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Darwin and Evolution

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Page 1: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Darwin and Evolution

Page 2: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought

1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS Beagle that began a voyage around the world; it provided Darwin with many observations.

In a lofty valley of the Cordillera, near Mendoza, I found another spider with a singularly-formed web. Strong lines radiated in a vertical plane from a common centre, where the insect had its station; but only two of the rays were connected by a symmetrical mesh-work; so that the net, instead of being, as is generally the case, circular, consisted of a wedge-shaped segment. All the webs were similarly constructed.

                     Excerpt from "The Voyage of the Beagle" by Charles Darwin

Page 3: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Pre-Darwinian world-view was determined

by theological beliefs.

1) The earth is young.

2) Each species was specially created and

did not change

3) Variations are imperfections

4) Observations are to substantiate the

prevailing worldview.

Page 4: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

2.  Mid-Eighteenth-Century Contributions

Carolus Linnaeus and Taxonomy

Taxonomy is the science of classifying organisms;.

Linnaeus developed a binomial system of nomenclature -

two-part names for each species

Homo sapiens Canis lupus Brassica rapa

Page 5: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

B. Georges Louis Leclerc

Count Buffon (1707-1788), was a French naturalist.

In the course of his examination of the animal world, Buffon noted that despite similar environments, different regions have distinct plants and animals, a concept later known as Buffon's Law, widely considered the first principle of biogeography.

Page 6: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

C. Erasmus Darwin 

a. Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802) was Charles Darwin's grandfather.

b. He was a physician and a naturalist whose writings on both botany and zoology contained many comments that suggested the possibility of common descent.

Page 7: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

3. Late Eighteenth-/Early-Nineteenth Century Contributions

A. Cuvier and Catastrophism 

a. George Cuvier (1769-1832), a French vertebrate zoologist, was the first to use comparative anatomy to develop a system of classifying animals.b. He founded the science of paleontology-the study of fossils-and suggested that a single fossil bone was all he needed to deduce the entire anatomy of an animal.

Page 8: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

c. To explain the fossil record, Cuvier proposed that a whole series of catastrophes (extinctions) and re-populations from other regions had occurred.

d. Catastrophism is the term applied to Cuvier's explanation of fossil history: the belief that catastrophic extinctions occurred, after which repopulation of surviving species occurred, giving an appearance of change through time.

Page 9: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

B. Lamarck's Acquired Characteristicsa. Lamarck (1744-1829) was the first to state that descent with modification occurs and that organisms become adapted to their environments.b. Lamarck, an invertebrate zoologist, held ideas at odds with Cuvier's.c. Lamarck mistakenly saw "a desire for perfection" as inherent in all living things.

Page 10: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

d. Inheritance of acquired characteristics was Lamarck's belief that organisms become adapted to their environment during their lifetime and pass these adaptations to their offspring.e. Experiments fail to uphold Lamarck's inheritance of acquired characteristics

         

How could you test Lamarck's theory?

Page 11: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

What We Know So Far1.  Taxonomy and classification emphasize similarities among species  (common descent)2.  Fossils show extinct species (paleontology)3.  Isolated species are distinct (biogeography)4.  Organisms have adaptations to help them survive

*At this point, no mechanism has been proposed to explain how these adaptations come to be

* Special creation is still strongly held, but offers no explanation for the appearance of new species (like on an island)

.........Enter Charles Darwin..........

Page 12: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

17.2 Darwin's Theory of Evolution

Page 13: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

The Voyage of the Beagle

Page 14: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

4. Galapagos●Islands off S. America

●Island species varied from mainland species

●Finches resembled mainland finches, but with more

variation

●Tortoise Variations

Page 15: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Figure 17.7a

Dome shells, short necks - feed at ground level

Page 16: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Figure 17.7b

Shells that flare up, long necks - feed on tall plants

Page 17: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Marine Iguana

Page 18: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

5. Darwin's Finches

a. Finches on the Galápagos Islands resembled a mainland finch but there were more types.

b.  Galápagos finch species varied by nesting site, beak size, and eating habits.

