aim: how are species related? do now: why do scientists develop theories? are theories facts? why or...

167
AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Upload: allen-russell

Post on 29-Dec-2015

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How are species related?

• DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Page 2: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Scientific theory of the origin of life

Page 3: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Francisco Redi:disproved abiogenesis

Page 4: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Louis Pasteur

Page 5: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Louis Pasteur

• Pasteurization: boils liquids to kill microbes

• He found microscopic organisms live in the air and water surrounding us

Page 6: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

1920’s Alexander Oparin and John Haldane: postulated conditions of

early earth

Page 7: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Theory of primordial Soup• Hypothesized the early conditions of earth• Boiling oceans, volcanic eruptions, lightning

storms• Atmospheric gases methane (CH4),

ammonia (NH3), hydrogen (H2), and water (H2O).

• Energy sources electric current through lightning storms and sun’s UV light

• Early earth’s conditions interacted to form amino acids and small nucleic acids

Page 8: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

1953 Stanley Miller and Harold Urey

Page 9: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Miller and Urey

• Actually created a closed system simulating early earth conditions

• Observed small simple organic compounds were formed– Amino acids

• Supports primordial soup hypothesis

Page 10: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

From amino acids to the protocell

• Amino acids combines to form proteins

• Proteins evolved into RNA

• RNA into DNA

• Somehow cell membranes were synthesized it is still unclear how

Page 11: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

How did the first types of cells develop?

• Small organic compounds combine to create some types of membrane surrounding molecules and nucleic acid

• This was called a protocell

Page 12: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

First cells

• Prokaryotes: no nucleus

• Most likely archaebacteria

Page 13: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

How then did we go from single celled prokaryotes to

eukaryotes?

Page 14: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Lynn Margulus: endosymbiont theory

• 1960’s explains how eukaryotic cells arose

• Eukaryotic cells evolved from symbiotic relationships with prokaryotic cells

• Evidence is seen in the DNA of both chloroplasts and mitochondria of eukaryotes which has more similarities to prokaryotic DNA and not eukaryotic

Page 15: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 16: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Alternative theory of origin of life: Deep sea vents

• Life originated in the hydrothermal volcanic vents in the deep sea

• Chemosynthesis: used the digestion of living things to make food

• Photosynthesis uses light• Chemosynthesis uses

molecules

Page 17: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Assessment

• In your own words explain the scientific explanation of the origin of life

Page 18: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

AIM: What are some pieces of evidence for AIM: What are some pieces of evidence for evolution?evolution?

DO NOW: In your own words explain the DO NOW: In your own words explain the scientific explanation of the origin of life.scientific explanation of the origin of life.

Homework: Textbook Read pages 423-426 Homework: Textbook Read pages 423-426 questions 3 and 4 pg 430questions 3 and 4 pg 430

Page 19: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Organic Evolution

Page 20: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Organic Evolution

• The central idea of biological evolution is that all life on Earth shares a common ancestor, just as you and your cousins share a common grandmother.

• Biological evolution, simply put, is descent with modification.

• Small-scale evolution (changes in gene frequency in a population from one generation to the next)

• Basically offspring displays different traits than parents• Large-scale evolution (the descent of different species

from a common ancestor over many generations).

Page 21: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Organic Evolutiona) Changes in the genetic characteristics of a

population over generations

b) Genetic changes alter:

proteins produced by organism

c) Changes in proteins affect:

biochemistry, structure, appearance, reproduction, development,

behavior, disease resistance, etc, etc.

Page 22: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How do scientists determine common ancestry?

