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Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 • Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART • We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.
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Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9

• Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART

• We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Page 2: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evolution and Natural Selection

How did life evolve on Earth?

Page 3: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

What is Evolution?

-Evolution is the gradual change in a POPULATION over a long period of time.

Page 4: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evidence of Evolution1) Fossils

– Found in sedimentary rock layers (strata)

– Fossils found deeper very different from fossils found closer to surface

– Relative dating- idea that fossils found deeper are older

– Radiometric dating- A fossil’s carbon14 can be measured to determine actual age

– Fossils have revealed changes in organisms over time and provide clues to changes in climate.

Page 5: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evidence for Evolution

2) Biogeography- We can compare island

species with their mainland ancestors

- Ex: Darwin’s discovery of a species of finches in the Galapagos Islands

Page 6: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evidence of Evolution

3) Homology- Similarity in characteristics of different species resulting from common ancestor

-homologous structures: same structure, different function

Page 7: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evidence for Evolution

4) Vestigial structures: structures that have a reduced or no function today, but had a function in a common ancestor

Page 8: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evidence for Evolution

5) Embryological- if the embryonic development was similar then this may indicate a close relationship and common ancestor

Page 9: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Evidence of Evolution

6) Biochemical Evidence: if two species have similar DNA sequences then they may have common ancestor (most reliable source)

Page 10: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Monday 1/12 Evidence Quiz

1) What is the most reliable piece of evidence we have to show how animals have evolved?

2) What kind of rock are fossils found in?3) What is radiometric dating?4) What are homologous structures? Vestigial

structures?5) What is evolution?

Page 11: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Natural Selection of the Peppered MothWhat do you notice that has changed with these

moth populations?

During the Industrial Revolution large amounts of air pollution killed the lichens on the tree, exposing the dark bark underneath.

Page 12: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

What is Natural Selection?

• A process in nature that only the organisms best adapted to their environment tend to survive and pass on the surviving traits to their offspring.

• It is a key mechanism of evolution.

Page 13: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Natural Selection1. Individuals within a population vary

in their traits.2. More offspring are produced than

can survive. Many will get eaten or will not be able to compete for resources.

3. There is competition for limited resources that creates a struggle for existence.

4. Individuals with advantageous traits will survive and reproduce. Those with bad traits will die, taking those bad traits with them.

5. Concept was called survival of the fittest by Herbert Spencer after Spencer read Darwin’s book, On the Origin of Species.

• Natural Selection of “the best” traits leads to EVOLUTION.

Page 14: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

Tuesday 1/13 Natural Selection

1) What is the key mechanism for evolution?

2) What is natural selection?

3) How was natural selection modeled by the peppered moth simulation yesterday? Explain.

Page 15: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

What an Adaptation IS and IS NOT…

• An adaptation is a trait that an organism is born with/has genetically that better enables it to survive in an environment.– Ex: webbed feet on a

duck

• An adaptation is NOT acquired during an organism’s lifetime.

Page 16: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

What are two types of evolution?

Divergent Evolution:•When a species diverges into 2 or more descendant species which results in once related species becoming more and more dissimilar.

Page 17: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

What are two types of evolution?

Convergent Evolution– Unrelated species evolve

similar traits even though they live in different parts of the world.

– Similarity in environment has led to evolution of similar traits.

– EX: Madagascar aye-aye and New Guinea striped opossum both have elongated middle fingers. Live separately but have same structure

Page 18: Zoology Journal: TGIF 1/9 Please pick up handouts on SILVER CART We are going to look at our timelines from yesterday and discuss.

What is Speciation?• Species: group of individuals that

actually or potentially interbreed in nature.

• Speciation: process of one species splitting into two species. Usually due to a geographic divide that separates the species.– Ex: Kaibab squirrel and Abert

squirrel were once the same species but were divided by creation of Grand Canyon.

• Phylogenetic Trees show evolutionary relationships among organisms.

• They also show how they evolved from a common ancestor