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Historic Context Plato and Aristotle believed that organisms were perfectly formed and adapted to the world Judeo Christian theology believed: –that the world is 6,000 years old –species were created individually Natural Theologians searched for God’s plan through the study of nature`
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Carolus Linnaeus- founder of taxonomy and binomial nomenclature –Clustered similar organisms into categories, he did not assume any evolutionary relationship based on this classification scheme Paleontology developed by Cuvier (1769-1832) –He noticed that species appear and disappear in the fossil record –He did not use this to support evolution, but developed catastrophism
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Principles of Populations Thomas Malthus (1798) published that populations increase faster than environment can handle Capacity to over-reproduce is seen in all species Eventually populations stop increasing in size and reach a steady state (carrying capacity)
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Geology Hutton ( 1795) theory of gradualism that major changes are the result of slow small changes Lyell (1830) geological changes throughout time have been subjected to the same forces Conclusions: –If geological changes are slow, earth is older than 6,000 years old –the slow changes can build and result in profound environmental changes over time
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Relating geological evolution to biological evolution: Theories of biological evolution begin in the late eighteenth century Lamarck was the first to propose a mechanism that related environment to biological changes (1809) –Use and Disuse –Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics
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Darwin Sails on Beagle at 22 Noted that flora and fauna of islands off of SA were more like continental species than those of other islands with similar climate and habitats Contributions of Lyell and Malthus along with his observations lead him to his mechanism for evolution
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Evolution What is evolution? All of the accumulated changes that have occurred over time Darwins definition: Descent with modification Life’s history is a tree with different branches Forks of the tree represent common ancestors Most closely related organisms share common paths on the branching tree
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Darwin used Linnaeus’ taxonomic classification scheme to connect diversity of life Kingdom > phylum > class > order > family > genus > species
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Mechanism : Natural Selection Fact 1: Over-reproduction occurs in nature Fact 2: Populations do not increase exponentially Fact 3: There are limited natural resources (food, shelter) These facts are seen in Malthus’ works on populations
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Inference 1: –struggle for survival ensues Fact 4: Variation exists in populations Fact 5: Much of the variation is heritable –Fact 4 was physically observed. Darwin’s weakness was the 5th fact Inference 2: –Organisms with the best variations survive the struggle for life Inference 3: –Unequal survival of organisms with different variations leads to favorable variations accumulating over time
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Key Concepts What is the raw material necessary for the mechanism of Natural Selection? Heritable variations What is the smallest unit of evolution? Populations Darwin incorporated Lyell’s gradualism into biological evolution combined with Malthus’ observations regarding populations
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Examples of Natural Selection Grants on the island of Daphne Major observed shifts in the frequency of beak sizes over short periods of time Peppered moths (next page) Antibiotic resistance in bacteria How do the genetic variations arise in nature?
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Originally, the vast majority of peppered moths had light colouration, which effectively camouflaged them against the light-coloured trees and lichens upon which they rested.camouflaged However, due to widespread pollution during the Industrial Revolution in England, many of the lichens died out, and the trees which peppered moths rested on became blackened by soot, causing most of the light-coloured moths to die off due to predation.Industrial Revolution soot The dark-coloured moths flourished because of their ability to hide on the darkened trees
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Evidence for Evolution Artificial selection Island biogeography Fossil record Taxonomy Comparative Anatomy Vestigial Structures Comparative Embryology Molecular Biology
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Island Biogeography
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Fossil Record
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Taxonomy a)Based on physical similarities b)Based on DNA c)Based on fossil record
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Comparative anatomy
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Eye sockets in blind salamanders Vestigial structures
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Modern whales traces their ancestry to land mammals that evolved into species progressively more adapted to water.
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Comparative embryology
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Molecular Biology
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