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The Macroevolutionary Puzzle
Chapter 18
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Fossils and the Great Deluge
Fossils of seashells have been found in rock layers high in the mountains How did they get there? Initial explanation was that they had been deposited during the biblical flood
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Evidence of Past Life 1700s Excavations unearthed similar fossil sequences in distant places Scholars began to view these findings as evidence of the connection between Earth history and the history of life
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What Do Fossils Tell Us? As a result of mutations, natural selection, and drift, each species is a mosaic of ancestral and novel traits All species that ever evolved are related to one another by way of descent
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Macroevolution The large-scale patterns, trends, and rates of change among families and other more inclusive groups of species
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Fossils Recognizable evidence of ancient life
Fossilized hard parts (most common) Trace fossils (indirect evidence)
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Fossilization Organism becomes buried in ash or sediments
Rapid burial and a lack of oxygen aid in preservation The organic remains become infused with metal and mineral ions
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Stratification Fossils are found in sedimentary rock
This type of rock is formed in layers In general, layers closest to the top were formed most recently
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Radiometric Dating parent isotope in newly formed rock
after one half-lives after two half-lives
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Geologic Time Scale Archean eon (oldest interval)
Proterozoic eon Paleozoic era Mesozoic era Cenozoic era (most recent) Boundaries based on abrupt transitions in fossil record Correspond to mass extinctions
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Record Is Incomplete Fossils have been found for about 250,000 species
Most species weren’t preserved Record is biased toward the most accessible regions
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Continental Drift Idea that the continents were once joined and have since “drifted” apart Initially based on the shapes Wegener refined the hypothesis and named the theoretical supercontinent Pangea
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Changing Land Masses 420 mya 260 mya 65 mya 10 mya
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Evidence of Movement Wegener cited evidence from glacial deposits and fossils Later was discovered that magnetic orientations in ancient rocks do not align with the magnetic poles Discovery of seafloor spreading provided a possible mechanism
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Plate Tectonics Earth’s crust is fractured into plates
Movement of plates is driven by upwelling of molten rock at mid-oceanic ridges As seafloor spreads, older rock is forced down into trenches
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Forces of Change crustal margin of one plate being thrust under margin of another plate mid-oceanic range plumes of molten material
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Comparative Morphology
Comparing body forms and structures of major lineages Guiding principle: When it comes to introducing change in morphology, evolution tends to follow the path of least resistance
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Morphological Divergence
Change from the body form of a common ancestor Produces homologous structures that may serve different functions
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Morphological Divergence
1 2 3 Morphological Divergence PTEROSAUR 4 1 2 CHICKEN 3 STEM REPTILE 2 3 PENGUIN 1 2 3 4 1 5 2 PORPOISE 4 3 5 1 2 BAT 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 HUMAN 5
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Morphological Convergence
Individuals of different lineages evolve in similar ways under similar environmental pressures Produces analogous structures that serve similar functions
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Comparative Development
Each animal or plant proceeds through a series of changes in form Similarities in these stages may be clues to evolutionary relationships Mutations that disrupt a key stage of development are selected against
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Altering Developmental Programs
Some mutations shift a step in a way that natural selection favors Small changes at key steps may bring about major differences Insertion of transposons or gene mutations
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Development of Larkspurs
Two closely related species have different petal morphology They attract different pollinators side view front view D. decorum flower side view front view D. nudicaule flower
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Development of Larkspurs
Petal difference arises from a change in the rate of petal development 6 D. decorum 4 Petal length (millimeters) 2 D. nudicaule 10 20 40 Days (after onset of meiosis)
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Similar Vertebrate Embryos
Alterations that disrupted early development have been selected against FISH REPTILE BIRD MAMMAL
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Similar Vertebrate Embryos
Aortic arches Adult shark Early human embryo Two-chambered heart Certain veins
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Developmental Changes
Changes in the onset, rate, or time of completion of development steps can cause allometric changes Adult forms that retain juvenile features
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Proportional Changes in Skull
Chimpanzee Human
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Comparative Biochemistry
Kinds and numbers of biochemical traits that species share is a clue to how closely they are related Can compare DNA, RNA, or proteins More similarity means species are more closely related
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Comparing Proteins Compare amino acid sequence of proteins produced by the same gene Human cytochrome c (a protein) Identical amino acids in chimpanzee protein Chicken protein differs by 18 amino acids Yeast protein differs by 56
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Sequence Conservation
Cytochrome c functions in electron transport Deficits in this vital protein would be lethal Long sequences are identical in wheat, yeast, and a primate
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Sequence Conservation
Yeast Wheat Primate
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Nucleic Acid Comparison
Use single-stranded DNA or RNA Hybrid molecules are created, then heated The more heat required to break hybrid, the more closely related the species
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Molecular Clock Assumption : “Ticks” (neutral mutations) occur at a constant rate Count the number of differences to estimate time of divergence
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Taxonomy Field of biology concerned with identifying, naming, and classifying species Somewhat subjective Information about species can be interpreted differently
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Binomial System Devised by Carl von Linne
Each species has a two-part Latin name First part is generic Second part is specific name
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Higher Taxa Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Inclusive groupings meant to reflect relationships among species
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Phylogeny The scientific study of evolutionary relationships among species Practical applications Allows predictions about the needs or weaknesses of one species on the basis of its known relationship to another
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A Cladogram shark mammal crocodile bird feathers fur lungs heart
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Five-Kingdom Scheme Proposed in 1969 by Robert Whittaker Monera
Protista Fungi Plantae Animalia
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Three-Domain Classification
Favored by microbiologists EUBACTERIA ARCHAEBACTERIA EUKARYOTES
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Six-Kingdom Scheme EUBACTERIA ARCHAEBACTERIA PROTISTA FUNGI PLANTAE
ANIMALIA
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Transitional Forms Dromaeosaurus Archaeopteryx
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