• Do NOW: 1- take out mondays homework Text pg 383 RC page 385 question 2

• 2- Take out Darwin’s finches handout

• 3- EXPLAIN HOW each island has a different species of finch bird

• HOMEWORK: 387 Reading Check. Page 389 question 2

Page 23: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Darwin’s descent with modification

• Each generation shows a slight variation from the prior

• Successful variations remain in the gene pool

• Unsuccessful variations are removed

Page 24: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Family Tree Diagramsa) used to show probable

evolutionary relationships

b) some interpretations

c) multiple species can evolve from a single ancestor

d) many species have become extinct

Page 25: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Evolution

• Change over time

• Natural selection vs Artificial Selection

• Natural selection: environmental conditions are the selecting agents

• Artificial selection: humans are the selecting agents

Page 26: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Thursday 5/10/12

• AIM: how is evolution seen through history?

• DO NOW: What do genes code for and how are genes related to descent with modification?

Page 27: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Evidence for EvolutionI. Fossils

show structural changes

II. Comparative Sciences• result from common ancestry

• the greater the similarity, the closer the evolutionary relationship and the more recent the common ancestor

• III. The geological record• IV. Biogeography (Pangea)

Page 28: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Comparative Studies looks for Similarities

Between Species

1. Cytology

2. Anatomy (structure)

3. Development embryology

4. Biochemistry

Page 29: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Cytology

a) cells with similar organelles appear in virtually all species

b) similarities in cell structure suggest that all organisms may have evolved from a single ancestor

Page 30: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Comparative anatomy

• Compares the physical structures of organisms within different species– Homologous structures– Analogous Structures– Vestigial

Page 31: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Homologous Structuresa) structures in different

species that are truly similar and develop in the same way

b) ex: vertebrate forelimbs

c) result from common ancestry

d) may now be used for different purposes

Page 32: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Vestigial Structures (Vestiges)a) useless structures “left over” from

ancestors

b) ex: snakes have small leg bones inherited from their lizard ancestors

c) human vestiges include:• appendix• coccyx (tail bones)• tonsils

Page 33: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 34: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Analogous structures

• Similar in function but not structure

• Gives evolutionary information about the natural environment the organisms were exposed to

• Does not give common ancestry

• Ex: wing of butterfly (chitin)– Wing of bat (bones)

Page 35: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 36: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

What is the closet common ancestor of species I and N?

Page 37: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How do scientists determine common ancestry?• DO NOW: The study of homologous structures in mature

organisms provides evidence for the evolutionary relationships among certain groups of organisms. Which field of study includes this evidence of evolution?

1- comparative cytology 2- biochemistry

3- geology 4- comparative anatomy

Homework: Textbook Read pages 426-428. Questions 10-13 page 445

Page 38: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 39: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Comparative Embryologya) different species go through

similar stages of early development

Studies the embryological development of organisms

Page 40: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

ComparativeBiochemistry

a) different species have many of the same genes (DNA sequences) and produce similar proteins

b) provide the most precise information for determining evolutionary relationships

Page 41: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Comparing DNA Sequences For A Specific Protein

Species #1: ATC CTA GCC TTT AAA

Species #2: ATC CTT GCC TAT AAA

Species #3: ATC CTA GCC TTT AAA

Species #4: ATT CTT GCG TAT AAA

1. Which two species are most closely related?

Answer: #1 and #3

2. Species #3 is _______closely related to species #4 than it is to species #2

Answer: less

Page 42: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How do fossils provide evidence for evolution?

• DO NOW: What are homologous structures? How do they give evidence to a common ancestor?

Page 43: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Fossil Evidence for Evolution

Fossils are:

• naturally preserved remains of dead organisms

• show structural changes resulting from evolution

Page 44: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Fossils are found in:

• 1. Sedimentary Rock

• 2. Burgess shale

• 3. Ice

• 4. Tar

• 5. Amber

Page 45: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 46: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 47: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Types of Fossils1. Complete organisms Molds and casts

can be preserved in ice, tar or amber

2. Partial remains (ex: skeleton)

3. Imprints or trace fossilsimpressions left by organism

4. Petrified fossilsgradual absorption of minerals turns

the remains into a stone like material

Page 48: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Fossil Samples

Page 49: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• Trace fossils • Mold and cast

Page 50: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• Petrified fossils • Replacement

Page 51: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• Amber • Frozen

Page 52: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Fossil Formation• Sedimentary Rock • Burgess Shale

Page 53: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Friday 5/18/12

• AIM: how does the geological time scale create a timeline for the origin of life

• DO NOW:In your own words explain how fossils give us insight to common ancestry.

