Chapter 15 - Mechanisms of evolution.

Use of the word theory:

Non scientific use: a theory is, at best, an educated guess. It implies that something is unproven or speculative.

Scientific use: A scientific theory summarizes a group of hypotheses that have been supported with repeated testing and it becomes accepted as a valid explanation of a phenomenon.

Charles Darwin

In 1831, Charles Darwin, a 22-year-old naturalist, accepted a position aboard the ship HMS Beagle that began a voyage around the world; it provided Darwin with many observations.

Prior to Charles Darwin

·  Pre-Darwinian world-view was determined by theological beliefs.

o  The earth is young.

o  Each species was specially created and did not change

o  Variations are imperfections

o  Observations are to substantiate the prevailing worldview.

o  Aristotle and Judeo-Christian viewpoints – “scala natuae”

o  Scientists were also usually theologians

Linneaus (1707-1778)

o  Swedish taxonomist (taxonomy is the science of naming and classifying organisms.

o  He developed a binomial system of nomenclature (two-part names for each species [e.g., Homo sapiens]).

o  Like other taxonomists of his time, Linnaeus believed in the ideas of

a)special creation—each species had an“ideal”structure and function; and

b)fixity of species—each species had a place in thescala naturae, a sequential ladder of life.

Lamarck

•  first to state that descent with modification occurs

•  Proposed inheritance of acquired characteristics

•  he believed that organisms become adapted to their environment.

•  Lamarck mistakenly saw “a desire for perfection” as inherent in all living things

Should be recognized for:

claim of evolution, theorizing about great age of earth, emphasis on adaptation

Charles Lyell

Lyell was a geologist that popularized the idea that earth had been shaped by slow-acting forces that are still at work today. 2 ideas that Darwin took from Lyell’s work:

The earth must be very old (much older than 6000 years)

Many gradual changes over time will yield substantial changes.

Charles Darwin 1809 - 1882

HMS Beagle Sailed in 1831

Darwin was ship’s naturalist

Sailed for 5 years and surveyed coast of South America

Voyage of the HMS Beagle

Plants and animals

Uniquely South American

More closely related to each other than to organisms on other continents

Fossils – uniquely SA

Galapagos Islands

Organisms lived nowhere else on earth

Closely resembled organisms from the mainland

Three major propositions by Darwin

1.  species are not immutable –they change over time

2.  Divergent species share a common ancestor

3.  The mechanism that produces change is natural selection

Natural Selection

Darwin decided that adaptations develop over time; he sought a mechanism by which adaptations might arise.

Natural selection was proposed by both Alfred Russel Wallace and Darwin as a driving mechanism of evolution caused by environmental selection of organisms most fit to reproduce, resulting in adaptation

What is Natural Selection?

1.  Differential success in reproduction

2.  Occurs through interaction between environment and variability in individuals

3.  Product of natural selection is the adaptation of populations of organism to their environment

4.  Because the environment is always changing, there is no perfectly-adapted organism.

5.  There are three preconditions for natural selection.

a.  The members of a population have random but heritable variations.

b.  In a population, many more individuals are produced each generation than the environment can support.

c.  Some individuals have adaptive characteristics that enable them to survive and reproduce better.

6.  There are two consequences of natural selection.

a.  An increasing proportion of individuals in succeeding generations will have the adaptive characteristics.

b.  The result of natural selection is a population adapted to its local environment.

7.  Natural selection can only utilize variations that are randomly provided; therefore there is no directedness or anticipation of future needs.

8.  Extinction occurs whenprevious adaptations are nolonger suitable to a changed environment.

Organisms Struggle to Exist

Malthus proposed that human populations outgrow food supply and death and famine were inevitable and Darwin applied this to all organisms; resources were not sufficient for all members to survive.

Therefore, there is a constant struggle for existence; only certain members survive and reproduce.

Variations

1. In contrast to the previous worldview where imperfections were to be ignored, variations were essential in natural selection.

2. Darwin suspected, but did not have today's evidence, that the occurrence of variation is completely random.
3. New variations are as likely to be harmful as helpful.

4. Variations that make adaptation possible are those that are passed on from generation to generation.
5. Darwin could not state the cause of variations because genetics was not yet established.


Organisms differ in fitness

FITNESS is a measure of an organism’s reproductive success

A polar bear can survive and reproduce in cold climates, it is not adapted to warmer climates

Reproduction is important for evolution, only those who survive to reproduce pass on those advantageous genes

Artificial Selection

Darwin used the power of artificial selection to reinforce natural selection

Organisms Become Adapted

1.  An adaptation is a trait that helps an organism be more suited to its environment.
2. Unrelated organisms living in the same environment often display similar characteristics. (Convergent evolution)
3. Because of differential reproduction, adaptive traits increase in each succeeding generation.

