charles darwin and natural selection. darwin journeyed on the hms beagle as a naturalist 5 year...

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Charles Darwin and Charles Darwin and Natural Selection Natural Selection

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Page 1: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Charles Darwin and Charles Darwin and Natural SelectionNatural Selection

Page 2: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist

• 5 year journey• studied and collected many biological specimens• on Galapagos Islands, off coast of Ecuador, observed

animals such as finches, tortoises, and iguanas • Thirteen different but similar species of finches, each

with a distinctive bill that is specialized for a particular food source.

• Suggested that these birds migrated from Ecuador

and changed after they arrived.

Page 3: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens
Page 4: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Darwin’s ideas were influenced by:

• Jean Baptiste Lamarck, who hypothesized that acquired traits were passed onto offspring

Page 5: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

•Charles Lyell, a geologist, who suggested that the Earth was much older than 6000 yrs•Thomas Malthus, who wrote that human populations grow much faster than their food supply

•Alfred Wallace, who suggested natural selection after studying wildlife in the Malay Archipelago.

Page 6: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Darwin observed differences among island species.

Page 7: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Marine iguana

Page 8: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Land iguana

Page 9: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Thirteen different but similar species of finches, each with a

distinctive bill that is specialized for a particular food.

Page 10: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens
Page 11: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Suggested that these birds migrated from South America and changed after they arrived

Page 12: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Key insights led to Darwin’s idea for natural

selection. • Darwin noticed a lot of variation in

domesticated plants and animals.

• Artificial selection is the process by which humans select traits through breeding.

Page 13: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Natural selection is a mechanism by which individuals that have inherited beneficial adaptations produce more offspring on average than do other individuals.

• Heritability is the ability of a trait to be passed down.

• There is a struggle for survival due to overpopulation and limited resources.

• Darwin proposed that adaptations arose over many generations.

Page 14: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Principles of Natural Selection1. Variation. What can cause variation in a

population?

• Genetic differences and mutation

2. Overproduction. What are pros and cons of overproduction?

• Having many offspring increases the chance for survival, but also results in competition for resources.

Page 15: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

3. Adaptation. What determines whether an adaptation is beneficial or not?

• A certain variation that allows an individual to survive better than other individuals it competes against.

4. Descent with Modification. How does natural selection change a population over time?

• Over time, more members of the species will have adaptations that are well suited for survival and reproduction in an environment.

Page 16: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Elephants in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda, Africa

Page 17: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Normally, nearly all African elephants, male and female, have tusks. In 1930, only one percent of the elephant population in Queen Elizabeth Park was tuskless because of a rare genetic mutation. Food was plentiful, and by 1963 there were 3,500 elephants in the park.

Page 18: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

In the 1970’s, a civil war began in Uganda. Much of the wildlife was killed for food, and poachers killed elephants for their ivory tusks. By 1992, the elephant population had dropped to about 200. But by 1998, the population had increased to 1,200. A survey revealed that as many as 30 percent of the adult elephants did not have tusks. Ugandan wildlife officials also noted a decline in poaching.

Page 19: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Natural selection acts on distributions of traits. • A normal distribution graphs as a bell-shaped curve.

• Populations have a normal distribution when they are not undergoing natural selection

Page 20: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Microevolution is evolution within a population.– observable change in the allele frequencies – can result from natural selection

Page 21: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Directional selection – favors one of the extreme variations

Page 22: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Woodpeckers with long beaks capture the most insects, as they can reach the insects deep in the tree trunk.

Page 23: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Stabilizing selection – favors the average

Page 24: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Small spiders have a hard time capturing prey

• Large spiders easily spotted by birds

• Medium sized spiders are best suited to survive in their environment, reproduce more often, leave more offspring.

Page 25: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Disruptive selection - favors both extremes

Page 26: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• On light colored rocks, the light limpets are camouflaged and survive the best

• On dark rocks, the dark limpets are most successful

• Tan (intermediate) limpets are visible on both the light rocks and dark rocks, and their numbers decline due to predation

Page 27: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Evidence of Evolution

A. Fossils

Fossil links found between

• fish and amphibians

• reptiles and birds

• reptiles and mammals

Whales from land mammals

Page 28: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Fossil linking fish and amphibians

• 365 million years old

• arm bone with fish fin characteristics

• found in Pennsylvania

• thought to be from a lobed-finned fish

Page 29: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Archaeopteryx – links reptiles and birds

Page 30: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

                                                                                                                                         

A fossil of Archaeopteryx was discovered at about the same time Darwin published On the Origin of Species. This pigeon-size creature had a dinosaur like shape, complete with a long bony tail, heavy jaws with serrated teeth, and three long fingers. It also had feathers like those of modern birds.

Page 31: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Hind leg bones in whales

Page 32: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

An amphibious reptile found in Texas, 2005

Page 33: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Diarthognathus, an animal with reptile and mammal characteristics

Page 34: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Early mammals may have looked like this

Page 35: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Evolution of the horse

Page 36: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

B. Geography– island species most closely resemble nearest mainland

species– populations can show variation from one island to

another

Page 37: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Larva

Adult barnacleAdult crab

– Crabs and barnacles with similar larvae, different adult body forms

C. Embryology

Page 38: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Early in development, vertebrate embryos have similar characteristics such as a tail, buds that become limbs, and pharyngeal pouches that hold the gills of fish and amphibians.

