* Interest Grabber * When Is a Flipper a Wing? * All living things are related. Some relationships are easy to see— your pet cat may not roar like a lion, but it clearly resembles one. Other relationships are less obvious. Section 15-3
Feb 23, 2016
*Interest Grabber
*When Is a Flipper a Wing?
*All living things are related. Some relationships are easy to see—your pet cat may not roar like a lion, but it clearly resembles one.Other relationships are less obvious.
Section 15-3
*Interest Grabber continued
* 1. On a sheet of paper, construct a table that has five columns and six rows. In the columns, write the following heads: Animal Group, Example, Legs, Fins, and Tail. Then, place the following animal groups in their own row: Mammal, Bird, Fish, Amphibian, Reptile, and Insect.
* 2. Give one example for each group, and then fill in the information for that example. For Legs, write in the number of legs that each animal has. Do animals with fins have legs? Do animals with wings have legs? If so, how many?
* 3. Can you tell from your table if a fish is more closely related to a bird or to an amphibian? Explain your answer.
*15.3 – Darwin Presents His Case
*Darwin’s Publication*After Darwin’s journeys he wrote and
published a book called On the Origin of Species*In this book he proposed his thoughts on
how evolution happened called natural selection
*Objective: Summarize Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural
selection*Influences on Darwin*Thomas Malthus—(Essay on the Principle of Population, 1798) *plants and animals produce more offspring than can survive.*human overpopulation would lead to decreasing living
standards if left unchecked.*Charles Lyell (1797-1875)* Assumed natural forces in past same as today (erosion, sedimentation, etc.)* Uniformitarianism (idea originally proposed by James Hutton but popularized
by Lyell)
"In October 1838, that is, fifteen months after I had begun my systematic inquiry, I happened to read for amusement Malthus on Population, and being well prepared to appreciate the struggle for existence which
everywhere goes on from long- continued observation of the habits of animals and plants, it at once struck me that under these circumstances favourable variations would tend to be preserved, and unfavourable ones to be
destroyed. The results of this would be the formation of a new species. Here, then I had at last got a theory by which to work".Charles Darwin, from his autobiography. (1876)
"I am well aware that this doctrine of natural selection . . . is open to the same objections which were at first urged against Sir Charles Lyell’s noble views on ‘the modern changes of the earth, as illustrative of geology;’ but we now very seldom hear the action, for instance, of the coast waves, called a trifling and insignificant cause, when applied to the excavation of gigantic valleys or the formation of the longest lines of inland cliffs. Natural selection can act only by the preservation and accumulation of infinitesimally small inherited modifications, each profitable to the
preserved being; and as modern geology has almost banished such views as the excavation of a great valley by a single diluvial wave, so will natural selection, if it be a true principle, banish the belief of the continued creation of new organic beings, or of any great and sudden modification in their structure.” Charles Darwin, from the Origin of
Species, 1859
*Evolution by Natural Selection*Darwin proposed that as populations grew
that there would be a struggle for existence*A key factor in the above would be survival of
the fittest*Successful adaptions enable organisms to be
better suited for environment *Those adaptations are then passed on to next
generations*Those that are adapted best for their
environment will have more offspring and those that are not will either die or have few offspring*http://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=nS1tEnfkk6M*http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPbWJPsBPd
A&feature=fvsr
* Natural selection* Some members of a species have characteristics
that enable them to survive, produce more offspring than others, and pass these characteristics on.* (Species—a group of similar organisms capable of reproducing with one
another).* Fitness—the relative ability of an organism to
survive and transmit its genes to the next generation.
* Adaptation—a characteristic that increases the chances an organism will survive and reproduce in its environment.* 3 Types:
1. Morphological/Structural2. Behavioral3. Biochemical
* Note: It is species that evolve, not individuals.* Gene pool—the entire collection of genes among a population of organisms.* Population genetics—the study of gene pools and their changes.
*Natural Selection*Observations*Populations tend to be
constant
*Naturally occurring variations—small differences between members of a species
*Inferences*If more offspring are born,
yet population is constant, then there is competition for food, water, light, etc.*Some variations are helpful
and others aren’t. Natural selection eliminates those that aren’t.*Good variations are
adaptations
• If variations are selected, then organisms may change—given enough time this may result in a new species.
*Causes of Variation
*Recombination of genes during mating.*Genotype—the genetic makeup of an individual.*Phenotype—the visible characteristics of an organism
*“Crossing-over”*Mutation
Bivalent
Chiasma (site of crossing-over)
Centromere
What is crossing over?
*Natural Variation vs Artificial
Selection
*Descent with Modification*Darwin proposed that over long periods of
time organisms developed different structures to adapt to different environments*As a result species today look different
from their ancestors*Common Descent*All species-living and extinct-were derived
from same ancestors
*The Fossil RecordArchaeopteryx
*Lucy
Beaver
NORTH AMERICA Muskrat
Capybara SOUTH AMERICA
Coypu
* Geographic Distribution
of Living SpeciesSection 15-3
Beaver MuskratBeaver andMuskratCoypu CapybaraCoypu andCapybara
*Observations/Experiments that Support Natural
Selection*Intermediate fossil forms*Archaeopteryx indicates that birds probably evolved from reptiles.
*Changing populations*Artificial selection (domestication)*Antibiotic resistant bacteria*Anol Lizards in the Bahamas, Etc.
*Homologous structures—2 organisms w/parts that have similar organization that is functionally unnecessary (meaning the similarity is unnecessary but the trait in question may be, and usually is, functional). * Indicates a common ancestor*May or may not have similar function today*Whale fin & our forelimb
*Homologous Structures
• The forelimbs of vertebrates are homologous structures.
*Analogous structures (for contrast with homologous structures—analogous structures are not evidence for common descent)—2 organisms w/parts that have similar function, but different internal structure.*Did not come from a recent common ancestor*Whale vs. shark fin*Insect vs. bird wing
*Vestigial structures—parts that are no longer useful.*Appendix—human*Snakes with nerves to their “legs”*Birds have genes that code for a reptilian mouth and tail.
*5 Main Assumptions of Darwin
*Overpopulation—Tendency to have more offspring than can survive*Variations—within a species there are variations—
hair, color, height, etc.*Inheritance of variations*Not all survive. Struggle for existence. Competition
for resources.*Survival of the fittest, the best adapted.
Turtle Alligator
Bird Mammals
Typical primitive fish
*Homologous Body StructuresSection 15-3
*Vestigial Organs
*Similarities In Early
Development
*Concept Map
includes
Evidence of Evolution
Physical remains of organisms
Common ancestral species
Similar genes Similar genes
which is composed of which indicates which implies which implies
The fossil record
Geographic distribution of living species
Homologous body
structures
Similaritiesin early
development