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Explore the history of Earth's major events, from the emergence of organic compounds to the development of eukaryotic organisms. Learn about key figures like Darwin and the evidence for evolution, including microevolution and macroevolution. Understand causes of microevolution and sources of genetic variation in populations. Delve into patterns of natural selection, steps in speciation, and rates of evolutionary change.
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Evolution Review 2013
History of Major Events • Earth is 6 billion years old • Radiometric Dating: a method to establish the age of materials. Radioactive decay = half life • First organic compounds • Urey Miller experiment were able to produce organic compounds by initiating lightening on water vapor, H2, CH4 and NH3 • Development of first cells– Microsphere and coacervates.
Transition of chemosynthetic, photosynthetic, and aerobic • Chemosynthetic used sulfur for energy– Archaea today • Gave rise to photosynthetic bacteria –used sun as energy source---aerobic respiration produces O2 • Eukaryotic organisms developed through endosymbiosis—chloroplasts and mitochondria • Check events that lead to aerobic life. Why did heterotrophs evolve first?
Modern Evolutionary Theory • People: Explain their contribution on Darwin’s thinking • Darwin • Cuvier • Lyell • Lamark • Wallace • Malthus • Steno
Darwin • Traveled to Galapagos • Studied how animals adapted to environments • Ship: HMS Beagle • Book: On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection • Did Darwin know anything about genetics?
Evidence for evolution • Fossils • Species variation • Anatomy/embryology • This is very incomplete!!!!!! Check your book and the ppt. on Charles Darwin.
Species and populations • Microevolution: change in the collective genetic material of a population • Put in some examples here • Macroevolution: the evolution of a species on a large scale. Effects the entire species • Give examples
Hardy-Weinberg • Genotype frequencies in a population tend to remain the same from generation to generation unless acted o by outside influences. • Conditions for a stable population • No mutation • No immigration or emigration • Pop. Is large • Selection does not occur • Individual mate randomly
Causes of microevolution • Mutation; give example • Gene flow: give example • Genetic Drift: give example • Nonrandom mating: give example • Natural Selection: give example
Variation in a population • Sources: • Mutation: random change in a gene passed to offspring • Recombination: reshuffling of genes during independent assortment and crossing over. • Random pairing of gametes: large number and fetilizes randomly.
Single gene traits: determined by a single gene with two or more alleles Examples • Polygenic traits: influenced by several genes. Examples • Patterns of Natural Selection • Disruptive • Stabilizing • Directional • Be able to draw each type and explain what is happening.
Steps in speciation • A species is a pop. of organisms that can successfully interbreed but cannot breed with other groups. • Geographic isolation results from the separation of population subgroups by geographic barriers. • Geographic isolation may lead to allopatric speciation.
Allopatric speciation: two groups become separated geographically which results in reproductive isolation because of • Genetic drift, • Mutations • Natural selection
Reproductive isolation: results from the separation of population subgroups by barriers to successful breeding. • Reproductive isolation leads to sympatric speciation.
Sympatric speciation: two population become reproductively isolated within the same geographic area. • Each species occupies a different niche • This specialization leads to reproductive isolation.
Rates of Speciation • Gradualism: species undergo small changes at a constant rate. • Punctuated : new species arise abruptly, differ greatly from their ancestors, and then change little over long periods.