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Evolution Learning Targets 1-17. Guided Reading Review. Charles Darwin. LT 1. HMS Beagle. Born in England in 1809 A Naturalist (studied nature) Took a 5yr voyage on a ship called the HMS Beagle to study the organisms encountered on the journey
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Charles Darwin LT 1 HMS Beagle • Born in England in 1809 • A Naturalist (studied nature) • Took a 5yr voyage on a ship called the HMS Beagle to study the organisms encountered on the journey • Traveled to the Galapagos Islands near S. America • Here he made many observations about the organisms he saw there; including tortoises and finches
Darwin’s Observations Found that finches had different beaks He also found fossils similar to living organisms and some like he had never seen before • Each island of the Galapagos have a different climate. • Found that tortoises had different shells depending on the island they inhabited
The Ride Home After leaving the Galapagos Islands, Darwin had a few questions. • Why do organisms have differences based on their habitat? • Why had so many species disappeared? • How are they related to those still living? • Were similar organisms formerly the same species?
Other Old Dead Dudes LT 2 Darwin, being a good scientist, studied the works of other scientists in and outside of his field. Malthus HMS Beagle Economist Darwin Hutton Lamarck Naturalist Lyell Geologists
What Darwin Concluded Charles Darwin What everyone else thought The Earth was made as it was now and did not change The Earth is only a few thousand years old Organisms don’t change **Darwin’s conclusions caused a BIG buzz** From Hutton and Lyell: • If the Earth can change, can life also change? • Geological processes take a long time, therefore the Earth must be old. From Malthus: • That organisms will have more offspring than will die and this will lead to competition. • Not all offspring live so what makes some survive and others die?
That Other Guy Jean Baptiste Lamarck All living things change over time Living things descend from other living things Organisms adapt to their environment Selective USE or DISUSE of organs will cause organisms to gain or lose the trait during their lifetime Traits lost or gained will be passed onto the organism’s offspring. Loss or acquisition of a trait is to move toward being perfect and better suited for their environments
Darwin’s Idea • Knowing that his ideas were not going to be well received, Darwin wrote a book called On the Origin of Species, but did not publish it for a long time. • His idea was… • Natural Selection (nature “selects” organisms to survive based on the most favorable trait for the environment) • Every species has variations within a trait and the variations are IMPORTANT • Some of the traits were inheritable • Those organisms that have favorable traits (ADAPTATIONS) will survive and go on to have more offspring (FITNESS) • SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST • Over many generations, an adaptation could spread throughout the entire species. • In this way, according to Darwin, evolution by natural selection would occur.
Noodle Worms Post “Noodle Worm Lab” we can say… • Variations do exist within the population (green, orange, white worms)-Where did it come from? Why Genetics, silly! • Some worms did struggled to survive. • Those that did live were best suited or “most fit” and possess a color characteristic that makes them more likely to survive. • Those that survived can pass their characteristic to the next generations (a.k.adescending with modifications)
Variations So do variations exist in all populations? How do they go from parent to offspring? • Meiosis • Cells copy DNA • Crossing over events take place in Prophase I • Fertilization from SEXUAL reproduction • Egg + Sperm • Individual sets of chromosomes combine to form offspring with features unique from either parent
Variations • Mutations • ByChance, radiation, and chemicals • Give new genetic material to the gene pool • Genetic Drift • Migration/Gene Flow All of these forces change GENOTYPES, PHENOTYPES, and determine the amount of GENETIC VARIATION
Variations Gene pool – all members of an interbreeding population who bring genetic variety to the population. • So all the BB, Bb, or bb in the buffalo herd Relative frequency – percentage of time a particular allele appears in the gene pool compared to other alleles • What is the % of B’s to the % of b’s in the buffalo herd
Putting It All Together LT 5 Evolution (Darwin) 1859 Genetics (Mendel) Mid 1800’s DNA (Watson & Crick) 1963 Current Understanding of Biological Evolution
Putting It All Together Okay, then…so, Based on the Mouse WS and the Moths Activity, Evolution– a change in the relative frequency of alleles in a population over time Evolutionary fitness – the successwith which an individual can pass their traits to the next generation Therefore, POPULATIONS, NOT INDIVIDUALS, evolve
Putting It All Together • Evolution NEVER acts DIRECTLY on ONE GENE. • Evolution works on the entire organism • If the organism has evolutionary fitness and • Reproduces = gene(s) in the gene pool • Does not reproduce = NO gene(s) in the gene pool
NS on a Single Gene Trait Single gene trait – one gene controls a trait. • Only two phenotypes (Widow’s peak or no widow’s peak) • Three genotypes (WW, Ww or ww) • Two alleles (W and w) in this example • Natural selection can work on each phenotype and change the allelic frequency
NS on a Polygenic Trait Polygenic Trait- when a trait is controlled by more than one gene • A range of phenotypes (a bell curve) • Many genotypes • At least two alleles per gene • Natural selection effect is more complex • fitness of individual close on curve is similar • fitness of individuals further apart is varied. This is where NS can act.
