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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
Absent last Friday? Get 3 handouts + hand written letter Get book Place Lab notebooks on shelf Completed Student info & Honor Code sheets? Place in your period’s box (by door) Phone in the bin…muted or off….please & thank you I will scream sometime during this chapter
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Educational Service Trip to the Dominican Republic – July 2017
Information Meeting – Thursday, September 6:30PM Only 25 students can participate – all students eligible. See Mr. Bennett for more details.
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Essential Questions LO 1.2 The student is able to evaluate evidence provided by data to qualitatively and quantitatively investigate the role of natural selection in evolution. LO 1.5 The student is able to connect evolutionary changes in a population over time to a change in the environment. LO 1.9 The student is able to evaluate evidence provided by data from many scientific disciplines that support biological evolution. LO 1.10 The student is able to refine evidence based on data from LO 1.11 The student is able to design a plan to answer scientific questions regarding how organisms have changed over time using information from morphology, biochemistry and geology. LO 1.12 The student is able to connect scientific evidence from many scientific disciplines to support the modern concept of evolution. LO 1.22 The student is able to use data from a real or simulated population(s), based on graphs or models of types of selection, to predict what will happen to the population in the future.
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? Gradual heritable change over time What is paleontology? Study of fossils Allows for relative dating – older or younger – layer found in Grant video on beaks
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? Inheritance of acquired characteristics Evolution within an organism’s lifetime – use & disuse Examples – Blacksmith, giraffe A twist…..epigenetic inheritance supports Lamarck Changes in expression w/o changes in alleles What was Darwin’s view? Descent with modification – tree of life REPRODUCTION of the fittest not SOTF Story time…
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Figure 22.5 The voyage of HMS Beagle
England EUROPE NORTH AMERICA Galápagos Islands Darwin in 1840, after his return SOUTH Cape of Good Hope Cape Horn Tierra del Fuego AFRICA HMS Beagle in port AUSTRALIA Tasmania New Zealand PACIFIC OCEAN Andes ATLANTIC
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? Inheritance of acquired characteristics Evolution within an organism’s lifetime – use & disuse Examples – Blacksmith, giraffe A twist…..epigenetic inheritance supports Lamarck Changes in expression w/o changes in alleles 5. What was Darwin’s view? Descent with modification – tree of life REPRODUCTION of the fittest not SOTF Story time….. Studied Galapagos finches
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Figure 22.6 Beak variation in Galápagos finches
(a) Cactus eater. The long, sharp beak of the cactus ground finch (Geospiza scandens) helps it tear and eat cactus flowers and pulp. (c) Seed eater. The large ground finch (Geospiza magnirostris) has a large beak adapted for cracking seeds that fall from plants to the ground. (b) Insect eater. The green warbler finch (Certhidea olivacea) uses its narrow, pointed beak to grasp insects.
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? Inheritance of acquired characteristics Evolution within an organism’s lifetime – use & disuse Examples – Blacksmith, giraffe What was Darwin’s view? Descent with modification – tree of life REPRODUCTION of the fittest not SOTF Story time….. Studied Galapagos finches 1859 – The Origin of Species – 2 main points Descent with Modification (evolution) f/ common ancestor Natural selection is the mechanism of evolution
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Figure 22.7 Descent with modification
Hyracoidea (Hyraxes) Sirenia (Manatees and relatives) Years ago Millions of years ago Deinotherium Mammut Stegodon Mammuthus Platybelodon Barytherium Moeritherium Elephas maximus (Asia) Loxodonta africana (Africa) cyclotis
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view Natural selection is differential reproductive success Natural selection occurs through interactions between the environment and the variability among individual organisms in a population
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Figure 22.9 Variation in a population
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Figure 22.11 Camouflage as an example of evolutionary adaptation
(a) A flower mantid in Malaysia (b) A stick mantid in Africa
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view Natural selection is differential reproductive success Natural selection occurs through interactions between the environment and the variability among individual organisms in a population The product of natural selection is the adaptation of a population of organisms to their environment What is artificial selection? - Selective breeding to encourage the occurrence of desirable traits
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Figure 22.10 Artificial selection
Terminal bud Lateral buds Brussels sprouts Cabbage Flower cluster Leaves Cauliflower and stems Broccoli Wild mustard Kohlrabi Stem Kale
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Students Student info & Honor code – place in box Bozeman Science videos – 1 & 2 Crash Course Biology – 14 Start Learning Log….cues are mandatory & they should guide you 124 people interested in Galapagos (48 Bennett, 45 Mercer & 31 from Reagan) Zach Moore Allie Bagley Phones in box…muted or off…please & thank you
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view What is artificial selection? What is the evidence for evolution? Homologous structures – similar structures with different functions show signs of evolution from a common ancestor, may be vestigial organs
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Figure 22.14 Mammalian forelimbs: Homologous structures
Human Cat Whale Bat
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view What is artificial selection? What is the evidence for evolution? Homologous structures – similar structures with different functions show signs of evolution from a common ancestor, may be vestigial organs Comparative embryology Pharyngeal gill slits Post-anal tail
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Figure 22.15 Anatomical similarities in vertebrate embryos
Pharyngeal pouches Post-anal tail Chick embryo Human embryo
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view What is artificial selection? What is the evidence for evolution? Homologous structures – similar structures with different functions show signs of evolution from a common ancestor, may be vestigial organs Comparative embryology Pharyngeal gill slits Post-anal tail Molecular biology (e.g. DNA, protein, glycolysis)
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Figure 22.16 Comparison of a protein found in diverse vertebrates
Species Human Rhesus monkey Mouse Chicken Frog Lamprey 14% 54% 69% 87% 95% 100% Percent of Amino Acids That Are Identical to the Amino Acids in a Human Hemoglobin Polypeptide
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view What is artificial selection? What is the evidence for evolution? Homologous structures – similar structures with different functions show signs of evolution from a common ancestor, may be vestigial organs Comparative embryology Pharyngeal gill slits Post-anal tail Molecular biology (e.g. DNA, protein, glycolysis) Biogeography – geographical distribution of species
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Fig. 22.17 Different geographic regions, different mammalian “brands”
Sugar glider AUSTRALIA NORTH AMERICA Flying squirrel
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Chapter 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life
What do you know about evolution? What is evolution? What is paleontology? What was Lamarck’s view? What was Darwin’s view? Summarizing Darwin’s view What is artificial selection? What is the evidence for evolution? Homologous structures Comparative embryology Molecular biology Biogeography – geographical distribution of species Fossils
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Figure 22.18 A transitional fossil linking past and present
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