• HOMEWORK: Textbook pages 441-443 questions 1-8. WRITE OUT THE QUESTION FOLLOWED BY THE ANSWER

Page 54: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Determining The Age of Fossils Relative dating:

1. Rock Layer Positionsin undisturbed layers of sedimentary rock

the law of superposition

the deeper the layer, the older the rock (& the older & simpler the fossils)

Page 55: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

2. Index Fossils

a) The age of these fossils is known

b) Other fossils found in same layer are the same age

Page 56: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

The fossils found in layer B resemble the fossils found in layer A. This similarity suggests that

• 1-the fossils in layer B were formed before the fossils in layer A

• 2-modern forms of life may have evolved from earlier forms of life

• 3- vertebrate fossils are only found in sediments

• 4-the fossils in layer A must be more complex than those in layer B

Page 57: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 58: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• Explanation: These fossils demonstrate gradualism, the theory on the time frame of evolution that states that species gradually change over time. Since the fossils are found in different layers of sedimentary rock, the older layer contains species that evolved into newer species with some changes in the newer layer of rock.

Page 59: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• SPECIATION• develop of a new

species from a previously existing species

Page 60: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Gradualism vs Punctuated equilibrium

• Both processes are referring to the development of new species caused by natural selection

• In gradualism slight changes in each generation lead to a longer, slower speciation process

• In punctuated equilibrium an extreme environmental change caused a rapid shift in the gene pool leading to a quick speciation process

Page 61: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

3. Radioactive Dating of Fossils1. All living organisms maintain small of amounts

of radioisotopes (ex: Carbon 14)

2. After death, radioisotopes change into non-radioactive “decay” products

3. Ratio of decay product to radioisotope increases over time and can be used to estimate fossil’s age

4. Half life: the amount of time it takes for half of the atoms of a radioactive element to decay

Page 62: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

If the half-life of carbon-14 is 5800 years, how old is this specimen after 3 half lives?

5,800 yrs 11,600 yrs 17,400 yrs

Page 63: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Half Lives Radioisotope Decay Products

O 2000 grams O

1 1000 grams 1000 grams

2 500 grams 1500 grams

3 250 grams 1750 grams

Page 64: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

The geological time scale

• Derived from the examination of fossils

• Explains major geological and biological events in the earths history

Page 65: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Divides into 4 major eras

• Precambrian Era: Life beginsautotrophic prokaryote eukaryotes multicellular eukaryotes

• Paleozoic Era: Cambrian explosion: ancestors of most animal groups.

• Mesozoic Era: Dinosaurs. K-T boundary

• Cenozoic Era: Mammals. Humans

Page 66: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Extinction

• Each era ended with mass extinction

• Extinction: all individuals within a species dies forever!!!!– The species is never seen again in evolutionary

history

Page 67: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Conclusions Based on Fossil Record

1. Earth is about 4.5 Billion old

2. First organisms were bacteria and evolved about 3.2 Billion years ago

3. Biodiversity (the variety of different species) has increased

4. Organisms have become more complex

5. Most species became extinct

6. Life first evolved in the water, land organisms evolved more recently

Page 68: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Adaptation to EnvironmentBecause organisms with superior traits produce more offspring than organisms with inferior traits the next generation will have…

a) a higher % of superior characteristics and a lower % of inferior characteristics and

b) be better suited to it’s environment

Page 69: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How does an entire new species evolve from a parent species?

• DO NOW: Handout. Observe the pictures. Explain what is happening from picture 1-5. Which individuals survive and explain WHY.

