EVOLUTION BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION Ch. 10 & 15.
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Transcript of EVOLUTION BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION Ch. 10 & 15.
![Page 1: EVOLUTION BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION Ch. 10 & 15.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022070407/56649e105503460f94afb9ae/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
EVOLUTION BY MEANS OF NATURAL
SELECTIONCh. 10 & 15
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1. What adaptations does this organism have?2. How did these adaptations evolve?3. How do they enable the organism to survive in its environment?
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1. What adaptations does this organism have?2. How did these adaptations evolve?3. How do they enable the organism to survive in its environment?
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1. What adaptations does this organism have?2. How did these adaptations evolve?3. How do they enable the organism to survive in its environment?
They have long legs and neck, long, tough, prehensile tongue, and leathery mouth for food gathering. Their coloration is protective. They are tall with good eyesight for watchfulness. Giraffes have high blood pressure (240/160) for pumping blood to the brain. Long neck for reaching its food source (leaves)
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The Peppered Moth
2 variations of Moths: light and dark Prior to the industrial revolution –
white was favored Post-industrial revolution – black
(peppered) became more common. Why? How do predators and
environments drive evolution?
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The Industrial Revolution polluted the environment, raining soot down on the countryside. As a result,
white moths became highly visible on the now blackened tree trunks.
Black moths such as the peppered moth (which
had previously been quite rare), suddenly had a
competitive advantage. They were well
camouflaged on black tree trunks, and their
numbers grew exponentially. By the
early twentieth century, they were the dominant moth form in polluted
areas of the UK.
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EVOLUTION BY MEANS OF NATURAL
SELECTION5 Principles
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1. Variation All species have variations Variation is the raw material
for natural selection
Ex: Variations in giraffes
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2. Struggle for Existence Organisms produce more offspring
than can survive. The environment produces struggles
organisms must surpass to survive
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3. Only some survive to reproduce
Some are better able to survive and reproduce (pass on their genes)
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4. Natural selection results in genetic change
Each generation contains an increased proportion of individuals with traits that promote survival and reproduction.
What are some alleles that a successful giraffe might have?
Neck length Leg length
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5. Species adapt to their environment
Selection makes a population better suited to it’s environment.
The environment determines the direction of genetic change.
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What drives the Natural Selection?
*When is a mutation
a ‘good’ mutation
?
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Mimicry and
Coloration
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Driving Force of Evolution:Competition
Limiting factors – any condition of the environment that limits the size of a population
Carrying capacity – The number of organisms that can be supported by a particular ecosystem
Overpopulation - the condition of having a population so dense as to cause environmental deterioration, an impaired quality of life, or a population crash
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RAPID GROWTH “Pyramid”Rapid, Slow or Negative Population Growth?
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SLOW GROWTH “Boxy”“Pear Shaped” “Middle Bulge”Rapid, Slow or Negative Population Growth?
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Slow vs Fast Which is Fast, which is Slow Growth?
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Fast -1930 to Negative 1999Rapid, Slow or Negative Population Growth?
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Symbiosis
A close, long-term association between two or more species.
3 types: Mutualism – all participating organisms
benefit Commensalism – one species benefits,
the other is unharmed Parasitism – one species benefits, the
other is harmed (usually not killed – why?)
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Factors Affecting Population Changes
Birth Rate Death Rate*usually determine the size of the
base, but also affected by Migration Immigration- movement INTO a
population (migrant workers/child bearing age)
Emigration- movement OUT of a population
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Evidence of Evolution
Fossils Bones, casts, footprints, amber, ice
Homologous structures Comparative embryology Vestigial structures Biochemical (DNA and amino acids)
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~3.5 Bill yrs Oldest fossils/prok
Cyanobacteria
Endosymbiosis
Land Plants, Animals
200,000- Homo Sapiens (11:59:30)
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Review timelines lab assignment and completed timelines in the classroom NOTE: 1 Meter stick = 1 Billion Years
4.6 Billion (Age of Earth) = ? 10 cm = ?..........1 cm = ?.........1 mm = 1 million
years
Evolutionary Timelines
LAB: Textbook…
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Opening of ‘adaptive zones’ – allowed for new species to develop
Mass Extinction
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Earth’s Geologic History
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Anthropoids:Monkeys, Apes, Humans~45mya Africa/Asia
Hominoids: Apes, Humans~23-25 mya
Hominids: Humans & ancestors~6-7mya
PROSIMIANS-
“before
primates”
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Advanced brain Eyes forward- stereoscopic vision/depth
perception Color vision Acute hearing Dental formula- same #, type,
arrangement of teeth Long slender limbs/rotate freely at
hips/shoulders 5 flexible digits with flattened nails/not
claws Opposable thumbs Complex social behaviors Usually 1 offspring at a time; longer
parental care
Characteristics of Primates
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Human Evolution:Australopithecines Homo habilis Homo erectus Homo sapiens
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The remains or evidence of any creature or plant that once lived on
the Earth.
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Fossils
Fossils are often found in sedimentary rock, which is formed from layers of silt and sand covering dead organisms.
The oldest are found on the lowest layers, youngest in the upper layers
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Fossils in Amber(Hardened Tree Sap)
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Homologous Structures
Similar structure and anatomical position (but not necessarily the
same function) in different organisms
suggesting a common ancestry
or evolutionary origin
(e.g. wings of bats and arms of humans are homologous).
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How Many Neck Vertebrae?
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Comparative Embryologythe more closely related any two species are,
the more similar their development
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Vestigial Structuresstructures or organs that seem
to serve no useful function
Organisms having vestigial structures probably share a common ancestry with organisms in which the homologous structure is functional
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Biochemical/DNA Evidence The closer the DNA sequences of 2
organisms are, the more closely related they are. Ex. Humans and chimps have DNA
that is 99% identical
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Dating the Age of Fossils
Carbon-14 dating is a way of determining the age of certain archeological artifacts of a biological origin up to about 60,000 years old. It is used in dating things such as bone, cloth, wood and plant fibers that were created in the relatively recent past by human activities.
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This Carbon 14 combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide,
which plants take in during
photosynthesis
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Animals and People eat the plants and take in the C14. We have a set amount of C12 in us, but the amount of C14 changes
while we live.
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Once we die, the amount of C14 decreases
(by half in 5,700 years!!)
but the amount of C12 in us
stays constant (It is a STABLE
isotope). So the RATIO C14 to C12 changes
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C14 can be used to date
any fossil up to about 60,000
years old…why the limit?
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Driving Force of Evolution:Competition
Limiting factors – any condition of the environment that limits the size of a population
Carrying capacity – The number of organisms that can be supported by a particular ecosystem
Overpopulation - the condition of having a population so dense as to cause environmental deterioration, an impaired quality of life, or a population crash
![Page 51: EVOLUTION BY MEANS OF NATURAL SELECTION Ch. 10 & 15.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022070407/56649e105503460f94afb9ae/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
Opening of ‘adaptive zones’ – allowed for new species to develop
3. Mass Extinction
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4. Earth’s Geologic History
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6th Mass Extinction
Mass Extinction Event – YouTube 9.19
Permian Mass Extinction 5.06
Permian Methane Explosion 5.56