1 / 38

Chapter 16.3 and 16.4

Chapter 16.3 and 16.4. 16.3 Darwin Presents His Case 16.4 Evidence for Evolution. 16.3: Evolution by Natural Selection. Under what conditions does Natural Selection occur ?. Evolution by Natural Selection. The Struggle for Existence More organisms are produced than can actually survive.

gaetan
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 16.3 and 16.4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 16.3 and 16.4 16.3 Darwin Presents His Case 16.4 Evidence for Evolution

  2. 16.3: Evolution by Natural Selection • Under what conditions does Natural Selection occur?

  3. Evolution by Natural Selection • The Struggle for Existence • More organisms are produced than can actually survive. • Leads to competition within the species

  4. Evolution by Natural Selection • Variation and Adaptation • Any heritable characteristic that increases an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in its environment is called an adaptation. • Those best adapted to the environment with survive more often and reproduce. • Their offspring will then have those same traits. • Species will eventually acquire those traits in general.

  5. Evolution by Natural Selection • Survival of the Fittest • Fitness: • how well an organism can survive and reproduce in its environment. • The most well adapted organisms in the environment are “most fit”.

  6. Evolution by Natural Selection • Natural Selection • Under what conditions does Natural Selection occur? • similar to Artificial Selection, but nature itself is imposing the force, selecting for or against certain traits as being favorable. • occurs in any situation in which more individuals are born than can survive… • Struggle for Existence • there is natural heritable variation… • Variation and Adaptation • there is variable fitness among individuals • Survival of the Fittest

  7. Common Descent • What does Darwin’s mechanism for evolution suggest about living and extinct species?

  8. Common Descent • Successful species can evolve into new species. • Descent with Modification • living species are descended, with modification, from common ancestors. • Deep Time gave enough time for natural selection to act.

  9. Common Descent • What does Darwin’s mechanism for evolution suggest about living and extinct species? • According to the Principle of Common Descent, all species –living and extinct- are descended from ancient common ancestors. • A single “tree of life,” then, links all living things.

  10. Common Descent • Tree of Life with Common Ancestry

  11. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • How does the distribution of species support evolution?

  12. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Biogeography • How does the distribution of species support evolution? • Patterns in the distribution of living and fossil species tell us how modern organisms evolved from their ancestors.

  13. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Biogeography • study of where organisms live now and where they and their ancestors lived in the past. • Two distinct pattern • 1. Closely related species differentiate in slightly different climates. • Ex: Finches and Tortoises on the Galapagos Islands • 2. Very distantly related species develop similarities in similar environments. • Ex: Flightless birds of South America, Africa and Australia

  14. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • The Age of Earth and Fossils • How do fossils support evolution?

  15. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • The Age of Earth and Fossils • How do fossils support evolution? • Many recently discovered fossils form series that trace the evolution of modern species from extinct ancestors. • Ex: Fig 16-13 • Evolution of whales from ancient land mammals. • Others include: • connections between dinosaurs and birds as well as fish and four-legged land animals.

  16. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Comparing Anatomy and Embryology • How do homologous structures and embryology support evolution?

  17. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Comparing Anatomy and Embryology • How do homologous structures and embryology support evolution? • According to evolutionary theory, organisms that share homologous structures have descended, with modification, from a common ancestor.

  18. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Homologous Structures • Structures that are shared by related species and that have been inherited from a common ancestor. • Ex: • Fig 16-14 • Homologous Limb Bones

  19. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Front limbs of reptiles and birds are more similar to each other then either is to the front limbs of an amphibian or mammal. • Reptiles and birds have a more recent common ancestor

  20. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Note: *Analogous Structures • Bat wing and Fly wing • same function, different structure • unrelated • Analogous Structure • Bat wing and Horse leg • different function, similar (bone) structure • related • Homologous Structure • Common descent is common structure, not common function.

  21. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Vestigial Structures • Physical structures present, but not used or selected for/against • typically just a trace or vestige of what it once was • Ex: hipbones of whales and dolphins • remnants of pelvic bones in dolphins’ ancestors

  22. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Embryology • Similar patterns of embryological development provide further evidence that organisms have descended from a common ancestor.

  23. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Genetics and Molecular Biology • What evidence of evolution comes from molecular biology?

  24. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Genetics and Molecular Biology • What evidence of evolution comes from molecular biology? • The universal genetic code and homologous molecules provide evidence of common descent.

  25. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Life’s Common Genetic Code • Different species that are closely related • more similarities in DNA • Different species that are distantly related • less similarities in DNA • Fig 16-16

  26. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Testing Natural Selection • What does recent research on the Galapagos finches show about natural selection?

  27. 16.4: Evidence of Evolution • Testing Natural Selection • What does recent research on the Galapagos finches show about natural selection? • Natural selection takes place in wild finch populations frequently, and sometimes rapidly. • Variation within a species increases the likelihood of the species’ adapting to and surviving environmental change.

  28. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • What happens in the process of natural selection?

  29. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • Why do organisms with greater fitness generally leave more offspring than organisms that are less fit?

  30. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • How are natural selection and artificial selection similar? Different?

  31. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • Why were Hutton’s and Lyell’s ideas important to Darwin?

  32. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • What do evolutionary trees show?

  33. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • What does a tree of life imply about all species living and extinct?

  34. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • What is Biogeography

  35. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • Why do species in very different places sometimes share similar structures?

  36. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • Whay are fossils important evident for evolution?

  37. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • How do vestigial structures provide evidence for evolution?

  38. Chapter 16.3-16.4 Assessment • Explain the differences between homologous and analogous structures. Which are more important to evolutionary biologists? Why?

More Related