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Darwin and Evolution

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Title: Darwin and Evolution Author: Mandy Dyer Last modified by: Jessica Pinkerton Created Date: 12/19/2003 11:49:29 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Darwin and Evolution


1
Darwin and Evolution
  • Evidence
  • Origin of Life
  • Adaptation and Speciation

2
Origin of Life
  • Formation of organic compounds
  • First and Later organisms
  • Oxygen revolution

3
Formation of organic compounds- Theory
  • Earths early atmosphere probably contained
    hydrogen cyanide, carbon dioxide, carbon
    monoxide, nitrogen, hydrogen sulfide, and water.
  • Free oxygen was not abundant until about 2
    billion years ago, after the first life forms
    evolved
  • UV radiation and lightening bombarded the
    atmosphere causing organic compounds to form.

4
Organic Molecule Hypotheses
  • Miller-Urey Experiment
  • A lab model was used to represent the conditions
    of early Earth. The experiment demonstrated that
    organic molecules can be made from inorganic
    molecules amino acid like.

5
An RNA World
  • A new hypothesis supports the idea that early
    genetic material was RNA rather than DNA.
  • RNA can replicate itself without enzymes.
  • Ribozymes are RNA molecules that catalyze
    chemical reactions making organic molecules.

6
The first organisms
  • Believed to have evolved in the ocean
  • Performed anaerobic respiration (no free oxygen
    in the atmosphere)
  • Single-celled prokaryotes

Later organisms
  • Autotrophs
  • Photosynthesis
  • Chemosynthesis uses the energy from chemical
    reactions to produce food

7
Oxygen revolution
  • Photosynthesis produced oxygen
  • Aerobic respiration could take place providing
    more energy
  • Different types of organisms could then evolve

8
Endosymbiotic Theory
  • Eukaryotes evolved about 1.5 billion years ago
  • What is the difference between a prokaryote and
    eukaryote?
  • Endosymbiosis a relationship in which one
    organism lives within the body of another and
    both benefit from the relationship

9
Geologic Time
10
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11
Darwin and Evolution
  • Evidence
  • Origin of Life
  • Adaptation and Speciation

12
What is Evolution?
  • change over time
  • e.g. humans are taller, resistant bacteria

What is a Theory?
  • Well-supported, testable explanation or phenomena
    that have occurred in the natural world

13
Historical Context of Evolutionary Theory
  • Linnaeus Natural Theology
  • -discovery of a Creators plan through the
    classification of species
  • - grouped organisms by their similarities

14
Historical Context of Evolutionary Theory
  • Lamarck Environmental Influence
  • Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
  • Early explanation of mechanism of evolution
  • Proposed that all organisms evolved toward
    perfection and complexity
  • He did not think that species became extinct
  • Changes in an environment caused an organisms
    behavior to change

15
Historical Context of Evolutionary Theory
  • Hutton Gradualism
  • profound change is the cumulative product of
    slow but continuous processes (ex. Canyons carved
    by rivers)
  • Lyell Uniformitarianism
  • geologic processes have constant rates through
    time (ex. Rock strata)
  • Malthus Population Trends
  • if population continues to grow unchecked,
    eventually we will run out of resources

16
Darwins Voyage
  • H.M.S. Beagle (1831) as the ships naturalist
  • collected plant and animal specimens
  • collected fossils
  • some resembled organisms still alive
  • some were completely unknown

17
Darwins Voyage
  • Galapagos Islands (west of South America)
  • found giant land tortoises, marine iguanas and
    finches with differently shaped beaks

18
Darwins Voyage
  • Returned to England in 1836
  • discovered that the organisms found on the
    Galapagos were found nowhere else
  • BUT, each species looked like similar species
    found on the mainland
  • 1859 he published On the Origin of Species
  • Proposed the idea of natural selection
  • struggle for existence
  • survival of the fittest live to reproduce

19
Main points associated with natural selection
  • 1.  Individuals of any population vary from one
    another even siblings differ.2.  These
    variations can be inherited.3.  Populations
    produce more offspring than the environment can
    support.4.  Those individuals with favorable
    variations are likely to leave more
    offspring.5.  The passing on of favorable
    variations leads to the population evolving
    gradually.

20
Main Points (continued)
  • 6. Individuals dont evolve - populations do.
  • 7. Natural selection only amplifies or
    diminishes heritable traits. It edits rather than
    creates.
  • 8. Evolution is NOT goal-directed.

