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Do you think these birds are related? Why or Why Not?

A. Do you think these birds are related? Why or Why Not?. D. C. E. B. What do you think each bird eats? Why do you think that?. Change Over Time. Organisms adapt to suit their environment – they evolve. Who is Darwin?.

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Do you think these birds are related? Why or Why Not?

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  1. A Do you think these birds are related? Why or Why Not? D C E B What do you think each bird eats? Why do you think that?

  2. Change Over Time Organisms adapt to suit their environment – they evolve

  3. Who is Darwin? • Charles Darwin is considered the father of modern evolutionary theory • Darwin’s 5 year voyage as the naturalist on the HMS Beagle helped him develop the theory of how change over time occurs

  4. Figure 15–1 Darwin’s Voyage Section 15-1

  5. They explored South America and the South Pacific, including the now famous Galapagos Islands off the coast of South America • They collected samples of fossils and live specimens for study • The islands had animals that were unique, but they also had species that were similar to those on the mainland • Ex: marine iguanas and tortises

  6. Giant Tortoises of the Galápagos Islands Section 15-1 Pinta Tower Marchena Pinta IslandIntermediate shell James Fernandina Santa Cruz Isabela Santa Fe Hood Island Saddle-backed shell Floreana Hood Isabela Island Dome-shaped shell

  7. DarwinPresentsHisCase • Through his observations abroad, he concluded that naturalvariations or differences occur among individuals of a population • EX: Galapagos Finches

  8. Natural Selection • What is Natural Selection: • Organisms with more favorable traits or variations tend to survive and reproduce; organisms with less favorable traits are less likely to survive

  9. 2 Main Points of Natural Selection • Struggle for existence: competition for territory, food, water, and mates • Survival of the fittest: some organisms are better suited to survive in an environment as a result of adaptations

  10. - Examples of Adaptations • Mimicry: copying the appearance of other species • Camouflage: blending into the environment • Adaptations can take millions to hundreds of years • Bacteria show adaptations in 50 or less years

  11. Mimicry

  12. Camouflage

  13. Before the Industrial Revolution, the white peppered moths were camouflaged better than the black peppered moth in England.

  14. However, the pollution caused by the industrial revolution caused a lot of the trees around England to become a black color. The number of white moths decreased, where the number of black moths increased, this is population change over time

  15. Evidence for Change Over Time • Fossils: by using fossils, scientists can show the sequence of evolution in an organism • Geography: organisms that are similar but live in different parts of the world • Earth has changed over the last 4.6 billion years: Pangaea (the super continent)

  16. Figure 15–14 Geographic Distributionof Living Species Section 15-3 Beaver Beaver Muskrat Beaver andMuskrat Coypu Capybara Coypu andCapybara NORTH AMERICA Muskrat Capybara SOUTH AMERICA Coypu

  17. Evidence for Evolution • Homologous Structures: structures that are similar and seen in different species • Ex: forelimbs of humans/bats

  18. Evidence for Evolution • Vestigial Structures: a body structure that appears to nolonger have a function • Ex: appendix in humans, hipbones in snakes

  19. Vestigial Structures

  20. Evidence for Evolution • Embryology: by studying unborn organisms, we can see structures in common during development in different organisms

  21. Embryology

  22. Embryology

  23. Embryology

  24. Genetic Relationships: DNA comparisons help establish evolutionary relationships between different species

  25. Extra Tidbit of Info Sometimes organisms with close relationships (like symbiosis) evolve together in response to each other’s changes • Madagascar orchid and hawk moth

  26. To reach the nectar of this orchid requires a 30 centimeter (eleven inch) proboscis (tongue) to penetrate the long nectar spur (white arrow).

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