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Ch. 15 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
Unit 5 Evolution Ch. 15 Darwin’s Theory of Evolution
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The Puzzle of Life’s Diversity
Evolution - modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms (change over time) Theory - a well-supported, testable explanation of phenomena that have occurred in the natural world
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Voyage of the HMS Beagle
1831 Charles Darwin contributed most to our understanding of evolution He made observations & collected evidence that led him to propose a hypothesis about the way life changes over time.
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Voyage of the Beagle That hypothesis, now supported by a large amount of evidence, has become the Theory of evolution
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Darwin’s Observations
Darwin collected the preserved remains of ancient organisms - Fossils Some of these fossils resembled organisms that were still alive Others looked unlike any creature ever seen
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Darwin’s Observations
The Galapagos Islands influenced Darwin the most He observed that the characteristics of animals & plants varied among the different Islands.
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Darwin’s Observations
Each island had a different climate although they were very close. He studied tortoises. Each tortoise’s shell had a different shape depending on which island it came from. He wondered if the animals living on different islands were once related….
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Views before Darwin Earth was created only a few thousand years ago.
Since creation, neither earth nor its species had changed Darwin was influenced by several individuals.
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An Ancient, Changing Earth
Hutton & Lyell helped scientists recognize that Earth is millions of years old. They also noted that the processes that changed Earth in the past are the same processes that are changing Earth now.
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Lamarck’s Evolution Hypothesis
The year that Darwin was born, Lamarck published his hypothesis He proposed that by selective use or disuse of organs, organisms acquired or lost certain traits during their lifetime Over time, this process led to change in a species
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Lamarck’s Explanation
Tendency toward perfecton Use and Disuse Inheritance of Acquired traits
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Population Growth English economist, Malthus, published a book, noting that babies were being born faster than people were dying He stated that if the human population continued to grow unchecked, sooner or later there would be insufficient living space & food for everyone
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Darwin Presents His Case
In 1859, Darwin published the results of his work in a book, On the Origin of Species. In his book, he proposed a mechanism for evolution called natural selection. He stated that evolution has been taking place for millions of years, & continues in all living things
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Darwin Presents His Case
Species on Earth today descended from ancestral animals in various habitats. Heritable variation- differences that are passed from parents to offspring. Variations were thought to be unimportant.
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Inherited Variation & Artificial Selection
Artificial selection - nature provided the variation, & humans selected those variations that they found useful. It has produced diverse plants & animals by selectively breeding for different traits.
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Evolution by Natural Selection
Struggle for existence - the members of each species compete regularly to obtain food, living space, & other necessities of life Predators that are faster & better at catching prey are more likely to survive
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Evolution by Natural Selection
Fitness - the ability of the organism to survive & reproduce in its specific environ. Fitness is the result of adaptations
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Evolution by Natural Selection
Adaptation - any inherited characteristic that increases an organisms’ chance of survival Successful adaptations allow organisms to become better suited to their environ. & thus better able to survive
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Evolution by Natural Selection
Individuals that are better suited to their environ., with adaptations that enable fitness, survive & reproduce most successfully - Survival of the Fittest
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Evolution by Natural Selection
Since it is similar to artificial selection, Darwin referred to survival of the fittest as - Natural Selection In both AS & NS, only certain individuals of a population produce new individuals
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Evolution by Natural Selection
However, in NS, the traits being selected, & therefore, increasing over time, contribute to an organism’s fitness NS takes place without human control or direction
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Evolution by Natural Selection
NS results in changes in the inherited characteristics of a population, that increase a species’ fitness in its environ. Over time, NS produces organisms that have different structures, & occupy different habitats
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Evolution by Natural Selection
As a result, species today look different from their ancestors Each living species has descended, with changes, from other species over time - Descent with Modification
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Evolution by Natural Selection
Descent with modification also implies that all living organisms are related to each other Common descent - all species (living & extinct) were derived from common ancestors
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Evidence of Evolution Darwin argued that living things have been evolving on Earth for millions of years Evidence of this could be found: in the fossil record, the geographical distribution of living species, homologous structures of living organisms, & similarities in early development
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Evidence of Evolution The Fossil Record:
Darwin noticed that the sizes, shapes, & varieties of related organisms preserved in the fossil record, changed over time
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Evidence of Evolution Geographic Distribution of Living Species:
Darwin realized that similar animals in different locations were the product of different lines of evolutionary descent
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Evidence of Evolution Homologous Body Structures:
Homologous structures - structures that have different mature forms but develop from the same embryonic tissues Not all homologous structures serve important functions Organs of many animals are so reduced in size that they are just vestiges, or traces, of homologous organs
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Homologous Structures
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Evidence of Evolution Homologous Body Structures:
Vestigial organs - may resemble miniature legs, tails, or other structures, a trace of a homologous structure
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Evidence of Evolution Similarities in Early Development:
The early stages or embryos, of many animals with backbones are very similar
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