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History of EVOLUTIONARY THEORY & DARWIN & NATURAL SELECTION Ms. Kim Honors Biology

History of EVOLUTIONARY THEORY & DARWIN & NATURAL SELECTION Ms. Kim Honors Biology. On November 24, 1859, Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection .

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History of EVOLUTIONARY THEORY & DARWIN & NATURAL SELECTION Ms. Kim Honors Biology

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  1. History of EVOLUTIONARY THEORY & DARWIN & NATURAL SELECTION Ms. Kim Honors Biology

  2. On November 24, 1859, Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection. Darwin’s book drew a cohesive picture of life by connecting what had once seemed a bewildering array of unrelated facts. Darwin made two points in The Origin of Species: Today’s organisms descended from ancestral species. Natural selection provided a mechanism for evolutionary change in populations. Introduction

  3. What is the difference between Hypothesis and Theory? Hypothesis: Tentative explanation of observations Theory: General explanation of important natural phenomena, developed through extensive & reproducible observations & experiments

  4. What is a Scientific Theory? A theory in science is not a “guess” It represents the best model for making sense out of all the evidence. Germ theory, Electrical theory, Cell theory, etc. Evolution is a well-supported theory drawn from a variety of sources of data: Observation of the fossil record Genetic information Distribution of plants and animals Similarities across species of anatomy and development

  5. Darwin made two major points in his book called Origins of Species: 1. Many current species are descendants of ancestral species 2. Natural selection is a mechanism for this evolutionary process

  6. Nature and Classification of Species • Greek philosopher Aristotle • organisms were perfectly formed and adapted to the world (fixed and unchanging) • Saw adaptations as evidence that a Creator had designed each species for a specific purpose • founder of taxonomy (biology concerned with classifying organisms) & binomial nomenclature (scientifically naming organisms- Species genus) Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) “King Philip Came Over For Good Spaghetti”

  7. Fossils, Cuvier, and Catastrophism • The study of fossils helped to lay the groundwork for Darwin’s ideas • Fossils • remains or traces of organisms from the past, usually found in sedimentary rock, which appears in the layers orstrata

  8. Western Historical Context Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) French anatomist who largely developed paleontology, the study of fossils

  9. Western Historical Context Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) Deeper strata contain older taxa Preferred hypothesis for profound geologic change = catastrophism = Stated that species disappear due to a catastrophic event of the earth’s crust (volcano, earthquake…)

  10. Western Historical Context James Hutton (1726-1797) Scottish geologist who offered an alternative to catastrophism Preferred hypothesis for profound geologic change = gradualism Changes in Earth’s crust due to slow continuous processes (erosion, earthquakes, volcanoes…)

  11. Charles Lyell (1797-1875) • Proposed theory of Uniformitarianism • Geological processes at uniform rates building & wearing down Earth’s crust • Proposed that the Earth was millions of years instead of a few thousand years old

  12. Western Historical Context Jean Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) • Stated that Changes Are Adaptations To Environment • acquired in an organism’s lifetime • Said acquired changes were passed to offspring

  13. Lamarck’s Theory of Evolution (1809) • Lamarck hypothesized species evolve through • use and disuse and • inheritance of acquired traits • Tendency toward perfection • The mechanisms he proposed are unsupported by evidence

  14. Lamarck’s Theory of Evolution • Idea called Law of Use and Disuse • If a body part were used, it got stronger • If body part NOT used, it deteriorated

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  16. inheritance of acquired traits • Will his kids be born with big muscles because he has them?

  17. WILL THE OFFSPRING BE NICELY PRUNED?

  18. Tendency toward Perfection • Organisms are continually changing and acquiring features that help them live more successfully in their environment. • Example: Bird Ancestors Desired to Fly So they tried until wings developed.

  19. Lamarck’s Mistakes • Lamarck did NOT know how traits were inherited (traits are passed through genes) • Genes are NOT changed by activities in life • Change through mutation occurs before an organism is born.

  20. Western Historical Context Thomas Malthus (1766-1834) • English demographer • Hypothesis: Plants and animals are capable of producing far more offspring than resources can support; the “struggle for existence” (e.g., famine, war) is an inescapable consequence • Each Species Struggles For: • Food • Living Space • Mates

  21. Charles Darwin (1809-1882) • LOVED nature • Sails on HMS Beagle at 22 and voyaged around world • Noted flora and fauna on islands off of South America • Contributions of Lyell, Hutton and Malthus lead him to his mechanism for evolution • species change through natural selection • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/educators/teachstuds/svideos.html