21
Adaptation
  • Structural
  • Physiological
  • Behavioral

22
What is an adaptation?
  • Any trait that aids the chances of survival and
    reproduction of organisms
  • Variations vs. Adaptations
  • Adaptations are products of evolution by natural
    selection (always good)
  • Variations are the raw materials upon which
    natural selection acts (can be good or bad)

23
Complex adaptations
  • e.g. the eye
  • Does not arise overnight
  • Occurs over many, many generations
  • Does not invent, but modifies what already exists

24
Speciation
  • Formation of a new species

25
What is a species?
  • A group of organisms that can interbreed and
    produce fertile offspring in nature
  • Mules, ligers and tiglons are not considered
    species

26
Evolution of a species
  • Geographic isolation - geological change (river,
    canyon, or mountain) that isolates segments of a
    population
  • Reproductive isolation the inability to
    exchange genes among species

27
Evolution of a species
  • Divergent evolution when one species evolves
    into two or more species with different
    characteristics
  • Convergent evolution species that are not
    closely related evolve similar traits (dolphin
    and fish)
  • Coevolution occurs when two species evolve
    together

28
Evolution of a species
  • Genetic drift rapid changes in the numbers and
    kinds of genes in a small, isolated population
  • Adaptive radiation the divergent evolution and
    adaptation of species to different roles in new
    habitats

29
What is a population bottleneck?
  • event in which a significant percentage of a
    population or species is killed or otherwise
    prevented from reproducing they increase
    genetic drift may increase inbreeding linked
    to speciation

30
Tempo of speciation
  • Gradualism slow steady change in species
  • Punctuated equilibrium slow evolution
    punctuated by short events of rapid evolution

31
Biodiversity
  • The degree of variation of life

32
Evidence for Evolution
  • Fossils
  • Anatomy
  • Embryology, Biochemistry, Genetics

33
Fossils
  • Evidence of organisms that lived long ago
  • Parts or whole organisms are preserved or
    petrified
  • Frozen in ice, enclosed in amber, sand or clay
    that turns to rock

34
Dating Fossils
  • Relative Dating estimates the time during which
    an organism lived based on the placement of other
    fossils.
  • Radiometric Dating technique that uses the
    natural decay of unstable isotopes
  • Isotope same element/different of neutrons
  • Half-Life the amount of time it takes for half
    of the isotope to decay into a different element
    Carbon is often used to date organic substances.

35
Fossil record
  • Layering in sedimentary rock clues as to when
    organisms lived
  • Lower layers are older than upper layers

36
Anatomy
  • comparative anatomy study of structures of
    different organisms
  • vestigial organs structures that have no
    function in the living organism (appendix)
  • homologous parts similar in structure but
    appear in different organisms and have different
    functions.

37
Anatomy
  • Analogous structures structures that perform
    similar functions but are not similar in origin.

38
Anatomy vs Physiology
  • Anatomy A branch of science concerned with the
    bodily structure of an organism.
  • Physiology A branch of science concerned with
    the way an organism or bodily structure functions

39
Embryology and Biochemistry
  • comparative embryology study of developing
    organisms
  • embryos start out very similar, but as they
    develop, they become distinct
  • comparative biochemistry studies of organisms
    on a biochemical level (proteins, DNA)

40
Genetics
  • production of new alleles and genetic
    recombination
  • mutations
  • selective breeding
  • DNA similarities

41
  • A gene pool is the combined genetic information
    of all the members of a particular population. 
    It contains 2 or more alleles for each
    inheritable trait. 
  • The relative frequency of an allele is the number
    of times that allele occurs in a gene pool
    compared with the number of times other alleles
    occur. 

42
What is the founder effect?
  • When a few individuals with rare alleles produce
    a population with frequencies different from
    those expected for the population.

43
What is the Hardy-Weinberg Principle?
  • Under certain conditions, the genotype
    frequencies of a trait for a particular
    population stay relatively the same (gene
    frequencies remain constant)

44
  • The Hardy-Weinberg principle states that allele
    frequencies in a population will remain constant
    unless 1 or more factors cause those frequencies
    to change.  This is called genetic equilibrium. 

45
Five conditions are required to maintain this
from generation to generation
  • 1. Random mating 2. Large population size3.
    No migrations4. No mutations5. No natural
    selection

46
What is artificial selection?
  • When humans choose the best organisms to
    reproduce for the next generation (farmers
    choosing a bull to mate with all of the cows).

47
What is antibiotic resistance?
  • The ability of bacteria or other microbes to
    resist the effects of an antibiotic.

48
How does evolution lead to antibiotic resistance?
  • Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria change
    in some way that reduces or eliminates the
    effectiveness of drugs, chemicals, or other
    agents designed to cure or prevent infections.
    The bacteria survive and continue to multiply
    causing more harm.

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