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Charles Darwin

Charles Darwin Was Darwin the First? Darwin was not the first to present the concept of evolution Word first appeared in 1647 Ancient Greeks inferred that species had descended from a common ancestor Darwin referred to evolution as “descent with modification”

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Charles Darwin

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  1. Charles Darwin

  2. Was Darwin the First? • Darwin was not the first to present the concept of evolution • Word first appeared in 1647 • Ancient Greeks inferred that species had descended from a common ancestor • Darwin referred to evolution as “descent with modification” • Explained it as the differential survival of organisms following their naturally occurring genetic variation • Natural Selection

  3. Early Influences on Darwin • Charles Lyell – geologist • Proposed that plant and animal species had arisen, developed variations over time and then became extinct • Also believed that earth’s physical landscape had changed over time • Thomas Malthus – proposed that populations outgrew their food supplies, causing competition between organisms and a struggle for one species to survive against another • Applied theory to humans, Darwin applied to all animal species

  4. Galapagos Islands • Darwin’s trip on the Beagle stopped in the Galapagos • Contained endemic species, not found anywhere else on earth • The species there looked similar to mainland species • But somehow specialized to their particular environment • proposed that changes were dependent on the environment

  5. Sequence • 1st: Adaptations  traits occur within organisms and allow them to be more successful in the environment • Darwin reasoned that the importance of these adaptations was to insure the survival of reproduction of the species • Successful adaptations help organisms to both survive and reproduce, so these adaptations are passed on to future generations • Natural Selection is the mechanism that explains how changes occur within a population with favorable variations for that particular environment surviving, reproducing and passing these variations on to the next generation • (environments are constantly changing)

  6. Sequence • 2nd Speciation – organisms on the Galapagos Islands had become geographically separated from one another • Produced reproductive isolation so that there is no interbreeding between organisms of same species • separates the gene pools of the populations • Darwin theorized that within a populations of species, adaptations would arise because of reproductive isolation and would develop adaptations specific to their particular environment over time • Eventually this would lead to new species evolving on the different islands • Which is what was observed

  7. Reproductive Isolation • All begins when a group becomes reproductively isolated from the rest • May be geographic, temporal or behavioral • It is most obvious in distant islands, such as the Galapagos or Hawaiian island • Mountains, rivers, lakes and other natural barriers can also geographically separate populations that once belonged to the same species

  8. Types of Reproductive Isolations • Temporal isolation occurs when there is a time difference between two species • Such as one species of flower opening up for pollination in the morning and another at night • Behavorial isolation occurs when the behavior of one species does not match another • One mating song for one bird is not recognized by another • Geographic isolation is the most common method of separating two populations of a species • Depends on the animal involved as to what is needed to separate it

  9. Finches • Classic example of speciation is the 13 species of finches on the Galapagos Islands • Each species, descended with modifications, from an ancestral species • Today, the different species of finches on the island have distinct habitats, diets and behaviors depending on the current climate conditions • Which determines what food is available to the birds

  10. Darwin’s Book • The Origin of Species – Presents Darwin’s theory (1859) • Has undergone modification and expansion and is now supported by studies in genetics and molecular biology

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