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EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION Evolutionary Theories
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LAMARCK Developed two theories of evolution: Law of Use and Disuse: the more a part is used, the stronger it becomes Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics: theory stating that useful traits developed during a lifetime are passed on to offspring
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EXAMPLES
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Children of cyclists inherit the strong muscles of their parents
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WEISMAN Disproved Lamarck’s theory that acquired traits could be inherited by cutting off the tails of mice then mating them RESULT: offspring of tailless mice were always born with normal length tails
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MALTHUS Believed that human population increased geometrically (2, 4, 8, 16) Food production increased arithmetically (1, 2, 3, 4) RESULT: millions of people must die to keep a balance between the need/supply of food
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DARWIN Background Information: Traveled for five years aboard the HMS Beagle Made significant discoveries by studying finches on the Galapagos Islands RESULT: noticed that species on island resembled mainland species, but had adapted to different regions
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THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION Nature acts as a selecting agent of an organism’s traits Organisms better adapted to the environment survive and reproduce more successfully than organisms that are not as well adapted Overall theme: traits that help an organism survive in a changing environment are passed on to offspring
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DARWIN’S MAIN IDEAS Overproduction: a population generally produces more offspring than can survive in an environment
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COMPETITION Definition: there is a struggle between organisms for space, food, water, light, minerals, and other limited resources
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VARIATION Definition: members of a population show differences in traits that make certain individuals better adapted to survive Types of variations—differences in size, structure, color, etc.
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NATURAL SELECTION Some variations are more helpful than others—there is a natural selection against organisms that cannot adapt Organisms that cannot adapt die
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SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST Applies to those individuals that have variations that enable them to live and reproduce
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INHERITANCE OF VARIATIONS Organisms with more helpful variations are more likely to survive and reproduce, passing on variations to offspring
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EVOLUTION OF NEW SPECIES Variations accumulate over long periods of time Eventually, there are so many variations, a new species evolves
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