  22. What is Evolution? Evolution is the slow, gradual change in a population of organisms over time 22

  23. What was the Voyage of the Beagle? Charles Darwin Joined Crew of HMS Beagle, 1831 Naturalist 5 Year Voyage around world Collected specimens of South American plants and animals Observed adaptations of plants and animals that inhabited many diverse environments Main focus of geographic distribution of species = Galápagos Islands near the equator west of South America

  24. Darwin Left England in 1831 Darwin returned 5 years later in 1836

  25. The Galapagos Islands • Small group of islands 1000 km west of South America • Very different climates • Animals on islands unique • Tortoises • Iguanas • Finches

  26. What are The Galapagos Islands? Island species varied from mainland species & from island-to-island species Each island had long or short neck tortoises

  27. What are Characteristics of Galapagos Finches? Finches on the islands resembled a mainland finch More types of finches appeared on the islands than the mainland Finches had different types of beaks

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  29. Darwin’s Focus on Adaptation • Adaptation= a change in structure or habits, often hereditary, to improve survival and reproduction in environment • Adaptation to environment and the origin of new species  are closely related processes • EXAMPLE • Finches on the islands resembled a mainland finch • Finches had different types of beaks adapted to their type of food gathering

  30. LE 22-6 Cactus eater. The long, sharp beak of the cactus ground finch (Geospiza scandens) helps it tear and eat cactus flowers and pulp. Seed eater. The large ground finch (Geospiza magnirostris) has a large beak adapted for cracking seeds that fall from plants to the ground. Insect eater. The green warbler finch (Certhidea olivacea) used its narrow, pointed beak to grasp insects.

  31. Darwin’s Overall Observations • Left unchecked, the # of organisms of each species will increase • In nature, populations tend to remain stable in size • Environmental resources are limited

  32. More of Darwin’s Observations • Individuals of a population vary in characteristics with no 2 individuals being exactly alike. • Much of this variation between individuals is inheritable.

  33. Darwin’s Overall Conclusions #1. Variation exists in every population which may have been inherited and the result of a mutation #2. Production of more individuals than can be supported by the environment leads to a struggle for existence among individuals • Only a fraction of offspring survive each generation • Survival of the Fittest

  34. Darwin’s Conclusion #3. Adaptation: Individuals who inherit characteristics (adaptations) that are most fit (suitable/favorable) for their environment are likely to leave more offspring than less fit individuals • Called FITNESS • High survival = more offspring = more fit #4. Descent with Modification. Over time these adaptations will increase in the population.

  35. What is Common Descent with Modification? Darwin proposed that organisms descended from common ancestors Idea that organisms change with time, diverging from a common form Caused evolution of new species Takes Place Over Long Periods of Time Species Today Look Different From Their Ancestors Each Living Species Has Descended With Changes From Other Species Over Time

  36. Darwin’s Descent with Modification • descent with modification • refers to idea that all organisms are related through descent from common ancestor that lived in the remote past • the history of life is like a tree

  37. Having good “biological fitness” means you are the strongest and biggest. True False

  38. What are Adaptations? Inherited Characteristic That Increases an Organisms Chance for Survival Adaptations Can Be: Physical Speed, Camouflage, Claws, Quills, etc. Behavioral Solitary, Herds, Packs, Activity, etc.

  39. Darwin’s Conclusion • Natural Selection • gradual, nonrandom process by which traits become more/less common in a population • Acts on PHENOTYPES (adaptations), which influences GENOTYPES • only organisms best adapted to environment tend to survive and transmit genetic traits to future generations while those less adapted tend to be eliminated • Key mechanism to evolution

  40. Natural Selection Cannot Be Seen Directly It Can Only Be Observed As Changes In A Population Over Many Successive Generations Radiation Fossil Record 41

  41. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/educators/teachstuds/svideos.htmlhttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/educators/teachstuds/svideos.html • Video #4: How Does Evolution Really Work?

  42. 1844 • Darwin wrote an essay on natural selection but did not publish it • 1858 • Alfred Russell Wallace developed a similar theory of natural selection to Darwin’s (organisms evolve from common ancestors) • Darwin quickly finished The Origin of Species and published it the next year

  43. Darwin’s 1st Idea: Evolution • What is evolution? • All accumulated changes across successive generations in inherited characteristics of populations • A change over time in the genetic combination in a population give rise to diversity • Darwins definition = Descent with modification Darwin’s 2nd Idea: Natural Selection • If an environment changes over time, natural selection may result in adaptation to these new conditions  new species can also evolve

  44. What are the 4 conditions of Darwin’s Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection? • Population has variations. • More offspring are produced than survive • Some variations are favorable. Those that survive have favorable traits. • A population will change over time.

  45. Lamarckism Inheritance of acquired characteristics Use Darwinism Genetic inheritance from selected population Natural selection Generation 2 Generation 1

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