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Chap. 15 : Darwin

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Chap. 15 : Darwin s Theory of Evolution Fossils - traces of dead organisms, collect in sediments (dust, mud, etc) to form sedimentary rock. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chap. 15 : Darwin


1
Chap. 15 Darwins Theory of Evolution
  • Fossils
  • - traces of dead organisms, collect in
    sediments (dust, mud, etc) to form sedimentary
    rock.

2
A. Types
  • 1. Mold imprint (living parts maybe left
    behind) common in limestone rock.
  • 2. Cast when molds fill in with minerals
  • 3. Amber fossilized sap or petrified rocks
  • B. Law of Superposition states that layers of
    succession (called strata) build on top of each
    other.

3

  • youngest

  • oldest
  • all fossils found in same area are
    from the same time period.
  • relative age comparison between
    fossils.
  • absolute age - determined by
    radioisotopes.
  • (carbon dating)

D
C
B
A
4
C. Succession layers shows periods of boom of
certain organisms then periods of mass
extinctions. Caused by environmental changes.
  • D. Biogeography the study of distribution of
    living (or once living) organisms.
  • II. Evolution Theories
  • A. Lamarck 1st to suggest that similar
    species arose from common ancestors.

5
  • Suggested the term acquired trait ( not passed by
    genes but changed by habitat or behavior and then
    passed to offspring). Ex. webbed feet resulted
    from repeated stretching.
  • B. Darwin Origin of Species book about the
    idea of natural selection (nature selects for the
    most fit organisms to survive)
  • - fitness how well an organism is adapted
    to its environment

6
III. Evidence of Evolution
  • A. Homologous/Analogous Structures
  • - Homologous Structures features that
    originated from a shared ancestor. Ex. Different
    beaks, forelimbs of penguins, alligators, bats,
    and humans.
  • indicates that different species
    shared a common ancestor
  • - Analogous Structures features that
    look somewhat alike and serve similar functions
    but do not share the same embryo development. Ex.
    Birds and moths wings.

7
B. Vestigial Structures structures that
presently serve no function.
  • Ex. Appendix and tail bone in humans, 4-chambered
    stomach in whales, legs in boas and pythons.
  • --- organisms with similar vestigial structures
    shared an ancestor
  • C. Similar Embryo Development
  • - in the early stages of development all
    vertebrates are the same. Ex. Fish,rabbits,birds,
    and humans

8
D. Similar Macromolecules homologous structures
have similar amino acid sequences.The of
differences are related to how recent their
ancestor was.
  • IV. Patterns of Evolution
  • 1. Coevolution change of 2 or more species
    in close association with each other. Ex.
    Predator/prey , plants/animal pollinators
  • -- bats and flowers bats long tongue and
    slender nose, flower light in color and smells
    fruity

9
2. Convergent evolution environment selects
similar phenotypes even though the ancestors were
quite different. Ex. Sharks and porpoises
  • 3. Divergent Evolution 2 or more related
    populations become more and more dissimilar.
    Caused by a change of habitat.
  • --- usually results in new species
  • a. Adaptive Radiation related species
    evolve from single ancestor. Ex. Darwin finches.
  • b. Artificial selection speeding up of
    divergence by artificial means. Ex. Domestic
    dogs, horses
  • -- doesnt result in new species but rather
    varieties of species.

10
V. Events that lead to new species
  • Barrier separating like organisms forms (flood,
    volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, forest fires,
    etc.)
  • Time passes (thousands of yrs), environment
    changes
  • Natural selection breeds changes
  • Enough change occur overtime to change DNA
    significantly so no longer recognized.

11
VI. Primates and Human Evolution
  • 45 million years ago

Old World Monkeys (non- grasping tail, downward
nose)
New World Monkeys (tails that grasp, upward
noses)
Some evolved into apes and gorillas
monkeys
baboons
Evolved into humans
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