History of Life and Evolution ppt
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Transcript History of Life and Evolution ppt
History of Life and the
Origin of Species
Mrs. Stewart
Honors biology
Central Magnet School
Standards:
CCSS ELA 9-10.2
I can trace the historical development of the
theory of evolution
I can summarize the evidence for the theory of
evolution
CCSS ELA 9-10.8
I can critique and evaluate competing
evolutionary arguments based on scientific
knowledge, empirical evidence and logical
arguments regarding relevant factors.
Objectives (today, I will…)
Differentiate between spontaneous
generation and biogenesis
Differentiate between Charles Darwin
and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
Choose…
But choose
wisely.
Decide which
partner is the
bird and which
is the cat.
History of Life
Biogenesis:
All living things come from other living
things
Spontaneous Generation:
Living things could arise from nonliving
things
Redi’s experiment
Previous idea: Flies were created from
rotten meat
Redi: Meat kept away from adult flies
would not produce maggots
Spallanzani & Pasteur
Spallanzani – tried to disprove that
microorganisms arose from a “vital
force” in the air
Pasteur – improved spallanzani’s
experiment to eliminate the flaw of “no
air”
Cats
Tell your bird how Pasteur improved upon
Spallanzani’s experiment to disprove
spontaneous generation
Endosymbiosis
Where/how did mitochondria get their own DNA?
How did chloroplasts become so specialized?
Theory of Endosymbiosis:
Aerobic prokaryotes were engulfed by
eukaryotic cells evolved into mitochondria
(which perform aerobic respiration)
Photosynthetic prokaryotes were engulfed by
plant cells and evolved into chloroplasts (where
photosynthesis occurs)
Ch. 15.1 – 15.2
History of
Evolution
Mrs. Stewart
Honors Biology
Central Magnet School
What is Evolution?
Dictionary:
The gradual development/change of something;
especially from a simple to complex form.
Text book:
(In biology) Generally, the process of change by
which new species develop from pre-existing
species over time
Evolution of Dance
Birds
Tell your cat what Evolution means. Give an
example (not one that Mrs. Stewart used)
th
18
Century Ideas
About living species:
All species were permanent and unchanging.
About the Earth:
Earth was only a few thousand years old and unchanging.
th
19
Century Ideas
Uniformitarianism
Idea by Charles Lyell that said geologic processes
happed slowly over time and that some features of
the Earth may take millions of years to form.
Cats
Give your bird an example to support
Lyell’s theory.
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
French Naturalist
1809
Lamarck’s Hypothesis: by selective use or disuse of
organs, organisms acquire or lose certain traits.
These traits could then be passed on to their
offspring.
Lamarck believed over time, this process led to
change in a species.
Lamarck’s Hypothesis
1. Tendency toward perfection - All organisms
have an innate tendency toward complexity and
perfection, so they are continually changing to be
more successful in their environment
2. Use and disuse - Organisms can alter their
bodies/organs by use or disuse
3. Inheritance of acquired traits - Organisms can
pass on those altered body parts/organs to the
offspring
Birds
What did Lamarck get right?
Cats
What did Lamarck get wrong?
Lamarck the Loser
First to develop a hypothesis of
evolution
First to realize organisms adapt to their
environment
But, Behavior has no effect on
inheritable characteristics
Ch. 15.1 – 15.2
History of
Evolution
Mrs. Stewart
Honors Biology
Central Magnet School
Charles Darwin
1809 – 1882
Naturalist – study of nature
and the natural world
Sailed on the HMS Beagle in
1831
Every time the ship docked,
Darwin went ashore to
collect plant and animal
specimens
Darwin’s observations piqued his interest in
the diversity of life he observed.
Darwin even found evidence that suggested
species once present on earth had vanished.
Researchers today speculate that 99.9% of all
species that ever inhabited earth are now
extinct.
Galapagos Islands
The islands were close together, but had very
different climates
Smallest and lowest islands = hot, dry &
barren
Hood Island = sparse vegetation
Higher islands had greater rainfall and a
different assortment of plants/animals
Isabella Island = rich vegetation
Land Tortoise shell shapes could be used to
identify which island it inhabited
Pinta Island Tortoise
What predictions
can
YOU make
observations
can
YOU make
about
the island
about
environment
for
these species of
each
land tortoise?
Hood Island Tortoise
Isabella Island Tortoise
Pinta Island Tortoise
Which island
would you
predict has only
low-lying
vegetation?
Hood Island Tortoise
Isabella Island Tortoise
Darwin’s Idea
Darwin observed that the plants and
animals varied noticeably among the
different Galapagos Islands.
However, Darwin wondered if animals
living on different islands had once
been members of the same species –
originating from the same South
American ancestor
Darwin’s Finches
Darwin observed many different types of
“finch” and noticed several different beak
shapes.
Why?
He began to notice different shaped beaks
were “adaptations” for different food
sources
Religion’s Role
Darwin was a devout Catholic
He knew that his ideas, based on what he observed
would provoke the catholic church
He debated over what to do for 25 years.
Darwin’s Theory –
Descent With Modification
The Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection – 1858
Every species – living or extinct –
descended by reproduction from
preexisting species
AND
Species must be able to change over time
Natural Selection
Mrs. Stewart
Honors biology
Central Magnet School
Review
What was Lamarck’s hypothesis?
Inheritance of acquired traits
What did Darwin believe?
Species changed as environment changed – adaptation
and survival of the fittest
Standards:
CCSS ELA 9-10.2
I can trace the historical development of the
theory of evolution
I can summarize the evidence for the theory of
evolution
CCSS ELA 9-10.8
I can critique and evaluate competing
evolutionary arguments based on scientific
knowledge, empirical evidence and logical
arguments regarding relevant factors.
