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Evolution (I)
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Alfred Russel Wallace
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“On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life” (1859)
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Darwin’s Theory of Evolution Variation: There is variation among the individuals of most natural populations Inheritance: Some of that variation is inherited Competition: Populations tend to produce more offspring than the environment can support Survival of the Fittest: Those individuals whose traits best adapt them to the environment will survive better and leave more offspring than those with less adaptive traits
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Key forces which influence the evolution of species Environmental changes (e.g. geographic isolation of marsupials) Random factors (e.g. Genetic drift due to the founder effect)
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CONVERGENT EVOLUTION Different species come to resemble each other due to the similarities in their habitats (ecological niches) * *
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Analogousstructures Structures that evolved independently but are similar in their form because of a similar function
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Analogous structure
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Homologousstructures Structures that share the same origin (e.g. ancestral mammalian limb) but serve different function in different species
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DIVERGENT EVOLUTION continued accumulation of differences between or among species, attributable to adaptive radiation * *
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VESTIGIAL ORGAN: no longer useful but still retained A vestigial structure in the skeleton of a baleen whale. The pelvic bones have no apparent function.
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