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Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends. Chapter 13. Asteroid Impacts. Many past catastrophic impacts altered the course of evolution Iridium layer implicates asteroid in extinction of dinosaurs Asteroids are still a threat. Macroevolution.
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Evolutionary Patterns, Rates, and Trends Chapter 13
Asteroid Impacts • Many past catastrophic impacts altered the course of evolution • Iridium layer implicates asteroid in extinction of dinosaurs • Asteroids are still a threat
Macroevolution Large-scale patterns, trends, and rates of change among families and other more inclusive groups of species
Impacts, Issues Video Measuring Time
Fossils • Recognizable evidence of ancient life
What do Fossils Tell Us? • Each species is a mosaic of ancestral and novel traits • All species that ever evolved are related to one another by way of descent
Stratification • Fossils are found in sedimentary rock • This type of rock is formed in layers • In general, layers closest to the top were formed most recently
Radiometric Dating • Organism becomes buried in ash or sediments • Organic remains become infused with metal and mineral ions • Carbon 14 dating
Radiometric Dating parent isotope in newly formed rock after one half-life after two half-lives
Radioisotope decay Radiometric Dating
Geologic Time Scale Quaternary period Phanerozoic eon Cenozoic era Tertiary period • Boundaries based on transitions in fossil record 65 Mesozoic era Cretaceous period 145 Jurassic period 213 Triassic period 248 Paleozoic era Permian period 286 Carboniferous period 360 Devonian period 410 Silurian period 440 Ordovician period 505 Cambrian period Cambrian period 544 Proterozoic eon 2,500 mya Archean eon and earlier
Record Is Incomplete • Fossils have been found for about 250,000 species • Most species weren’t preserved • Record is biased toward the most accessible regions
Macroevolution • Major patterns and trends among lineages • Rates of change in geologic time
Continental Drift • Continents were once joined and have since “drifted” apart • Initially based on shapes • Later supported by world distribution of fossils and existing species, orientation of particles in iron-rich rocks
Plate Tectonics • Earth’s crust is fractured into plates
Plate Tectonics • Movement of plates is driven by upwelling of molten rock at mid-oceanic ridges island arc oceanic crust oceanic ridge trench continental crust lithosphere (solid layer of mantle) hot spot athenosphere (plastic layer of mantle) subducting plate Fig. 13-6a, p.199
Comparative Morphology • Comparing body forms and structures of major lineages • Guiding principle: • When it comes to introducing change in morphology, evolution tends to follow the path of least resistance
Morphological Divergence 1 early reptile 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 pterosaur • Change from body form of a common ancestor • Produces homologous structures 4 1 chicken 2 3 1 2 bat 1 3 4 5 porpoise 2 4 5 3 penguin 2 3 1 2 human 3 4 5
Morphological Convergence • Individuals of different lineages evolve in similar ways under similar environmental pressures • Produces analogous structures that serve similar functions
Comparative Development • Each animal or plant proceeds through a series of changes in form • Similarities in these stages may be clues to evolutionary relationships • Mutations that disrupt a key stage of development are selected against
Mutation and proportional changes Proportional Changes in Skull
Molecular Evidence • Biochemical traits shared by species show how closely they are related • Can compare DNA, RNA, or proteins
Biological Species Concept “Species are groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups.” Ernst Mayr
Genetic Divergence • Gradual accumulation of differences in the gene pools of populations • Natural selection, genetic drift, and mutation can contribute to divergence • Gene flow counters divergence
Reproductive Isolation • Cornerstone of the biological species concept • Speciation is the attainment of reproductive isolation • Reproductive isolation arises as a by-product of genetic change
Reproductive Isolating Mechanisms • Prevent pollination or mating • Block fertilization or embryonic development • Cause offspring to be weak or sterile
Reproductive isolating mechanisms Isolating Mechanisms
Prezygotic Isolation Mechanical isolation Temporal isolation Behavioral isolation Ecological isolation Gametic mortality
Mechanical Isolation • Wasp and zebra orchid
Temporal Isolation • Cicada
Temporal isolation among cicadas Reproductive Isolation
Behavioral Isolation • Albatrosses
Albatross courtship Reproductive Isolation
Postzygotic Mechanisms Early death Sterility Low survival rates
Models for Speciation • Allopatric speciation • Sympatric speciation • Parapatric speciation
Models of Speciation Models for Speciation
Allopatric Speciation • Speciation in geographically isolated populations • Some sort of barrier arises and prevents gene flow • Effectiveness of barrier varies with species
Extensive Divergence Prevents Inbreeding • Species separated by geographic barriers will diverge genetically • If divergence is great enough it will prevent inbreeding even if the barrier later disappears
Archipelagos • Island chains some distance from continents • Galapagos Islands • Hawaiian Islands • Colonization of islands followed by genetic divergence sets the stage for speciation
Allopatric speciation on an archipelago Models of Speciation
Hawaiian Islands • Volcanic origins, variety of habitats • Adaptive radiations: • Honeycreepers: in absence of other bird species, they radiated to fillnumerous niches