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1 Ch.14 Origin of Life
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2 Fossil Record Earth is 4.6 Billion Years Old Fossils In Different Layers of Rock Showed Evidence life began 3.5 BYA
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3 Aristotle (384 –322 BC) Proposed spontaneous generation=abiogenesis living things can arise from nonliving matter
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4 Examples of Spontaneous Generation
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5 Example #1 muddy soil gave rise to the frogs
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6 Example #2 mice came from the moldy grain.
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7 Example #3 sewage and garbage turned into the rats sewage and garbage turned into the rats.
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8 Example #4 rotting meat gave rise to maggots
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9 Disproving Spontaneous Generation
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10 Francesco Redi (1668) 1668, Francesco Redi, disproved spontaneous generation
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11 Redi’s (1626-1697) Experiments Evidence against spontaneous generation:
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12 Disproving Spontaneous Generation of Microbes
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13 Lazzaro Spallanzani’s (1765) Boiled broth and melted top shut. The soups remained clear. Later broke seals & soups became cloudy
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14 Conclusion Critics said sealed vials killed “vital force”
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15 Pasteur's Experiment - Step 1 S-shaped Flask Filled with broth special shape to trap dust
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16 Pasteur's Experimental Results Proved microbes only come from other microbes (life from life) - biogenesis
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17 Ch. 15 Evolution Diversity of Life
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18 Definition Evolution is the slow, gradual change in a population over time
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19 Lamarck’s Theory of Evolution Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, 1809 “Changes Are acquired in an organism’s lifetime” acquired changes were passed to offspring
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20 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, its lost
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21 Lamarck’s Theory of Evolution Clipped ears be passed to offspring!
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22 Charles Darwin the Naturalist
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23 Voyage of the Beagle Charles Darwin Born Feb. 12, 1809 Joined Crew of HMS Beagle, 1831 Naturalist 5 Year Voyage around world
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24 Darwin’s Voyage of Discovery
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25 Darwin Left England in 1831 Darwin returned 5 years later in 1836
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26 The Galapagos Islands Animals On Islands Unique Tortoises Iguanas Finches
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27 The Galapagos Islands
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28 Darwin’s Conclusion Scarcity of resources leads to struggle for existence Only a fraction of offspring survive =Survival of the Fittest Called Natural Selection
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29 Publication of “On The Origin of Species” But He Did Not Publish For 25 Years – Why?
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35 A Common Misconception…
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36 selective breeding Artificial Selection = “selective breeding” Examples: Dogs
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37 Artificial Selection Examples: Dogs
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38 Artificial Selection Crops, Examples: Crops, Decorative Plants
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39 Theory of Evolution Today Supporting Evidence
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40 Evidence for Evolution – The Fossil Record
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41 How do scientists figure out how old something is? Relative dating —looking at where the rock is located.
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42 How do scientists figure out how old something is? Radioactive dating — measuring radioactive decay.
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43 Similarities in DNA Sequence
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44 Evolution of pesticide resistance in response to selection
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Upsetting Genetic Equilibrium Natural selection is not the only way that allele frequencies can change from one generation to the next. Genetic Drift – a random loss of alleles. Mutation – a new mutation can add alleles. Nonrandom mating – inbreeding increases the number of homozygous traits. Migration – shuffles alleles between populations; can prevent speciation.
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Genetic Drift smaller the sample, the greater the chance of deviation These random deviations are called genetic drift. more likely in small populations.
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Genetic Drift allele gets lost is due to random chance. Over time, drift tends to reduce genetic variation through random loss of alleles. C R C R = red C R C W = pink C W C W = white Frequency C R = 0.5 Frequency C W = 0.5 Frequency C R = 0.7 Frequency C W = 0.3 Frequency C R = 1.0 Frequency C W = 0
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The Bottleneck Effect Sometimes a catastrophic event can severely reduce the size of a population. The random assortment of survivors may have different allele frequencies. This is a type of genetic drift called the bottleneck effect.
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The Bottleneck Effect The actions of people sometimes cause bottlenecks in other species. N. California elephant seal population reduced to 20-100 individuals in the 1890s. Current population > 30,000. Variation drastically reduced – 24 genes with 1 allele.
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The Founder Effect Founder effect – Another type of genetic drift occurs when a small group of individuals becomes separated from the population and form a new population. The allele frequencies in their gene pool may be different than the original population.
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51 Camouflage & Mimicry
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52 Homologous Structures = Same Structure, Different Function
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53 Ex. Appendix In Man Legs On Skinks Vestigial Organs = structure with no function
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54 Vestigial Structures —a body part that is reduced in size and does not seem to have a function. Examples: appendix, wisdom teeth and moving ears.
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55 Embryology —study of the development of embryos Examples Examples: gills and tailbones in humans
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56 Chicken Turtle Rat Embryonic Structures
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