• Homework: page 453 Reading check

• Exam Friday

Page 70: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

If the earth’s history (4.5 Billion Years) was compressed into 1 day

• 12:00:01 AM - formation of the earth

• 7:00 AM – life begins (prokaryotic bacteria)

• 2:00 PM –first eukaryotic organisms

• 6:30 PM – first multicellular organisms

• 10:00 PM – first land organisms

• 11:59: 58 PM – humans evolve

Page 71: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• If you were trying to determine the age of a fossil, would you rather use relative or radiometric dating? Why or why not?

Page 72: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How does an entire new species evolve from a parent species?

• DO NOW: What are the different pieces of evidence for evolution?

• What are the 2 mechanisms of evolution?

Page 73: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Review

• The fossil record

• Comparative Sciences

• The geological time scale

• Biogeography

Page 74: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• How does the biogeographical location of a species give evidence for evolution?

Page 75: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Biogeography

• Looks at the location of species and their environment

• Pangea: the supercontinent

• Plate tectonics

• Species found in similar climates all over the world have similar characterisitcs

Page 76: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

What is speciation?

Page 77: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Speciation• The evolution of two or

more species from a common ancestor

Important example:

the Evolution of Finches on the Galapagos islands

Page 78: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 79: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Peppered Moths

• Before Industrial Revolution

• After Industrial Revolution

Page 80: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

2. Air pollution caused soot to accumulate in major cities

3. In polluted areas, light colored moths were more likely to be eaten by birds

4. Moths evolved from mostly light to mostly dark color in a short period

Page 81: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Comparing Gene FrequenciesWhy are these gene frequencies changing?

“A” increases chances of survival and is more likely to be passed on to offspring

Page 82: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Assessment

Page 83: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 84: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Adaptations

• adaptation in biology is a trait with a current functional role in the life history of an organism that is maintained and evolved by means of natural selection.

• Adaptations usually occur because a gene mutates or changes by accident

• Structural adaptations• Behavioral adaptations

Page 85: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Mimicry

Page 86: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Mimicry

• One species looks or acts like a different species in order to increase survival

Page 87: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

3 Steps in Speciation

Geographic Isolation

Adaptive Radiation

Reproductive Isolation

Page 88: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

#1-Geographic IsolationAncestral species is split up into separate populations by physical barriers that prevent interbreeding

Physical Barriers include:

mountains, rivers, deserts, bodies of water

Page 89: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 90: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

#2-Adaptive RadiationIsolated populations begin to evolve in different directions due to:

A. Natural Selection(they adapt to different environments)

B. Genetic Drift(random events)

Page 91: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Pd 7pd 2 Monday Friday

Page 92: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Genetic DriftChanges in a population resulting from random events like:

1. Founder Effectinitial differences between groups founder

population is majority

2. Different Mutations occur in each group

3. Sexual Reproduction produces different combinations in each group

4. Accidental Deaths

Page 94: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Genetic drift Founder effect

Page 95: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Genetic drift: Founder Effect

• When a small part of a population moves to a new locale, or when the population is reduced to a small size because of some environmental change,

• the genes of the "founders" are the majority

• EX: Polydactyl (6 fingers) Amish people

Page 96: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Genetic drift: bottleneck effect

Page 97: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

#3-Reproductive Isolationa) Groups have become so different that they

can no longer interbreed if reunited

b) May result from differences in anatomy, behavior, body chemistry,mating season, chromosome content

c) Isolated groups are now considered to be separate species

Page 98: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

The graph below shows changes in the populations of two species that interact only with each other over a

period of time. In a complete sentence describes the two species.

A

B

Page 99: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Monday 5/7/12• AIM: How does evolution work?

• DO NOW: If you were a hawk looking for food, which of the rabbits would you dive for and why?