NS on a Polygenic Trait Three Effects on Phenotypes • Directional Selection - when one end of the curve has higher fitness than the middle or other end of the curve *Shifts the curve left or right* Peccaries eat cacti. Cacti with fewer spines are eaten first. Thus, the cacti with more spines fair better . NS moves the curve toward cacti that make many spines
NS on a Polygenic Trait 2. Stabilizing Selection– when individuals in the middle of the curve have higher fitness than those on the ends. *Narrows the graph* Peccaries continue to eat the cacti with few spines (left of graph). A parasitic insect lays its eggs at the cacti spine base and therefore loves cacti with lots of spines (right of graph). Both extremes are NOT fit. Being in the middle is best
NS on a Polygenic Trait 3. Disruptive Selection – when individuals at the upper and lower ends of the curve have higher fitness *Creates 2 peaks in graph /phenotype* A road through the desert brings tourists that love to pick cacti as souvenirs. Too few spines on the cacti look bad and too many spines are hard to pick. Thus, cacti with spine numbers in the middle are picked.
Other Factors of Evolutionary Change 4. Genetic Drift Variation (crossing over, meiosis, sexual reproduction, and mutations) 5. Migration Natural Selection Note…NS does not create variation, it just works on it Evolutionary Change
Genetic Drift LT 6 Genetic drift – is evolution BY CHANCE!; changes in a population that result from random chance or “luck” • Luck ≠ evolutionary fitness • Luck ≠ “better” • Affects all populations • Natural selection produces adaptations, Genetic Drift does not Genes of one generation do not wind up in identical ratios in the next generation, but…it’s still evolution!
Genetic Drift By random chance, the brown frogs die Their genes are thus unable to be passed to the next generation Thus the gray and greens are the only ones able to mate and pass on genes. Variation is thereby decreased
Genetic Drift Effects of Genetic Drift: • A decrease in variation within a population/change in the relative frequency • May decrease a populations ability to respond to selection pressures • Acts FASTER and is more DRAMATIC in small populations • Very bad for rare or endangered species • Can cause new species to emerge
Genetic Drift Population bottleneck – a decrease in population size for at least one generation • Causes a decrease in variation • Worse for small populations (even if for a short time) • Makes responding to selective pressures harder Causes: • Overhunting • Environmental Disaster (hurricane, flood, etc) • Habitat Destruction
Genetic Drift Founder Effect – when a portion of an original population breaks off and form a new population. • Also decreases variability because the small group may not be equally representative of the larger population’s variability
Hardy-Weinburg LT 7 Recall that evolution -is the change in the relative frequency of alleles in a population over time. Versus Genetic equilibrium - No evolution – no changes in the relative frequency When does this happen? Under what conditions?
Hardy-Weinburg A: The relative frequency of alleles in a population will remain constant UNLESS 1 or more factors cause the frequency to change. Five Conditions for GE: • Random Mating • equal opportunity for all member to produce young. • This is rarely random! • The population is large • this decrease the effects of genetic drift
Hardy-Weinburg • No immigration or emigration • Immigration = new individuals move in and bring new alleles and variety • Emigration = individuals leave the population and take allelic variety with them • No mutations • No natural selection • All genotypes have equal probability for survival
Hardy-Weinburg • For some populations these conditions are met, or nearly met, for long periods of time. • Conditions met = genetic equilibrium • Conditions not met = evolution • There are two equations that can be used to show changes. • p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1 • p + q = 1 • Where p = dom. allelefreq and q = rec. allelefreq
Geologic Time & Evidence for Evolution LT 9-13 Please see the Guided Reading Posted to the website for the answers and “notes” for Geologic Time and Evidence for Evolution (LT 9-13)
Cladograms LT 9-13 Let’s see one made Cladogram – a diagram that shows evolutionary relationships among groups • Based on phylogeny (the study of evolutionary relationships) • Sometimes called a phylogenic tree (although the two vary slightly) • Cladistics - the practice of looking at “innovations,” or newer features, that serve some kind of purpose • Derived characteristics – new features that appear in later generations but not earlier ones
Cladogram 1. ______ Wings2. ______ 6 Legs3. ______ Segmented Body4. ______ Double set of wings5. ______ Jumping Legs6. ______ Crushing mouthparts7. ______ Legs8. ______ Curly Antennae
Cladograms To make a cladogram, you must first look at the animals you are studying and establish characteristics that they share and ones that are unique to each group. For the animals on the table, indicate whether the characteristic is present or not. Based on that chart, create a cladogram like the one pictured above.
Speciation LT 14
Extinction LT 15 • 99% of all life that has ever existed is now extinct • mass extinctions have occurred many times in the Earth’s history • Extinctions indicate… • Organisms who were selected against by nature • A failure to adapt • A collapse in an organism’s environment they could not help
Extinction What becomes of those organisms that live (evolutionarily speaking, of course)? • When large groups of organisms die, it leaves habitats and niches open for others to move into. • New habitats can also have new selective pressures that will work on organisms. • This could cause evolution within a species OR • Adaptive radiation – a species has evolved from a common ancestor into diverse forms that live in different ways
Types of Evolution LT 16 A. Divergent Evolution-when selective pressures cause two species to form (think speciation) B. Convergent Evolution-takes place when species of different ancestry begin to share similar traits because of a shared environment or other selection pressure. C. Co-evolution- organism of different species but have a close relationship and evolve together
Rates of Evolution LT 17 Darwin believed evolution was a SLOW process; Gradualism Modern Biologist think that some evolution is slow and other times long periods of equilibrium are followed by RAPID evolution-Punctuated Equilibrium