Drawbacks of natural selection

Can only utilize variations that are randomly provided; there is no directedness or anticipation of future needs

Extinctions occur when previous adaptations are no longer suitable to a changed environment

Some subtleties

Population is the smallest unit that can evolve—individuals DO not evolve

Has to be a heritable characteristic

Situational

Examples

Evolution of insecticide resistant insects Evolution of antibiotic resistant bacteria

Evidence of Evolution

Homology

Anatomical homologies

Vestigial organs

Embryologyical homologies

Molecular homologies

Analogous vs. Homologous

Analogous (convergent evolution)

Occurs when two organisms live in such a similar (same) location that over time certain physical characteristics are favored and the two unrelated organisms end up looking very similar:

Ex: Shark and Dolphin

Ex: fusiform body shape in tuna, marlin, penguin, seal

Homologous (divergent evolution)

Occurs when 2 or more organisms share a common ancestor but live in such different environments that they have developed different structures used in different ways

EX: forearm of many vertebrates

Vestigial structures:

Human appendix

Pelvic bone in whales

Eye sockets in blind salamander

Fossils Back Up Evolution

Transitional forms – Fossils that link older forms of an organism to the current form

Darwin predicted it and we have found many.

Achaeopteryx – transition from reptile to bird. Had some reptile characteristics (tail with vertebrae, claws on wing, teeth) Also had bird characteristics feathers, wings, but pectoral girdle was not big enough to attach flying muscles to it. May have glided.

Neil Shubin at Penn State found the Tiktaalik. It’s a transitional fossil showing an organism that bridged the gap from water to land. Front fins were under body (able to support weight) and had the classic vertebrate forearm structure of one large bone, two smaller bone and a bunch of tiny bones

Microevolution

Evolution that occurs within a population = microevolution

Population -- all the members of a single species

Population genetics – studies variations in gene pools

Gene Pool and Allele Review

Gene pool – total of all the alleles in the population

Alleles – chromosome sections that code for specific proteins (traits). You have 2 for every trait. But there may be many more than 2 possibilities in the entire gene pool

5 causes of Microevolution

small gene pool

non random mating

mutation

migration

natural selection

Small Population

A small population is more likely to have a change in allele frequency due to chance

This is called genetic drift

Two situations in the which genetic drift occurs:

Bottleneck effect – disaster which greatly reduces the population. Remaining survivors not representative of original population.

Founder effect – when a few individuals from a large population colonize a new and isolated habitat.

Non Random mating

When sexually reproducing organisms select a mate based on some trait or behavior, evolution will take place as certain traits are selected for a passed on and others are not.

Sexual selection

Natural selection for mating success

Competition amongst males for female mates

Males have ritual displays and battles as well as to attract females

Intrasexual selection is a direct competition for mates among individuals of the same species and gender

Sexual Dimorphism

Distinct physical differences between males and females of the same species (aside from reproductive organs)

Ex:

Male cardinals are red, females grey

Lion has mane, lioness doesn’t

Peacock tail, pea hen no showy tail

Mutation

Mutation creates variation

New genes and new alleles originate only by mutation

Only mutations to sex cells can be passed on

Changes the DNA

Changes amino acid sequence, changes protein, changes fitness, usually makes an individual less fit, but occasionally, more fit

Gene Flow

Any addition of genes from other populations is gene flow.

This is what we would call “migration.”

As we become more of a global community, the human race experiences more and more gene flow.

Natural Selection

Organisms in a population are not equal in our ability to survive and produce offspring.

Thus some will pass their genes on and others will not.

There are several types of natural selection:

Diversifying

Directional

Stabilizing

Types of selection: The effect of selection depending on what is “fit”

Heterozygote advantage

Heterozygotes can have a have a greater fitness

Maintain both alleles in population

Sickle cell anemia

Heterozygotes are protected from the severest effects of malaria and do not develop sickle cell anemia

Five fingered evolution

Remember the 5 things that cause microevolution using your hand:

Pinky is small population size (genetic drift)

Ring finger is non random mating

Middle finger is mutation

Index finger is gene flow (migration)

Thumb is natural selection

Hardy-Weinberg theorem

Describes allele frequencies in a non evolving population.

They remain constant because no matter how many times we shuffle the alleles in a non evolving population, we always get the same ratios

Why do we need Hardy Weinberg?

Provides a base line or comparison

Evolution is a generation-to-generation change in a population’s frequencies of alleles

So if there is no change in allele frequencies, there is no evolution

·  Since allele frequencies are rarely equal, the dominants and recessives are represented by p and q.

·  Frequency of alleles and genotypes

Frequency of alleles:

p + q = 1

·  Suppose the p allele is for insulin production. q allele is for the mutated form where insulin is not produced. All the p and all the q added together is the entire human population.

Frequency of genes:

p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1
freq of freq of freq of

RR Rr rr

5 conditions of Hardy-Weinberg

·  Large population (pinky)

·  Random mating (ring finger)

·  No mutation (middle finger)

·  No migration (index finger)

·  No natural selection (thumb)

If the allele frequencies change over generations, it must be due to one of these five things.

HW equilibrium

Keeping the same allele frequencies over generations is called Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.

A failure to maintain HW equilibrium indicates evolution has occurred.

The pop. size is too small, there was non random mating, there was mutation, there was migration or there was natural selection.