Page 100: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

HOMEWORK

• Read 382-383. RC on 383. Page 385 q 2

Page 101: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• How does competition cause a shift in the gene pool?– Variation within a species causes different

methods of competition– The individuals with successful adaptations will

survive and reproduce passing the successful trait to offspring

Page 102: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

List in order the scientists who helped develop the scientific theory

of the origin of life

Page 103: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Origin of Life

• Primordial Soup

• Amino acids and small nucleic acids

• Protocell

• Anaerobic prokaryote

• Aerobic prokaryote

• Single celled Eukaryote

• Multicelled eukaryotes

Page 104: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

How are the mitochondria and chloroplasts similar to prokaryotes?

Large organellesDouble membranes

Have DNAReproduce as needed

Use oxygen

Page 105: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

How did the earth become biodiverse?

Page 106: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• Evolution is the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient ancestors.

• Evolution is responsible for both the remarkable similarities we see across all life and the amazing diversity of that life — but exactly how does it work?

Page 108: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Lamarck’s Theory (Use and Disuse)1) 1st major theory of evolution

2) Lamarck believed that:

a) evolution occurs in response to “need”

b) acquired characteristics could be passed on

ex 1) if you learn a lot, you’ll have smarter kids

ex 2) if you use an organ it will be larger in offspring, if you don’t it will shrink

3) Experiments showed that Lamarck was wrong

Page 109: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Use and disuse: Giraffe necks are long because they use them

Page 110: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How did the earth become so biodiverse?

• DO NOW: 1- Regents review book read page 144-top of 145. In your own words, what is organic evolution?

2- Read pages 151-top 152. List and briefly describe the three modifications to the theory of evolution.

Homework:Regents Review book page 370 questions 15 and 16. page 382 question 41

Page 111: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Thursday 5/3/12

• AIM: What are the major concepts that helped Darwin develop his Theory of evolution by natural selection?

• DO NOW: Copy the side board and fill in the boxes

• HOMEWORK:Text page 381 Reading check and page 385 questions 1 and 2

Page 112: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Charles Darwin: 1809-1882

• Proposed a mechanism for biodiversity

• From 1831 to 1836 Darwin served as naturalist aboard the H.M.S. Beagle

• Visited places around the world

• Studied plants and animals everywhere he went

Page 113: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 114: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 115: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 116: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

The Father of Evolution

• I have called this principle, by whicheach slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term Natural Selection.

                         —Charles Darwin from "The Origin of Species“

• November 24, 1859

Page 117: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

How did Charles Darwin develop his Theory?

Page 118: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 119: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Darwin’s observations

• Specifically he paid close attention to the finch birds on each island

• He looked at their beaks• He determined that each finch had a different beak

shaped specifically for the food which was available to them

• He also noticed that finches on the Galapagos resembled finches in similar environments in other parts of the world

Page 120: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Darwin’s observations

• Overproduciton

• Competition

• Variation

• Survival of the fittest

Page 121: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Thursday 3/25/10• AIM: How did Darwin develop his theory of

evolution by Natural Selection?

• Homework: RRB page 373 question 22. Page 369 questions 13 and 14

DO NOW:the cactus

warbler & wood pecker finch

All live on one island.

Which of these finches is least

likely to compete with the

Other two?

Page 122: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Darwin’s Theory (Natural Selection)

Overproduction Struggle for Existence

CompetitionInherited Variation

Natural Selection

• • Survival of the fittest

Adaptation to Environment

Page 123: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Overproduction

• Species produce many more offspring than environment can support

• Population size is limited by:

space, food supply, disease, predators, etc.

Page 124: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Struggle for Existence

• Overproduction of offspring creates competition for survival between the members of the species

Page 125: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Survival of the fittest

• Fitness: refers to physical or behavioral characteristic that helps survival

• The most fit individuals are those capable of getting the food, shelter, females etc.

Page 126: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Friday 5/4/12

• AIM: how does nature choose fitness?

• DO NOW: In your own words, explain how competition causes survival of the fittest.

