favor different adaptations at different times. A trait that is favorable in one situation may be detrimental in another situation

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Descent with Modification