evolution overview. evidence for evolution a. biogeography 1. geographical distribution of species
TRANSCRIPT
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Evolution Overview
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Evidence for Evolution
A. Biogeography1. Geographical
distribution of species
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Evidence for Evolution
B. Fossil Record1. Evolutionary transitions
2. New forms appearing/disappearing
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Evidence for Evolution
Transitional Forms
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Evidence for EvolutionC. Comparative Anatomy
1. Anatomical similarities between species grouped in the same taxonomic categories
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Evidence for Evolution
2. Homologous structures
a. Similarity in characteristics from common ancestor
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Evidence for Evolution
3. Analogous structurea. Look similar because of environment
b. No common ancestor
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Evidence for EvolutionD. Comparative Embryology
1. Closely related organisms go through similar stages in embryonic development
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Evidence for Evolution
View comparative embryology
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Evidence for Evolution
E. Molecular Biology1. DNA, RNA, Protein Analysis, mitochondrial DNA
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Evolution is Descent With Modification Evolution only occurs when there is a
change in gene frequency within a population over time.
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Beetles and Drought Beetles of a different color
Why are the beetles smaller the next year? Evolution or environmental influences?
1st Year
2nd Year
Why are there less green beetles the next year? Evolution or environmental influences?
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I. Basic Mechanisms of Evolutionary Change
A. Mutation
B. Migration
C. Genetic Drift
D. Natural Selection
A.
C.
B.
D.
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II. Genetic VariationsA. Mutations (Genetic Variation)
1. DNA copies incorrectly
2. External influences
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B. Gene Flow (migration) any movement of genes from one population
to another
C. Sex (genetic shuffling) can introduce new gene combinations into a
population
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III. Genetic DriftA. Some individuals leave more descendants
B. Chance
C. Founder effect
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IV. Natural SelectionA. Variation in traits
B. Differential reproduction
C. Heredity
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D. Fitness how well an individual contributed its genes
to the next generation
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E. Stabilizing Selection
Types of Natural Selection
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F. Directional Selection
Types of Natural Selection continued
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G. Disruptive Selection
Types of Natural Selection continued
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V. Coevolution• two (or more) species reciprocally affect each
other’s evolution
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I. Microevolution (You can see change) Evolution on a small scale within a single
population A change in generation-to-generation
gene frequency within a population.
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Detecting Micro-evolutionary Change WHY?
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A. Mechanisms of micro-evolutionary change1. Mutation
2. Migration
3. Genetic Drift
4. Natural Selection
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Example of Microevolution
The size of the sparrow (originally introduced in the East in 1852…)
Why are sparrows now larger in the north?
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http://evoled.dbs.umt.edu/images/modes.gif
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II. Speciation a lineage-splitting event that produces two
or more separate species
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A. Species a group of individuals that actually or
potentially interbreed in nature.
•these happy face spiders look different, but since they can interbreed, they are considered the same species: Theridion grallator.
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The scene: a population of wild fruit flies minding its own business on several bunches of rotting bananas, cheerfully laying their eggs in the mushy fruit...
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Disaster strikes: A hurricane washes the bananas and the immature fruit flies they contain out to sea.
The banana bunch eventually washes up on an island off the coast of the mainland. The fruit flies mature and emerge from their slimy nursery onto the lonely island. Has speciation occurred yet???
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Types of Reproductive Isolation (behavioral, geographic, temporal, mechanical… pre/post zygotic???
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So we meet again: When another storm reintroduces the island flies to the mainland… what will happen now?
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B. Prezygotic Barriers Prevents mating and formation of zygotes
1. Habitat Isolation
2. Behavioral Isolation
3. Temporal Isolation
4. Mechanical Isolation
5. Gametic Isolation
6. Geographic Isolation
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C. Postzygotic barriers Prevents zygotes from developing into
fertile offspring
1. Reduced hybrid viability
2. Reduced hybrid fertility
3. Natural selection
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III. Macroevolution evolution of groups larger than an
individual species. encompasses the grandest trends and
transformations in evolution, such as the origin of mammals and the radiation of flowering plants
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The basic evolutionary mechanisms— mutation, migration, genetic drift, and natural selection—
can produce major evolutionary change if given enough time.