Page 127: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• Overproduction causes competition– There are too many individuals– The environment cannot maintain

• Individual variation causes different methods of survival– The variation with the greatest chance of survival is

said to be the fittest– These individuals survive and reproduce passing the

fit trait to their offspring– Over a period of time this shifts the observed

phenotype in the population (evolution)– NATURE CHOOSES FITNESS

Page 128: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

It is important to note• If Nature drastically changes, the definition

of fitness may change– Ex: Himalayan Rabbits

Page 129: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Inherited Variations• All populations have variations

that can be passed to offspring

• New variations can arise spontaneously and may be harmful or beneficial

• Weakness in Darwin’s Theory:

failure to account for the sources of variation

Page 130: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Natural Selection (Survival of the Fittest)

• In the “struggle for existence” between members of a species, the ones with the best “adaptations” for their particular environment (the “fittest”) are most likely to survive and reproduce

• “Adaptations” are inherited characteristics which improve the chances of survival and / or reproduction

Page 131: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Darwin was afraid of the skepticism• Because of the strong religious beliefs of his time

Darwin did not want to use the word “evolution”

• He called his observations Descent with modification– Current day species descended from ancestral species– Natural selection is the mechanism for descent with

modification (changes in observed characterisitcs in a species over a period of time)

• The more characteristics in common, the closer the ancestor

Page 132: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Click on: Watch Darwin Video

• Darwin | American Museum of Natural History

Page 133: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection

• In a varied population, Nature chooses which traits are best fit for survival.

• As Nature changes, new variants become fit so over a long period of time there is a shift in observed characteristics of the population

Page 134: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Why was Darwin’s Theory of Natural selection incomplete?

Page 135: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Darwin had no idea how variation occurred

• Gregor Mendel, Hugo deVries and Thomus Hunt Morgan were all geneticists who helped figure out the source of variation.

• Genetic Recombination: crossing over during gamete formation

• Genetic Mutation: random changes in gene

Page 136: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Selecting agents

• Factors that choose fitness– Ex: temperature, predators, pH, habitat, water

availability

Page 137: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Evolution

• Natural selection– Nature is the

determining factor

• Artificial selection– Humans are the

selecting factors

Page 138: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Modern (Synthetic) Theory3 Components

#1. Darwin’s Theory of Natural Selection

( he was correct, but his explanations were incomplete)

#2. An Explanation of the Sources of Inherited Variations

Genetic recombination (meiosis) and mutation

#3. Population Genetics

Page 139: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Sources of Inherited Variation#1 Mutations

a) random changes in genes

b) generally harmful and recessive

c) if most mutations are harmful, how can they contribute to improvements in a species?

d) natural selection preserves good mutations while eliminating harmful ones

Page 140: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

#2 Genetic Recombination

a) Homologous chromosomes swap information during Prophase 1 of meiosis

b) refers to inherited variations resulting from sexual reproduction

b) sexual reproduction creates variety through:

meiosis, fertilization & crossing over

Page 141: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Genetic Variety and Extinction

• The greater the genetic variety within a species the greater the chance that some can survive in a changed environment.

• If the environment changes, the definition of fitness may change

• Ex: Peppered moths in Manchester England

Page 142: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Peppered Moths

• Before Industrial Revolution

• After Industrial Revolution

Page 143: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Mechanisms for evolution

• Punctuated equilibrium

• Gradualism

Page 144: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Go to evidence for evolution

Page 145: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How is evolution in action in current day species?

• DO NOW: In your own words explain the greatest chance of variation within a species

• In your own words explain how fossils give us insight to common ancestry.

Page 146: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Microevolution vs Macroevolution

Micorevolution

• Looks at change in gene pool of a population

• Shows a shift in the observed traits within a specific population

Macroevoultion

• Looks at the major changes within the entire history of life

• Studies the origin of life or new species developments

• Mostly seen in the fossil record

Page 147: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Population Geneticsa) The study of changes in the genetic

characteristics of entire populations

b) used to study the rate of evolution

c) Gene Frequencythe % of one particular gene out of all the genes for one particular trait in a population

d) Gene poolall of the genes for all of the

characteristics in a population

Page 148: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Comparing Gene FrequenciesWhy are these gene frequencies changing?

