1 / 41

Darwin & Natural Selection

Darwin & Natural Selection. http://www.wuhsd.org/site/handlers/filedownload.ashx?moduleinstanceid=3044&dataid=22517&FileName=DarwinNatural%20Selection11.ppt. Learning Goals. Define "Evolution" & "Natural Selection". Describe the 4 steps of Natural Selection, giving an example of each.

wmiles
Download Presentation

Darwin & Natural Selection

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Darwin & Natural Selection http://www.wuhsd.org/site/handlers/filedownload.ashx?moduleinstanceid=3044&dataid=22517&FileName=DarwinNatural%20Selection11.ppt

  2. Learning Goals Define "Evolution" & "Natural Selection". Describe the 4 steps of Natural Selection, giving an example of each. Explain the importance of "Variation". Does Natural Selection act on an organism phenotype or genotype? Explain! List the 5 evidences that support the Theory of Evolution.

  3. Theory of Evolution Evolution: The process of change over time Specifically, a change in the frequency of a gene or allele in a population over time

  4. Charles Darwin Father of Evolution Proposed a mechanism for evolution, natural selection Darwin went on a 5-year trip around the world on the ship, the HMS Beagle As the ship’s naturalist, he made observations of organisms in South America and the Galapagos Islands • Wrote a book, “Origin of the Species”

  5. Darwin’s Finches

  6. Natural Selection Natural Selection: Organisms that are best adapted to an environment survive and reproduce more than others

  7. Darwin’s Theory of Natural Selection occurs in four steps: Overproduction Variation Competition Selection

  8. 1. Overproduction Each species produces more offspring that can survive

  9. 2. Variation Each individual has a unique combination of inherited traits. Adaptation: an inherited trait that increases an organism’s chances of survival

  10. What adaptations do you see? http://www.eveboo.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/snow-wolf-wallpaper.jpg

  11. What adaptations do you see? http://i.imgur.com/HZTh8ZG.jpg

  12. Why is Variation Important? Because the environment changes. The more variation within a species, the more likely it will survive EX: If everyone is the same, they are all vulnerable to the same environmental changes or diseases The more variation of types of species in an habitat, the more likely at least some will survive EX: Dinosaurs replaced by mammals

  13. 3. Competition Individuals COMPETE for limited resources: Food, water, space, mates Natural selection occurs through “Survival of the fittest” Fitness: the ability to survive and reproduce Not all individuals survive to adulthood

  14. 4. Selection The individuals with the best traits / adaptations will survive and have the opportunity to pass on it’s traits to offspring. Natural selection acts on the phenotype (physical appearance), not the genotype (genetic makeup) Ex: When a predator finds its prey, it is due to the prey’s physical characteristics, like color or slow speed, not the alleles (BB, Bb)

  15. Individuals with traits that are not well suited to their environment either die or leave few offspring. Evolution occurs when good traits build up in a population over many generations and bad traits are eliminated by the death of the individuals.

  16. Peppered Moth Which moth will the bird catch? A B

  17. Descent with Modification Descent with Modification – each living species has descended, with changes, from other species over time. Common Descent – all living organisms are related to one another

  18. Evidence for Evolution: Fossil Record Homologous Body Structures Vestigial Organs Embryology Biochemical Evidence

  19. The Fossil Record Fossils: a record of the history of life on Earth

  20. Archaeopteryx Missing link between reptiles and birds

  21. Homologous Body Structures Homologous Body Structures: similar anatomy in different types of animals because of common ancestor

  22. Vestigial Organs Vestigial Organs: “leftover” traces of evolution that serve no purpose

  23. Embryology Embryology: embryos of all vertebrates are very similar early on

  24. Biochemical Evidence Biochemistry: DNA with more similar sequences suggest species are more closely related EX: Humans and chimpanzees share more than 98% of identical DNA sequences

  25. Coral Snake (Poisonous) Milk Snake (Not poisonous)

  26. Stick Mantid

  27. Flower Mantid

More Related