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Learn about Charles Darwin's ideas on evolution and how he presented his case through his book "On the Origin of Species." Discover concepts such as the struggle for existence, natural variation and adaptation, survival of the fittest, natural selection, and common descent.
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Chapter 16: Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Section 16-3: Darwin Presents His Case
Darwin’s Ideas • Darwin wanted to gather evidence before making his ideas public • Waited 20 years after returning • Published On the Origin of Species in 1858
The Struggle for Existence • More individuals are produced than survive • Members of a population compete for food, living space, other limited necessities • Malthus
Variation and Adaptation • Individuals have natural variation in heritable traits, some better suited for the environment • Any heritable characteristic that increases an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in its environment is an adaptation • Adaptations can be morphological, physiological, behavioral
Survival of the Fittest • An organism’s fitness as how well it can survive and reproduce in its environment • Adaptations increase fitness • Differences in fitness (survival rate and reproduction) called survival of the fittest • Survival = passing adaptations to next generation
Natural Selection • The process by which organisms with variations most suited to their local environment survive and leave more offspring • Mechanism of evolution • Environment influences fitness • Populations continue to change as they become better adapted and their environment changes • Acts only on inherited traits
Natural Selection • Does not make organisms “better” • Does not move in a fixed direction • Extinction can occur if conditions change faster than species can adapt
Common Descent • Over many generations adaptation caused successful species to evolve into new species • Descent with modification from common ancestors • Life has been on Earth a long time • Evidence in fossil record • Explains diversity of life