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Published byMatthew Kennedy Modified over 5 years ago
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Examples of Evolution How does evolution occur? Natural selection is the mechanism that drives evolution and the environment dictates the direction and amount of change.
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Elements in Natural Selection:
1. All populations have genetic variation. 2. The environment presents challenges to successful reproduction. 3. Individuals that are better able to cope with the challenges presented by their environment tend to leave more offspring than those individuals less suited to the environment do. 4. Individuals tend to produce more offspring than the environment can support, which leads to competition.
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Examples of Natural Selection:
1. Antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria: Bacteria can become resistant through natural selection. For example, the drug rifampin acts by binding to the RNA polymerase preventing transcription and therefore killing the bacterial cell. Through natural selection, a single base change from cytosine to thymine in a gene called rpoB makes the bacteria resistant by preventing rifampin from binding to the polymerase.
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2. Darwin’s Finches: Darwin collected 31 specimens (9 species) of finches while on the Galapagos Island. All were very similar, except for their bills. He suggested that the 9 species evolved from an original ancestral species and that changes occurred as different populations accumulated adaptations to different food sources.
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Darwin’s Finches
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3. Peter and Rosemary Grant (1973) also showed that natural selection influences evolution. Their study showed a relationship between the environment (dry years vs. wet years) and how the availability of food was related to beak size.
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Grant Studies
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Patterns of Evolution:
Divergent evolution – the accumulation of differences between related groups Convergent evolution – the accumulation of similarities between unrelated groups Coevolution – the process by which 2 or more species evolve in response to changes in each other.
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Divergent vs. Convergent
Similar Characteristics
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Coevolution
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Barriers that may isolate two or more closely related groups:
Speciation – the formation of new species as a result of evolution by natural selection; they become so different they can no longer interbreed (reproductive isolation) Geographical isolation – physical barriers such as rivers or mountains separate a population Temporal Isolation – timing which prevents reproduction between a population Behavioral Isolation – differences in courtship or mating behaviors
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Darwin’s Natural Selection:
There are 2 types of worms: worms that eat at night (nocturnal) and worms that eat during the day (diurnal). The birds eat during the day and seem to be eating ONLY the diurnal worms. The nocturnal worms are in their burrows during this time. Each spring when the worms reproduce, they have about 500 babies but only 100 of these 500 ever become old enough to reproduce. What worm has natural selection selected AGAINST it? FOR it? Identify Darwin’s elements of natural selection. Populations have variations. _______________________ Some variations are favorable. _____________________ More offspring are produced than survive. ____________ Those that survive have favorable traits. _____________ A population will change over time. _________________
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