Evolution. What is evolution? A basic definition of evolution… “…evolution can be precisely defined as any change in the frequency of alleles within a.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Evolution & Natural Selection.
Advertisements

Speciation Genetic Equilibrium Disruption of Genetic Equilibrium
Evolution Chapter 16.
EVOLUTION: A History and a Process. Voyage of the Beagle  During his travels, Darwin made numerous observations and collected evidence that led him to.
Genes Within Populations
EVOLUTION Change in allele frequencies over time.
Theory of Evolution Chapter 15.
Darwin & Natural Selection
Life Science: Chapters 10, 11 and 12 Biology: Chapters 14, 15 and 16
Genes Within Populations
Population GENETICS.
EVOLUTION: A History and a Process Chapter 14. Voyage of the Beagle  During his travels, Darwin made numerous observations and collected evidence that.
Darwin Presents His Case 15-3
Introduction to Evolution Chapter 15. DO NOW !!! What is the connection between the words EVOLUTION AND REVOLUTION.
Evolution Mr. Wright, 2011.
Ch. 15 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
End Show Slide 1 of 20 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Biology Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall.
Ch 15- Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Evolution- change over time – Process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms Theory- well.
Chapter 11 Jeopardy Genetic Variation & Natural Selection.
Chapters 15, 16, 17. What is evolution? Change in organisms over a long time.
The Theory of Evolution Biology B/Evolution. Important Concepts  Natural Variation = Differences among individual organisms of the same species.  Exists.
Evolution Chapters 15/16. Intro Video =PLISBHwlJXpn2bmLjfiShKcIHpBP cov24Ohttps://youtu.be/FpfAZaVhx3k?list =PLISBHwlJXpn2bmLjfiShKcIHpBP.
Ch. 15 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
Natural Selection Natural selection is a major mechanism of evolution.
Evolution Only a theory?. Basic premises for this discussion Evolution is not a belief system. It is a scientific concept. It has no role in defining.
Evolution. Breaking Down the Definitions Honors 1.Evolution 2.Natural selection 3.Adaptation 4.Fitness 5.Convergent evolution 6.Divergent evolution 7.Adaptive.
Chapter 15 and 16 Evolution - Change through time.
EVOLUTIONEVOLUTIONEVOLUTIONEVOLUTION. Questions to Ponder TRUE/FALSE 1. You can web your hands if you try. 2. You can acquire traits in your lifetime.
EVOLUTIONARY THEORY. What is biological evolution? Successive genetic changes in a population over many generations. New species result as genetic characteristics.
Chapter 10 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
VOCABULARY EVOLUTION. GENETIC DRIFT RANDOM CHANGE IN ALLELE FREQUENCIES THAT OCCURS IN SMALL POPULATIONS.
Darwin & Natural Selection Evolution Unit Notes. Learning Goals  1. Define "Evolution" & "Natural Selection".  2. Describe the 4 steps of Natural Selection,
Evolution General Biology Chapters 15, 16 & 17. Darwin’s Journey Darwin made numerous observations and collected evidence that led him to propose what.
LEARN.
Evolution and the Diversity of Life. Theory Theories embody the highest level of certainty for comprehensive ideas in science. Thus, when someone claims.
Evolution. Charles Darwin Known as the Father of Evolution Known as the Father of Evolution Wrote book On the Origin of Species Wrote book On the Origin.
Ch.10: Principles of Evolution
Evolution for Beginners Only a theory?. Basic premises for this discussion Evolution is not a belief system. It is a scientific concept. It has no role.
Chapter 16 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Evolution What is evolution? A change in a population over time These changes is caused by many factors and are.
EVOLUTION Who is Charles Darwin? Where were the founding ideas of Evolution? What is evolution? Where are the Galapagos Islands?
Ms. Hughes.  Evolution is the process by which a species changes over time.  In 1859, Charles Darwin pulled together these missing pieces. He was an.
The Theory of Evolution.  Darwin developed the first theory on evolution, which is the basis for modern evolutionary theory ◦ Darwin spent 5 years sailing.
Natural Selection and the Evidence of Evolution (15.1) Evolution Foldable 1.Fold 4 pieces of paper, so you have 7 layered flaps 2.Write “Evolution” on.
Evolution Chapter 15. Definition a theory that the various kinds of plants and animals are descended from other kinds that lived in earlier times and.
Evolution for Beginners. What is evolution? A basic definition of evolution… “…evolution can be precisely defined as any change in the frequency of alleles.
Evolution.  Darwin:  HMS Beagle  Galapagos Islands  Artificial Selection -breeding to produce offspring with desired traits-He inferred that if humans.
Warm Up: What does theory mean to you? What does theory mean to you? A scientific theory is a well-supported testable explanation of phenomena that have.
Chapter 13 The Theory of Evolution - the change of something overtime. Theory- scientific truth based upon data or evidence.
Evolution Evolution- changes that have transformed life over time.
EVOLUTION Chapter 15 Students know the reasoning used by Charles Darwin in reaching his conclusion that natural selection is the mechanism of evolution.
Darwin & Natural Selection
Darwin & Natural Selection
The Theory of Evolution
Evolution for Beginners
Darwin Developed a Theory of Evolution
Evolution.
The Theories of Evolution
EVOLUTION VOCAB Chapter 14 & 16
Evolution.
Theory of Evolution Evolution: The process of change over time
Change in Populations over time
CHARLES DARWIN’S THEORY OF EVOLUTION
Darwin & Natural Selection
Natural Selection Struggle for Existence Survival of the Fittest
Charles Darwin ( ) Sailed around the world
Evolution Review Chapters
Evolution & Natural Selection Vocabulary
EVOLUTION VOCABULARY.
Big Idea: The types and characteristics of organisms change over time.
Evolution.
Presentation transcript:

Evolution

What is evolution? A basic definition of evolution… “…evolution can be precisely defined as any change in the frequency of alleles within a gene pool from one generation to the next." - Helena Curtis and N. Sue Barnes, Biology, 5th ed Worth Publishers, p.974

So what does the definition mean? Evolution is a change in the number of times specific genes that code for specific characteristics occur within an interbreeding population Individuals don’t evolve, populations do There is no implied “improvement” in evolution

Evolution: changes through time 1.Species accumulate difference 2.Descendants differ from their ancestors 3.New species arise from existing ones Genetic Variation and Evolution

A brief history of evolution Jean-Baptist Lamack First person to come up with a theory of how evolution occurred. Inheritance of acquired characteristics: changes that an organism aquired during it’s life were passed on. (no genetic link). WRONG

A brief history of evolution Charles Darwin was born on February 12, 1809 in Shrewsbury, England. From 1831 to 1836 Darwin served as naturalist aboard the H.M.S. Beagle on a British science expedition around the world. He observed much variation in related or similar species of plants and animals that were geographically isolated from each other. These observations were the basis for his ideas.

Evidence of Evolution The Fossil Record Geographic Distribution of Living Things Homologous Body Structures Similarities in Early Development

Evidence for Evolution The Fossil Record- Layer show change Geographic Distribution of Living Things Homologous Body Structures Similarities in Early Development

Evidence of Evolution The Fossil Record Geographic Distribution of Living Things-similar environments have similar types of organisms Homologous Body Structures Similarities in Early Development

Homologous Structures Homologous Structures -structures that have different mature forms in different organisms, but develop from the same embryonic tissue

Evidence for Evolution Vestigial organs-organs that serve no useful function in an organism i.e.) appendix, miniature legs, arms

Similarities in Early Development

Conclusion After making all these observations Darwin came up with a theory as to how populations evolve. NATURAL SELECTION!

Natural selection: proposed by Darwin as the mechanism of evolution individuals have specific inherited characteristics they produce more surviving offspring the population includes more individuals with these specific characteristics the population evolves and is better adapted to its present environment Natural selection: mechanism of evolutionary change

Natural Selection Darwin knew nothing of genes, but what he did have were two observations and a little inference that provided the motive force for evolution. Darwin: Evolution is descent with modification

Natural Selection Observation 1: Organisms generally have more offspring than can survive to adulthood. Observation 2: Offspring are not identical. There is variation in their appearance, size, and other characteristics.

Natural Selection Inference: Those organisms that are better adapted to their environment have a greater likelihood of surviving to adulthood and passing these characteristics on to their offspring. Survival of the “fittest.”

Darwin’s theory for how long necks evolved in giraffes Survival of the “fittest.”

Evolution of species Based on 3 mechanisms –1.Sources of variation –2.Method of selection for those characteristics that would be passed on –3.A mechanism for retaining changes

1. Sources of variation Genetic diversity thru mutations that are not lethal –Physical or behavioral traits Sexual reproduction between genetically different individuals

1. Sources of variation

Gene Flow Many species are made up of local populations whose members tend to breed within the group. Each local population can develop a gene pool distinct from that of other local populations. Members of one population may breed with occasional immigrants from an adjacent population of the same species. -introduce new genes or alter existing gene frequencies in the residents. This is called hybridization.

2. Method of selection Natural selection: environmental conditions determine which individuals in a population produce the most offspring Reproductive fitness is the method of selection. –Competition, escaping from and eluding predators –Finding a good mate

Fitness and Its Measurement Fitness: A phenotype better fitted to it’s environment usually increases in frequency. Fitness is a combination of: –Survival: how long does an organism live –Mating success: how often it mates –Number of offspring per mating that survive

3. Maintenance of Variation Fittest organisms reproduce. The beneficial alleles are passed down to the offspring. This maintains the ability for change.

Selection in 3 Directions There are three ways a population can change. Stabilizing Selection Disruptive Selection Directional Selection

Stabilizing Selection Organisms with the average traits have the highest fitness.

Disruptive Selection Individuals that have either extremes have the highest fitness.

Directional Selection Individuals with extreme characteristics in one direction have the highest fitness.

Selection Artificial selection: a breeder selects for desired characteristics

Hardy–Weinberg principle states that the genotype frequencies in a population remain constant or are in equilibrium from generation to generation unless specific disturbing influences are introduced. Those disturbing influences include Genetic equilibrium is a basic principle of population genetics.

Genetic Drift If a population is small, Hardy-Weinberg principal may be violated. Chance alone may eliminate certain members out of the population. In such cases, the frequency of an allele may begin to drift toward a certain trait or set of traits. Ultimately, the allele may represent 100% of the gene pool or, just as likely, disappear from it.