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Chapter 7 Sections 2 and 3
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Section 2 How Does Evolution Occur?
In the early 1800’s scientists figured out that the Earth is older than previously thought Bizarre fossils were found Fossils were found in odd places Seashell fossils found on mountains
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Charles Darwin Took the Beagle voyage in 1831 Had a degree in theology
Dad wanted him to be a doctor but he couldn’t watch surgery, it made him sick
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Charles Darwin Darwin was really interested in studying plants and animals On his 5 year Beagle voyage, he served as a naturalist, a scientist that studies nature He took samples and notes about the plants and animals he saw on the trip
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Natural Selection Darwin’s observations became the foundation for evolution by the mechanism of natural selection Natural selection is also known as survival of the fittest Individuals with favorable traits will survive and pass those traits into the next generation
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Beagle Voyage Darwin’s trip traveled to the Galapagos Islands, formed by volcanoes, off the coast of Ecuador in South America Darwin noticed that finches on the islands were similar but different than the birds on the mainland and other islands
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Beagle Voyage
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Darwin’s Finches Darwin noticed the finches on the islands had different beak shapes and ate different foods
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Finches Darwin thought the finches on the islands originated from finches on the mainland Darwin figured the wind from a storm helped the birds fly to the new islands
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Return to England Darwin used three sources to develop his evolution theory Farmers and breeders Geologists like Charles Lyell Thomas Malthus
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Farmers and Breeders Selective breeding- traits are chosen that are favorable and only individuals with those traits are bred Example: Dogs There are over 150 breeds selective bred from the ancestral canine
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In the wild For these types of changes to happen in the wild, it takes longer Variations in species is due to chance
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Charles Lyell Darwin learned from Lyell that the earth was formed by natural processes over a long period of time Due to fossils and current species, Darwin had already thought changes in populations took a long time as well
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Charles Lyell
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Thomas Malthus Darwin learned humans and other animals can produce more offspring than the food supply will support Starvation and disease will kill off the weak and the strong will survive to reproduce the next generation
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Thomas Malthus
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Increase versus Food Availability
Increase in human population Quantity Increase in food supply Time
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Natural Selction In 1858, Darwin started to collaborate with Alfred Russel Wallace In 1859, Darwin published his research, The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection Darwin believed natural selection is how evolution occurs
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Alfred Russel Wallace
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Natural Selection Overproduction Genetic Variation
Species produce more offspring than will survive to maturity Genetic Variation Individuals are different from each other slightly Some traits will increase chance of survival and reproductive success while other traits will decrease chances
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Natural Selection Struggle to Survive Successful Reproduction
Resources will vary in availability (food and water) Some will be killed while others survive Successful Reproduction Well adapted individuals will reproduce and produce offspring with similar “strong” traits while the weak will not live long enough to reproduce or only produce a few offspring
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More Evidence ’s biologists combine genetic inheritance and Darwin’s theories to explain variance in population Variations are caused by mutations Mutation- change in genes
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Section 3 Natural selection explains how a population changes over TIME. Generation time is the period between the birth of a generation and the birth of the next generation
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Insect Resistance Some insects survive the farmer’s insecticides or poison and survive to produce offspring with the same genes until most of the population is adapted to resist the insecticide
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Peppered Moths Peppered moths have 2 color variations, light and dark
Before the industrial revolution the light moths blended into the trees better and were eaten less by birds and were more abundant in the population After the revolution, pollution made the trees darker and the darker moths were eaten less and more abundant
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Peppered Moths
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Formation of New Species
Separation Part of the population gets separated Mountains, canyon, roads, river Adaptation Environment changes in one area Individuals adapt to that change Division Populations become so different over time they can no longer interbreed and become different species
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