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Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

Darwin’s Theory of Evolution. Theory vs. Hypothesis. Theory : unifying idea which is proven through repetitious experimentation Hypothesis : conjectures or plausible explanations that may be testable Evolution is a theory and not a hypothesis. Jean Baptiste Lamarck.

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Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

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  1. Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

  2. Theory vs. Hypothesis • Theory: unifying idea which is proven through repetitious experimentation • Hypothesis: conjectures or plausible explanations that may be testable • Evolution is a theory and not a hypothesis.

  3. Jean Baptiste Lamarck • Part of why Darwin’s theory of evolution was controversial is that many people still confuse Darwinian evolution with Lamarckian evolution. • Lamarck’s ideas about evolution are considered to be unsound.

  4. Use and Disuse • Lamarck believed that if a behavior is useful and beneficial to the organism, then the body parts used to carry out the behavior become prominent and developed. Example: Giraffe’s have long necks because they needed the longer necks in order to eat leaves from trees.

  5. Use and Disuse • Example of disuse: Horses and cows eat grass from the ground and therefore do not use their necks in feeding. This is why horses and cows have short necks.

  6. Inheritance of acquired traits • Lamarck believed that organisms can inherit acquired traits from parents. • Example: When Arnold Schwarzenegger has kids, his kids will come out looking like him.

  7. Influence of Thomas Malthus • 1798, economist Thomas Malthus published a work describing the nature of population growth. • Populations that continue to grow exponentially will eventually run out of resources.

  8. Effect of Competition on Population Growth • Darwin observed that few species are overpopulated. • Competition for resources and limitations on birth rate must select out some individuals.

  9. Influence of Artificial Selection • Darwin also observed that for the time of human existence, humans have selected plant and animal traits which benefit mankind. • Ex: dog domestication, increased crop yield per plant

  10. Many of Darwin’s conclusions were based on observations of wildlife in the Galapagos Islands. The Galapagos Islands lie 500 miles west of Ecuador in the Pacific Ocean, directly on the equator. “Galapagos” means turtle.

  11. Galapagos finches In particular, Darwin observed something odd about the finches: they all looked like a bird he had seen on the South American continent.

  12. Darwin wondered if the birds and other animals had been created to match their environment, why didn’t these birds look like the birds of the African continent, since the environments of both the Galapagos and Africa were similar.

  13. Darwin guessed that some of the birds from South America migrated to the Galapagos. Once on the islands, the birds must have changed over the years.

  14. large ground finch woodpecker finch cactus finch This would explain the numerous species of birds present.

  15. Darwin concluded: Each species has descended, with changes, from other species over time. Darwin called this… Descent With Modifications or evolution (change in species over time)

  16. Darwin’s conclusions • Earth is very old. • Events observed today must have also happened in the past. • Organisms struggle for resources and mates. • Some organisms are better competitors than others. • Traits can be selected.

  17. Natural Selection • The forces of nature create a selective pressure so that traits which are better adapted in a particular environment enable the organisms within a population to survive to reproductive age. • The ability to reproduce is called fitness. • Alfred Wallace coined the term “survival of the fittest.”

  18. Effect of Natural Selection on Populations • The organisms selected and survive to reproductive age are more likely to pass on their genes and influence the gene pool then those than die before mating.

  19. Descent with modification • With sexual reproduction, each generation inherits genes that are varied from the previous generation. These descents are modified from the parental generation.

  20. Observations & Inferences on Darwin's theory of natural selection

  21. 1. Organisms produce more offspring than can survive. Many that survive do not produce offspring. The female green sea turtle lays a clutch of about 110 eggs. She may lay several clutches. It is likely that less than 1% of the hatchlings will ever reach sexual maturity.

  22. Observations & Inferences on Darwin's theory of natural selection • #2. Genetic variation exists within members of the same species.

  23. Observations & Inferences on Darwin's theory of natural selection • #3. Natural resources are limited.

  24. food shelter water space mates 4. Since more organisms are produced than can survive, there is competition(struggle for existence). Competition exists WITHIN and AMONG species. Within and Among Species for And Within a Species for

  25. Observations & Inferences on Darwin's theory of natural selection • #5. Organisms that have an adaptation that gives them an advantage have a better chance to survive and reproduce. Much of the variation is heritable

  26. Over time, genes for less favored characteristics will be eliminated from the gene pool. Example: giraffes and their increasingly longer necks. Descent with modification: Living species today are descended with modifications from common ancestral species that lived in the past. Characteristics of fit individuals increase in a population over time.

  27. the variation exists first. the environment changes. a variation may give an advantage to survive environmental change. Natural Selection: Survival of the Fittest An adaptation is any inherited characteristic (a genetic variation) that can increase an organism’s chance of survival. An organism does not change because of need or desire to survive. The organism either already has the variation that enables it to survive or it dies.

  28. Evidence of Evolution • The main evidence that supports evolution is the fossil record. • The fossil record shows how organisms have changed over time, and how new groups have formed – examples of intermediates between fish and amphibians, reptiles and birds, and reptiles and mammals.

  29. Evidence for evolution • Fossils showing extinct and transitional species Cooksonia, earliest evidence of branching plant

  30. Evidence for evolution • Gene and protein comparisons

  31. Evidence for evolution • Homologous structures –different functions similar structure – common ancestor • Analogous structures – different structure same function – indicates similar pressure

  32. Evidence of Evolution • Vestigial Structures – structures that are reduced in function and importance. Examples include appendix in humans, toes in snakes, and hip bones in whales.

  33. Evidence for evolution • Embryology

  34. Speciation • If one population becomes isolated and inbreeds, their gene pool becomes smaller. • This population may not be able to breed with another population of the same species, thus leading to speciation(evolution of new species).

  35. Debate over Evolution • Many people confuse Darwin’s ideas with Lamarck’s ideas. • People proclaim that to believe in evolution is to disregard God. • Darwin does not propose how man came to be but how all organisms have the capacity to change. • We know today that mutations and genetic recombination can lead to differences in DNA from one generation to the next, making some organisms better adapted to the environment than others.

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