Page 19: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Vampire Finches?

Page 20: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Questions to Ponder:

Did the animals on the islands

descend from one mainland

ancestor?

What were the variations found on the finches?

Why were the island finches so different from

mainland finches?

Why did the vampire finch evolve?

Page 21: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

6. Natural Selection and Adaptation

a. Natural selection was proposed by both Alfred Russel Wallace and Darwin 

Wallace was not given credit for the theory because Darwin published first, however, there is a geographical area named for him called the "Wallace Line" which separates Australia and Asia.

Page 22: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Figure 17B

Regions between Australia and the Orient have

distinct biogeography – separated by what we now

call the Wallace Line

Page 23: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

There are three preconditions for natural selection.

1. The members of a population have random but heritable variations.

2. In a population, many more individuals are produced each generation than the environment can support.

3. Individuals have adaptive characteristics that enable some to survive and reproduce better.

Page 24: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Consider This.....

What characteristics might make these rats more likely to survive?

Page 25: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

There are two consequences of natural selection.

1. An increasing proportion of individuals in succeeding generations will have the adaptive characteristics.

2. The result of natural selection is a population adapted to its local environment.

Page 26: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Natural selection can only utilize variations that are randomly provided; therefore there is no directedness or anticipation of future needs.

Page 27: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Pause and think: Thinking that evolution has a direction is a common misconception.

Can you think of any statements you may have heard that suggest people think that evolution is directional?

Page 28: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Extinction occurs when previous adaptations are no longer suitable to a changed  environment.

Page 29: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

How Evolution by Natural Selection Works

1. Variations exist in a population.

Page 30: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

2. Every individual struggles to exist.

Page 31: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

3. Individuals differ in FITNESS

a) fitness measures an organism’s reproductive successb) it does not necessarily mean stronger.

Fully armored stickleback (ocean)

Low armor (freshwater)

Page 32: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

4. Survivors pass traits to offspring

Over time, the traits that provide the best chance of survival and reproduction are the ones most prevalent in the population - these are ADAPTATIONS

Page 33: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Be careful with that word…..Adaptation is a trait, a noun.

It is dangerous to use it in verb form because it suggests that an individual can choose to adapt. They cannot.

***** POPULATIONS EVOLVE *****

Individuals are pretty much stuck with the traits they have inherited.

Fix this sentence:

This Aye Aye has adapted to a life of eating insects. It’s long digit is used to probe wood.

Page 34: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

ARTIFICIAL SELECTION

Dogs breeds were

developed by years of

breeding wolves

We chose the traits

most desirable, then

bred the dogs with

those traits.

Nature does the same

with “natural selection”

Page 35: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

ARTIFICIAL SELECTION IN PLANTS

All of these species came from one species

Page 36: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

On the Origin of Species by Darwin

1. After the HMS Beagle returned to England in 1836, Darwin waited over 20 years to publish.

2. He used the time to test his hypothesis that life forms arose by descent from a common ancestor and that natural selection is a mechanism by which species can change and new species arise.

3. Darwin was forced to publish Origin of Species after reading a similar hypothesis by Alfred Russel Wallace.

Page 37: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

The Definition of Evolution

Evolution is the change in allele frequencies, or a change in the gene pool, of a population.

Things that are evolution. Things that are NOT evolution.

Page 38: Darwin and Evolution. 17.1 History of Evolutionary Thought 1. In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS

Imagine a Scenario of Evolution.....1.  Create a real or imagined organism2.  Describe 2-3 variations 3.  Show how evolution would act on this population given a change in the environment (climate, predators, food change..)4.  Pay attention to which variations are beneficial, which are harmful.5.  Show how reproduction changes the overall population (with regard to these variations) 6. Be creative!   You can map your organism through a few generations...  You will present your scenario to the class!