Evolution and The Fossil Record
Evolution and The Fossil Record
Natural Selection
Natural selection, a creative force, is one of the prime mechanisms of evolutionary change. (The other mechanism, a destructive force, is mass extinction.) Charles Darwin, 1859: The Origin of Species by Natural Selection.
Artificial Selection vs. Natural Selection: Dog breeds produced by artificial selection
Age 40
Age 45
Darwins finches: 13 different species evolved from a single ancestor from South America.
The beaks of Darwins finches are adapted to the variety of food types available on the different islands in the Galapagos Islands.
Fratricide among masked boobies. Every living adult killed its sibling. What is the evolutionary advantage?
A blue-footed booby
Frigate Bird: why does the male have this red balloon?
Lions and tigers share a common ancestor, but the hybrids are usually sterile, thus lions and tigers are separate species.
Liger
Equus asinus
Equus caballus
64 chromosomes
62 chromosomes
31 + 32 = 63
share a common ancestor. Their hybrid, the mule, is sterile. So horses and donkeys are separate species.
Speciation, contd
Allopatric speciation: produced by geographic isolation of populations. Natural selection causes an isolated population to adapt to its local environment. Given enough time, and no outside interbreeding, a new species will evolve.
Sources of Variation
Random mutations of DNA >>99.9% are harmful or neutral adaptive mutations are rare Sexual recombination new variants created by mixing of genes you have 4096 direct ancestors going back 12 generations (212)
The Anatomy of a Gene. Helical strands of DNA contain the blueprints for all forms of life.
The DNA molecule contains nitrogenous bases (A,T,C,G) that code for different amino acids, which form proteins.
Evidence of Evolution
Homology Analogous organs or Convergent Evolution (Homoplasy) Vestigial organs Adaptive radiations
Homology
The recognition of common ancestry of features. e.g. all primates have 5 fingers; apes and humans lack a tail; all tetrapods have similar limb bones. Studied by comparative anatomy of living and fossil organisms.
Hominoids
Chimp
Human
Chimp
Gorilla
Prothero, 2007
Analogous features indicate convergent evolution and not common ancestry. A good example are wings.
Vestigial Organs
Organs no longer used show clear evidence of evolutionary change. e.g., pelvic bones of whales, vestiges of former legs e.g., human body hair, a vestige of former fur
Adaptive Radiation
Natural selection can fill a variety of niches starting with a single species. e.g., Darwins finches in the Galapagos Islands, 13 species evolved from one ancestral species e.g., all birds essentially evolved from Archaeopteryx
A page from Darwins notebook with a phylogenetic tree showing adaptive radiation.
Rates of Evolution
Phyletic gradualism - continuous and gradual change over time Punctuated Equilibrium - long periods of stasis punctuated by rapid change, probably associated with a bottleneck in population size.
Stasis
Punctuated Change
Gradualism
Punctuated Equilibrium
Rates of Evolution
Large populations evolve very slowly or almost not at all. Advantageous mutations pass very slowly through a population. Small populations can evolve very rapidly. Advantageous mutations can be passed very quickly through the population.
Evolution in Action
Passing through a bottleneck: Pesticide resistant insects Antibiotic resistant bacteria New Drug-Resistant Superbacteria Found in 3 States (2010)
Bottleneck Effect
An extreme selection event severely reduces population size and changes the composition of the gene pool of the species.
Rates of Evolution
Biologists cannot measure evolutionary rates. They have only the present. Darwin assumed gradual rates. Paleontologists can measure evolutionary rates. They have found punctuated equilibria to be the major pattern in fossil species rather than gradual change.
Microevolution vs Macroevolution
Small changes, such as seen in modern bacteria or beaks in finches, are examples of microevolution. Microevolution leads to new species over time. Large changes, such as the evolution of major features, like wings in birds, or legs in fish, are examples of macroevolution. Macroevolution leads to significant evolutionary change.
Mass Extinctions
Survival of the luckiest? Over geologic time, mass extinctions may subvert the notion of survival of the fittest. Is evolutionary history predictable?
The teaching of evolution in public schools is controversial. Why? Should the teaching of evolution be controversial in colleges and universities?
0%
100%