Objective (Today I will…)
Explain the idea of “natural selection”
and determine “fittest”
Examine how adaptations help
animals survive better
Darwin’s reasoning for
Natural Selection
1. Overproduction – more offspring are produced than
can survive due to competition for resources
2. Genetic Variation – within a population, individuals
have different traits. New traits may appear
spontaneously.
3. Struggle to survive – constant competition may cause
some variations/traits to be advantageous
4. Differential Reproduction – Organisms with the best
adaptations will survive and reproduce, thus the
advantageous adaptations will become most prevalent
in the population.
Evolution by Natural
Selection
Struggle for existence – each member
of a species competes regularly for
food, living space and other necessities
of life.
main needs: Food, water, living
space and ability to reproduce
Who wins?
Think – Pair – Share
How can we describe Natural Selection
in just 4 words?
Survival of the Fittest
How well suited an organism is to it’s environment
Does fittest mean strongest?
Does fittest mean in the best shape?
Fitness – the ability of an individual to survive and
reproduce
The result of adaptations
What determines fitness?
The Environment!
Fitness leads to evolution
Fitness leads to evolution
Peppered Moth evolution
Peppered moth virtual lab
Survival of the Fittest
Fittest – the individuals most capable to survive
and reproduce for multiple generations
The traits selected as the most useful for
survival and reproduction are determined by
the organisms environment
Natural Selection accounts for Descent with
Modification as species become better adapted
to different environments.
Birds
Explain to your cat how the
environment can determine fitness –
use a specific plant or animal as an
example.
(Not one Mrs.
Stewart gave you)
What is a Population?
A group of organisms of the same
species, that live in the same area,
AND that interbreed
Adaptation vs.
Acclimatization
Adaptation - Changes in traits in populations
over time
Example: White moth population becoming
a black moth population after 5 generations.
Acclimatization – individual organism
changes physiologically
Example: growing thicker fur in winter
Adaptations
Any inherited characteristic that increases an
organism’s (and therefore, a populations) ability to
survive and reproduce
Anatomical or structural characteristics
Porcupine quills - protection
Longer necks in giraffes – find food
Physiological processes
How a plant performs photosynthesis
Instinctual Behaviors
Hunting in packs
Living in burrows
Can You…
Differentiate between biogenesis and
spontaneous generation
Differentiate between Charles Darwin
and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
Explain the idea of “natural selection”
and determine “fittest”
Evidence of Evolution
Mrs. Stewart
Honors Biology
Central Magnet School
Standards:
CLE 3210.5.3 – Explain how genetic variation in a
population and changing environmental conditions
are associated with adaptation and the emergence of
new species.
Descent with Modification
Over long periods of time, natural selection
produces organisms with different structures,
niches or occupy different habitats than their
ancestors.
Each living species has descended, with
changes, from other species over time.
Result: species today look/act different from
their ancestors
Common Descent
Look back: Tigers, panthers and cheetahs all
share a common ancestor
Look back further: you will find ancestors that
these cats share with horses, dogs and bats.
Farther back: common ancestors of mammals,
birds, alligators and fishes.
Logic: looking far enough back we should find
the common ancestor for all living things
Common Descent
Homologous &
Analogous
Structures
Fossil
Records
Vestigial
Structures
Evidence
of
Evolution
Molecular
Biology
Comparative
Embryology
Fossil Records
Fossils - preserved
remains of ancient
organisms
Compare
fossils from
older layers
and
younger
layers and
show
changes in
species over
time
Fossil Records
Compare fossils found around the world and we
can infer when and where different organisms
existed.
Fossils also provide evidence about the
environment in which the organism existed and for
which the organism adapted
Transitional
Species
Fossil records
show species
which have
features that are
intermediate
between those of
hypothesized
ancestors and
later descendant
species
Homologous vs. Analogous
Structures
Homologous – refers to structures that share the
same basic structure but may differ greatly in
function
Analogous – refers to structures that vary greatly in
structure but may share the same function
Homologous Body Structures
Homologous Body
Structures
The limbs of reptiles, birds and mammals
(arms, wings, legs and flippers) vary greatly
in function but are all constructed from the
same basic bones.
Analogous
Structures
Vestigial Structures
organs/body parts that were once
used, but by natural or artificial
selection, are no longer necessary
Appendix
Vestigial Organs
Vestigial Organs
Hip bone in a whale
Tailbone in humans
Vestigial Organs
Vestigial Organs
Plica Luminaris = Third Eyelid
Similarities in Embryology
The early stages, or embryos, of many
animals with backbones are very similar.
Does this mean that a human embryo is ever
identical to a fish, or a bird embryo?
NO
But, many embryos look especially similar
during early stages of development.
Fish
Salamander
Tortoise
Chicken
Pig
Man
Comparative Embryology
What do these similarities mean?
The same groups of embryonic cells develop in the
same order and in similar patterns to produce the
tissues and organs of all vertebrates.
All animals go
through this
process
Its at the
blastocoel step
that we differ
Blastopore
could become
mouth or
anus, etc.
Molecular Biology
Using new technology, we can see how many DNA
and RNA sequences organisms share in common
Amino acid sequences used to determine how
closely related different species are.
The number of amino acids that differ from
human hemoglobin
Molecular Biology
Amino Acid Similarities
Which two plants are the most closely related
according to this chart?
Assignment:
Evidence of evolution dry lab activity
packet
Exit Ticket: Socrative.com
Room Number: Stewart 348
Question: How does the environment
determine the “fittest” individual?