Vertebrate embryos

Page 39: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens
Page 40: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

D. Anatomy•Homologous structures – similar in structure, with different functions

Page 41: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Vestigial Structures

• Structures that are reduced in size and either have no use or a less important use than they do in other, related organisms.

• Examples: wings on flightless birds, Human ear muscles, human wisdom teeth human appendix , hind leg bones in whales

Page 42: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

The cassowary, a flightless bird with wings

Page 43: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Wisdom teeth in human

Page 44: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Human appendix

Page 45: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Human hand

Bat wing

Mole foot

Fly wing

– Analogous structures are not evidence of a common ancestor.

– Analogous structures have a similar function.

Page 46: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Evolutionary Biology Today• DNA sequence analysis: two closely-related organisms

will have similar DNA

Page 47: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Homeobox genes indicate a very distant common ancestor.– control the development of specific structures– found in many organisms

Homeobox genes

Page 48: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

1. Natural Selection: certain traits might be an advantage for survival

2. Mutation: creates new genetic variation

3. Sexual selection: certain traits may improve mating success; alleles for these traits increase in frequency

Mechanisms of Evolution

Page 49: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Sexual selection occurs when certain traits increase mating success.

• Sexual selection occurs due to higher cost of reproduction for females.– males produce many

sperm continuously– females are more

limited in potential offspring each cycle

Page 50: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Sexual dimorphism

Page 51: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Mating systems

Monogamy One male mates exclusively with one female

Polygamy Individuals mate with more than one partner

Polygyny Some males mate with more than one female

Polyandry Some females mate with more than one male

Monogamy Polygyny Promiscuity

Promiscuity Males mate with more than 1 female and vice versa

Page 52: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Harem polygyny

Elephant seals breeding females cluster together on beaches

- allows males to defend a harem of many females at once

Male elephant seals engagein violent, bloody fights overfemales – large size provides an advantage in male combat

Male elephant seals weigh up to 3x more than females!

Male reproductive success is highly variable:

8 individual males inseminated 348 females in one study!

Page 53: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Alternative reproductive tactics

Remember…there may not be a “best” way to be a male (or female)

Page 54: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

The Red Queen

Evolutionary arms-races

The Red Queen: “It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place.”--Lewis Carroll, “Through the Looking Glass”

The Red Queen Hypothesis: “For an evolutionary system, continuing development is needed just in order to maintain its fitness relative to the systems it is co-evolving with.” --Leigh Van Valen (1973)

Page 55: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

4. Gene flow: movement of individuals to or from a population (also known as migration). Immigrants add alleles, emigrants take alleles away.

Example: troops of baboons in eastern Africa. Females remain with the troop, but younger or less dominant males leave their birth troop, eventually joining another troop. This ensures gene flow.

Page 56: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

5. Genetic drift is a change in allele frequencies due to chance.

• Genetic drift causes a loss of genetic diversity.• It is most common in small populations.

A) A population bottleneck can lead to genetic drift. – It occurs when an event

drastically reducespopulation size.

– The bottleneck effect isgenetic drift that occursafter a bottleneck event.

Page 57: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Example: In the 1800’s, northern elephant seals were overhunted. The population was reduced to about 20 individuals. Hunting has ended, and there are now about 100,000 seals. However, the population has little genetic variation.

Page 58: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

B) The founder effect is genetic drift that occurs after start of new population

–It occurs when a few individuals start a new population.

Page 59: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

What is speciation?

The rise of two or more species from one existing species

Page 60: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

What causes speciation?

Page 61: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens
Page 62: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Types of reproductive isolation

• Geographic isolation

Page 63: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

2. Temporal isolation

• timing of reproductive periods prevents mating

Page 64: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

3. Behavioral isolation

• includes differences in courtship or mating behaviors

Example: female fireflies only respond to light patterns of males of their own species

Page 65: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Satin bowerbird

and McGregor’s

bowerbird

Page 66: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• What process keeps the number of total species on Earth from growing exponentially through speciation?

Page 67: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Draw a visual for divergent evolution and one for convergent evolution.

Page 68: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens
Page 69: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Give an example of each. (convergent and divergent)

• Which type leads to analogous structures?

Page 70: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Convergent or divergent?

Page 71: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Convergent or divergent?

Page 72: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Polar bears and grizzly bears?

Page 73: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• Convergent or divergent?

(Adaptive radiation)

Page 74: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens
Page 75: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

What is coevolution?

Evolutionary Arms Race

Page 76: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

True or false:

When sexual selection is acting in a species, all males tend to look alike.

Page 77: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

• There are two groups of pine trees that appear to be very similar phenotypically and genotypically. However, one releases pollen in January, when the female structures of that group are receptive, and one in March. What kind of reproductive barrier is this?

Page 78: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Microevolution• a change in gene frequency in a population —

such as all the individuals of one beetle species living on a particular mountaintop.

Page 79: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Industrial Melanism

• Example is the peppered moth.• Peppered Moth Simulation

Page 80: Charles Darwin and Natural Selection. Darwin journeyed on the HMS Beagle as a naturalist 5 year journey studied and collected many biological specimens

Macroevolution

• generally refers to evolution above the species level

• Macroevolution