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The Problem of Scale in Evolution

The Problem of Scale in Evolution. Jillian Banks, Jeremy Brown, Cindy Gordon, Chris Gregg, Travis Marsico, Chris Osovitz, Rebecca Symula Evolution II – We Rule!!. Context. Designed for 100+ student, introductory-level course Designed for the final day of a week long module on evolution

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The Problem of Scale in Evolution

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  1. The Problem of Scale in Evolution Jillian Banks, Jeremy Brown, Cindy Gordon, Chris Gregg, Travis Marsico, Chris Osovitz, Rebecca Symula Evolution II – We Rule!!

  2. Context • Designed for 100+ student, introductory-level course • Designed for the final day of a week long module on evolution • Prior knowledge • Students will understand divergence from a common ancestor; i.e., they will have a tree-like rather than a ladder-like view of evolution • Students will understand natural selection, population, variation, inheritance, genotype, and phenotype

  3. Organizational scale Natural selection Organism phenotype Protein phenotype Genotype

  4. Spatial scale rosarubicondior.blogspot.com

  5. Time scale earth-time.org

  6. Approximately how long would you expect it to take for diverging populations to display morphological variation? • 100 years • 100,000 years • 1,000,000 years • 1,000,000,000 years • It varies Response Counter

  7. Activity • Pair up with another person • Rank your cards according to instructions provided (5 min) • ‘A’ group pair with a ‘B’ group and compare: • What you based your rankings on (morphology or time) • The rankings themselves (2 min) • Flip your cards over, preserving the order of rankings. There is one correct sequence of colors which applies to both groups. • Do your two groups match? Why or why not? Discuss! (3 min)

  8. 0.01 million years ago commons.wikimedia.org brittanica.com

  9. ≥3 million years ago flickriver.com flickriver.com

  10. ~300 million years ago 0000050603428.deviantart.com cs.trinity.edu

  11. ~375 million years ago www.cisfbr.org.uk commons.wikimedia.org

  12. Sequence Morphology Time

  13. Approximately how long would you expect it to take for diverging populations to display morphological variation? • 100 years • 100,000 years • 1,000,000 years • 1,000,000,000 years • It varies Response Counter

  14. Learning Outcome • Students will resolve the misconception that evolution occurs at a single time scale

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