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From genetics…to evolution. What is the Theory of evolution?. Darwin’s Theory of Evolution. "the single best idea anybody ever had” (Daniel Dennet , Philosopher) “ a big idea, arguably the most powerful idea ever “ (Richard Dawkins, Philosopher)
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Darwin’s Theory of Evolution • "the single best idea anybody ever had” (Daniel Dennet, Philosopher) • “a big idea, arguably the most powerful idea ever “ (Richard Dawkins, Philosopher) • “Its publication (The Origin if Species) changed the world”
Evolution • Synonyms: • Charles Darwin used ‘Descent with modification’ • ‘Survival of the fittest’ • ‘Theory of Natural selection’
Richard Dawkins’ Theory of Evolution ‘Given sufficient time, the non –random survival of hereditary entities (which will occasionally mis-copy) will generate complexity, diversity, beauty and an illusion of design so persuasive that it is almost impossible to distinguish from deliberate intelligent design’
How similar are we? • How different are we?
Charles Darwin… An introduction to Charles Darwin….
Opponents to The Theory of Evolution: The Blind Watchmaker oh yeah, it's David Attenborough again...
How does natural selection work? • Too many offspring (‘over-production’) • Genetic variation (sex and mutation) • Competition: the Struggle for survival • Differential survival and reproduction (‘survival of the genetically fittest’) • Advantageous characteristics passed on to offspring • GRADUAL change over many generations
Too many offspring Results in competition for available resources – food, shelter, mates, water, sunlight
How are we different? Discontinuous variation Phenotype has distinct categories There are no ‘in- betweens’ • Blood types • Genetic diseases • ‘Traits’: tongue rolling, hitch-hikers thumb
How are we different? Continuous variation The variation in phenotype follows a ‘normal-type’ distribution, with most individuals falling in the ‘middle of the range’
What makes us different? Genetic variation • Meiosis • Random fertilisation • Mutation Affects BOTH continuous AND discontinuous variation Environmental effects on genotype Tends to affect continuous variation alone
Environmental effects on phenotype Sequoia sempervirens tree
Mutation • The basis of genetics • ‘ the fuel for evolution’ • ‘the destroyer and creator of life’ • ‘Thanks to mutation, we’re not all still in the primordial soup’
Gene mutation • Definition: A change in a gene or a chromosome • ‘COPYING ERRORS’ OF DNA • Mutations are the source of brand-new characteristics in the gene pool • They are the final source of all genetic variation • Mutations can occur WITHIN a chromosome • Another type of mutation affects whole chromosomes (non-disjunction) • How mutation works
Causes of mutation (2) • Radiation • Chemicals • Viruses • Diet • Stress • Lifestyle • ?Gamma radiation?.... ‘Hiroshima – the most cynical Biology experiment of all time’
Evolution in response to environmental change • Peppered moths in Great Britain • Antibiotic resistance in tuberculosis • Sickle Cell anaemia
1. Peppered Moths in the UK Peppered moth simulation
Natural selection does not always cause change • Change will only occur when there is environmental change, or when a brand new ‘advantageous’ mutation arises • Most of the time, natural selection keeps populations stable over the generations: and is considered as ‘stabilising selection’
Evidence for Evolution • 1. The Fossil Record • 2. Artifical Selection – breeding of plants and domestic animals • 3. Geographical Distribution • 4. Homologous Structures
Using our genome to understand human evolution By sequencing and databasing genes, we can see similarities and differences between species • The closer the genome match, the closer their evolutionary history • Human Chromosome 2 came from fusion of two great ape chromosomes • Karl Miller on human evolution • The time-tree of evolution
The Fossil Record • Palaeontologists uncover fossilised remains in sedimentary rock deposits and use the information to create timelines • Organic matter trapped in sand/ silt/fossils • Compressed over time • Dated by isotopic carbon (50,000 years), potassium40 (1.28 Billion years), 238 Uranium • Oldest fossils are at the bottom, youngest at the top
Other methods for dating fossils • Dating Methods
Fossil Evidence for Evolution http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/sex/mating/index.html
Evidence for Evolution 2: Homologous structures • Homologous traits have similar embryological origins and development • Indicative of common acnestry: what Darwin called ‘Unity of Type’ • Indicative of adaptive radiation • Pentadactyl limb • Human appendix • Whale pelvic and thigh bone
Evidence for evolution: Geographical Distribution • Before humans arrived, Australia had > 100 types of marsupials, but no placental mammals • Hawai’I and New Zealand had unique biotic environments – plants, insects, birds but no placental mammals
Evidence for Evolution: Observable Changes • Development of new species is RAPID in species with a short reproductive cycle: bacteria, viruses, parasites, moths etc etc etc