1 / 36

DARWIN and WALLACE

DARWIN and WALLACE. DARWIN. -well off. -well educated. -young & energetic. -careful note taker. -lots of time to observe. HMS BEAGLE. HMS Beagle. - 5 year trip around the world. -Darwin as gentleman companion and then as a naturalist.

mmejia
Télécharger la présentation

DARWIN and WALLACE

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. DARWIN and WALLACE

  2. DARWIN -well off -well educated -young & energetic -careful note taker -lots of time to observe

  3. HMS BEAGLE

  4. HMS Beagle. -5 year trip around the world -Darwin as gentleman companion and then as a naturalist -stopped at many places in South America

  5. Travelled down the east coast of South America Noted pattern of life changing as he went south found giant fossil species that resembled current species there

  6. GALAPAGOS ISLANDS -volcanic islands 1600 km from South America -very few land animals present; all of which arrived recently

  7. Each island had mockingbirds with slightly different beaks and feeding habits

  8. Darwin’s Finches: each had different bills & different diets.

  9. The giant tortoises on each island had slightly different shells and ate slightly different plants.

  10. A zoo in Australia has held a 175th birthday party for Harriet the tortoise, one of the world's oldest known living creatures, a Giant Galapagos tortoise. Testing has suggested the giant creature was born around 1830, a few years before Darwin visited the Galapagos archipelago in 1835. Harriet died in 2006.

  11. Darwin back in England -did more research on collected specimens for the next 20 years [1835-1855] -every Royal Navy vessel that landed on the Galapagos was required to collect finches & note where they were shot. -he was afraid of his own theories as they related to the church

  12. warbler finch woodpecker finch tree finches #8 - 13 ground finches # 1 - 6

  13. Woodpecker finch chooses different cactus spine for each job a large cactus spine a small cactus spine

  14. A small population of ground finches have found a new source of food….blood from large birds These are called vampire finches Ground finches with a booby

  15. GALAPAGOS FINCHES -each island has unique finches -finches beaks match their diet -mainland only has one finch -DARWIN thought that diet may have helped select or shape the beaks of the finches

  16. As Darwin thought, and experimented back in England, Alfred Russell Wallace was busy at work during the 1850’s in Brazil Unfortunately, all of his collected materials were destroyed when his boat sank in 1852 Others would have given up, Wallace just went off to Indonesia to start again

  17. WALLACE -not well off -sold specimens he collected mostly “BIRDS OF PARADISE” -careful observer -visited islands

  18. Bird of Paradise worth quite a bit as a preserved specimen

  19. Wallace’s journey

  20. What Wallace observed Sailing 1000km from Java to Bali, saw only hornbills eating large fruit with big seeds After crossing 32km of ocean, at Lombok, saw only cockatoos eating large fruit with big seeds

  21. Remember you can see Lombok from Bali Wallace wondered: why had God had created two such different birds to eat the same large fruit on two islands that were right beside each other? Wallace concluded: the environment had selected the best Asian bird [the hornbill] and the best Australian bird [the cockatoo] to match the same fruit

  22. Wallace’s Line

  23. Darwin and Wallace in 1855

  24. DARWIN / WALLACE Each concluded: -environment somehow shapes species -species vary due to natural selection

  25. NATURAL SELECTION Darwin & Wallace were both influenced by: Malthus – ESSAY ON POPULATIONS KEY IDEA – more births occur than can be supported so only the ‘fit’ survive

  26. WALLACE wrote to DARWIN -they shared similar theories -DARWIN was afraid WALLACE would scoop him -they agreed to publish a joint paper 1855

  27. DARWIN published a book: 1859 “On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.”

  28. Mr. Darwin, sir! The book was greeted with much criticism and ridicule, especially cartoons, although Darwin never mentioned humans at all in his book.

  29. Reaction to “The Origin of Species”

  30. Darwin fled to his country house and would see no visitors Thomas Huxley was a friend who agreed to speak for Darwin. He became known as “Darwin’s Bulldog” because he loved to argue about evolution [with anyone]

  31. There was a famous evolution debateon June 30, 1860 between Huxley and Bishop Wilberforce. Bishop Wilberforce was winning the debate until he strayed into Human Evolution. At some point he challenged Huxley about his ancestry. Huxley responded that “I would rather be descended from an ape than from a pompous ass like you!”. And the audience ended the debate with applause for Huxley. Evolution had won its first trial. It would face many more

  32. Now back to the giraffes….how would Darwin explain the longer necks?

More Related