Theory of Natural Selection
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Transcript Theory of Natural Selection
Evidence of Evolution
Voyage of the Beagle
Charles Darwin’s observations on a voyage
around the world led to new ideas about species
Voyage of the Beagle
Darwin, Wallace, and Natural Selection
In 1858, Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace
independently proposed a new theory, that
natural selection can bring about evolution
Descent with Modification
Darwin compared the modern armadillo with the
extinct glyptodont
Variations in Traits
Darwin observed that variations in traits
influence an individual’s ability to secure
resources – to survive and reproduce
Theory of Natural Selection
Natural selection
• The differential in survival and reproduction
among individuals of a population that vary in
details of their shared traits
• Can lead to increased fitness
Fitness
• An individual’s adaptation to an environment,
measured by its relative genetic contribution to
future generations
Fossil Evidence
Fossils
• Physical evidence of life in the distant past
Found in stacked layers of sedimentary rock
• Younger fossils in more recently deposited layers
• Older fossils underneath, in older layers
Stratification
Fossilization
Interpreting the Fossil Record
The fossil record is incomplete
Favors species with hard parts, dense
populations with wide distribution, and that
persisted a long time
Plate Tectonics Theory
Movements of Earth’s tectonic plates rafted land
masses to new positions
Pangea: First ancient supercontinent
• Gondwana (later southern supercontinent)
Movements had profound impacts on the
directions of life’s evolution
Evidence of Drifting Continents
Evidence for plate tectonics theory
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Distribution of global land masses
Global fossil distribution
Magnetic rocks
Seafloor spreading from mid-oceanic ridges
Drifting Continents
Biogeographical Evidence
Morphological Divergence
Homologous structures: Similar body parts that
became modified differently in different lineages
Evidence of descent from a common ancestor
Comparative Morphological Evidence
Homologous Structures
Analogous Structures
DNA, RNA, and Proteins
Comparisons of DNA, RNA, and proteins reveal
and clarify evolutionary relationships
Processes of Evolution
Rise of the Super Rats
Populations Evolve
Population
• Individuals of the same species in the same area
• Generally the same number and kinds of genes
for the same traits
Gene pool
• All the genes of a population
Variation in Alleles
Individuals who inherit different combinations of
alleles vary in details of one or more traits
Mutations are the original source of new alleles
• Lethal mutations result in death
• Neutral mutations neither help nor hurt
Phenotypic Variation in Populations
Microevolution
Changes in allele frequencies of a population
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Mutation
Natural selection
Genetic drift
Gene flow
Natural Selection
Natural selection
• Differential survival and reproduction among
individuals of a population that show variations in
details of their shared traits (alleles)
Allele frequencies
• Maintained by stabilizing selection
• Shifted by directional or disruptive selection
Modes of Natural Selection
Peppered Moth
Pocket Mice
Stabilizing Selection: Birth Weight
Sexual Selection
Balanced Polymorphism
Genetic Drift
Genetic drift
• Random change in a population’s allele
frequencies over time, due to chance
• Can lead to loss of genetic diversity
Most pronounced in small or inbred populations
• Bottleneck: Drastic reduction in population
• Founder effect: Small founding group
Gene Flow
Gene flow
• Movement of alleles into or out of a population by
immigration or emigration
• Helps keep populations of same species similar
Counters processes that cause populations to
diverge (mutation, natural selection, genetic drift)
Gene Flow Between Oak Populations
Reproductive Isolation
Individuals of a sexually reproducing species
can produce fertile offspring, but are
reproductively isolated
Reproductive isolating mechanisms evolve when
gene flow between populations stops
Divergences may lead to new species
Mechanical Isolation
Behavioral Isolation
Allopatric Speciation
A geographic barrier stops gene flow between
two or more populations of a species
• Example: Isolated continents or archipelagos
Genetic divergence and reproductive isolation
give rise to new species
Allopatric Speciations
An Isolated Archipelago
Patterns of Macroevolution
Coevolution
• Close ecological interactions cause two species
to act as agents of selection upon one another
Extinction
• Irrevocable loss of species
• Mass extinctions and recoveries have occurred
several times in the history of life
• Most species that ever existed are now extinct
Coevolution
Adaptation to What?
Evolutionary adaptation
• Heritable traits that improve an individual’s
chance of surviving and reproducing (under
conditions that prevailed when genes evolved)