“A” increases chances of survival and is more likely to be passed on to offspring

Page 149: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Conditions that Conditions that alter gene % stabilize gene%

1. Mutations

2. Natural Selection(unequal survival rates)

3. Non-random mating(unequal mating opportunities)

4. Small Population Size

5. Migration (organisms enter or leave the population)

1. No Mutations or balanced rates of mutation

2. Equal survival rates for all genotypes

3. Random mating (equal mating opportunities)

4. Large population size

5. No migration

Page 150: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Factors that Affect the Rate of Evolution

Page 151: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

#1 Rate of Environmental Change **

if rate of environmental change increases, rate of evolution must increase

#2 Time Between Generations

as TBG increases, capacity for rapid evolution decreases

#3 Method of Reproduction

sexual reproduction increases capacity for rapid evolution

#4 Competition Within Species

as competition increases, evolution rate increases

Page 152: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Two Theories About the Rate of Evolution1. Gradualism

species evolve slowly and steadily(traditionalists like Darwin believe in gradualism)

2. Punctuated Equilibriumspecies may remain relatively stable for many generations and then change dramatically in a short period

Both theories may be correct:some species have evolved gradually while

others may have evolved in abrupt spurts

Page 153: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Which type of evolution rate is represented in each graph?

Page 154: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

1. Coevolutionwhen the evolution of one species is strongly

influenced by the evolution of anotherExample: insects and flowering plants

2. Divergent Evolutionwhen species or populations evolve in different

directions because of adaptation to different environmentsExample: black bear and polar bear

3. Convergent Evolutionwhen unrelated species evolve similar characteristics

because they are adapting to similar environments Example: polar bear and artic fox

Page 155: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Which pattern of evolution is shown by each

picture?

Page 156: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How is evolution in effect today?

• DO NOW: List at least 2 things that would cause a shift in the gene frequency.

Page 157: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Artificial Selection

When humans have a strong influence on the evolution of another species

Humans choose fitness

shift gene frequency and may cause speciation

Page 158: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Selective breeding

• Humans choose organisms with desired characteristics and breed them

Page 159: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Ex: #1-Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria

1) when penicillin was first used it killed over 99% of bacteria exposed to it

2) some bacteria contain a gene which makes them resistant to penicillin

3) resistant bacteria survive use of penicillin and pass their resistance on to offspring

4) many bacteria are now resistant to penicillin and other antibiotics

5) antibiotics have been overused

Page 160: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?
Page 161: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Ex.#2- Industrial Melanism in Urban Moths

1. Before industrialization, most city moths were light in color because dark moths were more easily seen by bird predators

Page 162: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Ex.#3-Resistance to DDT1. When first used, this insecticide killed

almost all exposed insects

2. A small % of insects were genetically resistant and survived use of DDT

3. Resistant insects reproduced passing on their resistance to offspring

4. DDT resistance is now widespread

Page 163: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

What has caused an increase in DDT resistant mosquitoes?

Page 165: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Human Immunodeficiency Virus

• Once it enters the body, it infects White blood cells

• It uses the white blood cell to make more viruses

• The new viruses then infect more cells• Certain medications can prevent the HIV

virus from replicating so it cannot infect any new cells

Page 166: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

Resistance

• HIV is a very sophisticated virus

• It has mutated (changed) and created variation that are resistant to medicine

Page 167: AIM: How are species related? DO NOW: Why do scientists develop theories? Are theories facts? Why or why not?

• AIM: How do scientists classify species?

• DO NOW: If you were a scientist exploring unchartered land and you came across 2 new “animals” how would you determine their relatedness?