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The History of Evolutionary ThoughtA. James Hutton 1726-
17971. Geologist
2. Gradualism = Profound change is
the cumulative product of slow but continuous process
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The History of Evolutionary Thought Geology
The scientific study of the origin, history, and structure of the earth
Geologic Time Scale Used to represent
evolutionary time
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Geology
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The History of Evolutionary ThoughtB. Charles Lyell (1797-
1875)1. Geologist
2. Uniformitarianism Geological processes
have not changed throughout Earth’s history
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The History of Evolutionary ThoughtC. Jean Baptiste Lamark
(1744-1829)1. Proposed theory of
evolutiona. Change Through Use
and Disuse
b. Organisms Driven to Greater Complexity
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The History of Evolutionary ThoughtD. Thomas Malthus (1766-
1834) 1. Economist
2. Population Growth vs. the Food Supply
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The History of Evolutionary ThoughtE. Charles Darwin
(1809-1882)1. Naturalist
2. 1831-1836 voyage on H.M.S. Beagle
3. Mission: chart south american coast line
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F. Darwin’s Finches1. Galapagos formed
from volcanoes (young)
2. Species live nowhere else
3. Resemble South American
4. Different islands, different environments
5. Today – each island has own species
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6. Finch ancestors came from South America
a. “islands had been colonized by plants and animals strayed from mainland and then diversified”
7.Different islands, different environments
a. Adaptation
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G. Darwin’s Theory of Natural Selection
1. Obs. #1: Population size
would increase exponentially if all offspring reproduced successfully
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2. Obs. #2: Populations tend to
remain stable in size
3. Obs. #3: Environmental resources
are limiteda. Inf. #1: more individuals =
struggle for resources. Only a fraction of offspring survive
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4. Obs. #4: Individuals of a population vary
in characteristics
5. Obs. #5: Much of variation is heritable
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b. Inf. #2: Survival is not random but depends on heredity. Individuals most fit for environment will produce more offspring
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c. Inf. #3: unequal ability of individuals to survive and reproduce = gradual change in a population,
with favorable characteristics accumulating over generations
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H. Key Subtle Points1. Individuals don’t evolve,
populations evolve
2. Adaptations an organism acquires from its own actions is different from inherited adaptations that evolve in a population over time
3. Specifics of natural selection are situational
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Origin of Primates
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Lemurs 55 mya
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Tarsiers 50 mya … check out the fingers…and massive eyes
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New World Monkey (note tails, side facing nostrils) 35 mya, all arboreal
Woolly spider monkey golden lion tamarin
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Old World monkey: ~22 mya (down ward facing nostrils, no prehensile tail)Some arboreal
Some ground dwelling
Macaque Monkey
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Gibbon (ape not a monkey)
~15 myaHominoids:larger brains
than monkeysno tailssmaller ranges
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Hominoid: (ape) Orangutan diverged ~12 mya
Largest arboreal hominoid
Vegetarian
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Gorilla (~8 mya) largest ape- live in groups up to 20 individuals Knuckle walkers
Can walk upright
Shorter legs than arms
Sexual dimorphism
More closely related to humans and chimps than other apes
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Pan paniscus, Pan troglodytes… chimps… (diverged ~5 mya)
Bonobos chimps (dwarf chimpanzees) regular chimpanzees (male (female dominate society) dominate society)
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Human vs. Gorilla
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Hominin family tree…
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w1Lu4VggDH0
Laetoli footpath
Lucy
3.6 mya
Evidence of bipedalism
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Homo sapiens neanderthalensis vs Homo sapiens sapiens
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doF4sNrQtmg&feature=related
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Out of Africa… modern humans