evolution by natural selection

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Evolution By Natural Selection Do Now: 1 st : turn in natural selection lab 2 nd : on notes sheet from yesterday- Place the following organisms into 3 groups, based on their biological characteristics Jellyfish Dog Oak Tree Mustard Plant Yersinia pestis Bacillus anthracis

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Evolution By Natural Selection. Do Now: 1 st : turn in natural selection lab 2 nd : on notes sheet from yesterday- Place the following organisms into 3 groups, based on their biological characteristics JellyfishDogOak Tree Mustard Plant Yersinia pestis Bacillus anthracis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Evolution By Natural Selection

Evolution By Natural SelectionDo Now:

1st: turn in natural selection lab2nd: on notes sheet from yesterday-

Place the following organisms into 3 groups, based on their biological characteristics

Jellyfish Dog Oak TreeMustard Plant Yersinia pestis

Bacillus anthracis

Page 2: Evolution By Natural Selection

Evolution: A Definition• Biological evolution is the

change in the characteristics of a population over time.

Page 3: Evolution By Natural Selection

• Observation: There are 36 different species of cats. (Species = organisms able to reproduce together)

• Question: Where did all of these cats come from?

Page 4: Evolution By Natural Selection

Possible Hypotheses

• Each species of cat arose independently from one another, and it is only a coincidence that they have such similar characteristics.

• All cats are descendants of a single common ancestor. The differences seen in each species are a result of the evolution over time of this one ancestor species.

Page 5: Evolution By Natural Selection

Which Hypothesis is Correct?• Occam’s Razor: The least complex explanation of a

phenomenon is the most likely to be correct.

• However a cat species came to be, the independent development hypothesis requires it to have happened 36 times.

• The evolution hypothesis only requires the development of 1 ancestor species, which then changes over time.

Page 6: Evolution By Natural Selection

Peppered MothsAre the moths with the dark phenotypeeasier to see in the polluted orunpolluted ecosystem?

Page 7: Evolution By Natural Selection

Kettlewell’s Data

• Kettlewell released moths with a variety of phenotypes in 2 locations, one near the industrial city of Birmingham, and the other in the countryside near Dorset.

• Next, he trapped moths on the following days, and recorded the numbers of each phenotype.

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Results?As you might expect,things weren’t so clearcut. For example, doYou think the moth atright is more black ormore white?

Because Kettlewell didall of the classifying andignored the large numberof phenotypes “in between” black and white, his study has beencriticized.

Regardless of those concerns, it has been demonstrated that, as you might expect, darker moths survive better in darker forests.

Page 11: Evolution By Natural Selection

Simulation of Natural Selection I

• http://www6.district125.k12.il.us/~nfischer/Moth/

• Google “peppered moth game” if you want to play later

Page 12: Evolution By Natural Selection

Common Ancestors

• Any 2 species share a common ancestor.

• The more similar they are, the more recently it lived.

Page 13: Evolution By Natural Selection

Evolution is Parsimonious• Parsimonious solutions are less complex and require less

chance than non-parsimonious ones.

• That fact alone however, is not enough to completely support the evolution hypothesis.

• For a solution to be based in science, there must be a logical hypothesis for (and supporting observational evidence for) the mechanism by which something happens.

• In other words, there needs to be evidence of how all of these cats came from 1 ancestor cat species.

Page 14: Evolution By Natural Selection

Natural Selection

• Natural selection is the mechanism by which biological evolution happens.

• We’ll get a good definition in a minute… but first, how it works…

• Natural selection requires 3 conditions:

Page 15: Evolution By Natural Selection

1: Variation• For natural selection to work, there must be a

range of characteristics in a population.

Page 16: Evolution By Natural Selection

2: Differential Mortality

• Some characteristics or variations allow an organism to survive and/or reproduce more than others.

Page 17: Evolution By Natural Selection

3: Heritability

• The characteristics that lead to increased survival and reproduction must be able to be passed on to subsequent generations

Page 18: Evolution By Natural Selection

Definition

• Natural selection is the process by which heritable traits that make it more likely for an organism to survive and successfully reproduce become more common in a population over successive generations.

Page 19: Evolution By Natural Selection

Evidence Natural Selection made 36 Cat Species: 1 - Fossils

Page 20: Evolution By Natural Selection

Evidence Natural

Selection Made 36 Cat Species

2: Genetic Similarities

Page 21: Evolution By Natural Selection

More On Genetic Analysis

Page 22: Evolution By Natural Selection

It’s not just Cats… evolution by natural selection gets the job done every time…

Page 23: Evolution By Natural Selection

Any Evidence for 36 Independent Developments of Cat Species?

• No new cat species has arisen since the domestication of Felis silvestris catus, 10s of thousands of years ago. In other words, we haven’t seen it happen in recorded history.

• Remember the fallacious argument of negative proof?

• We can’t PROVE the Flying Spaghetti Monster didn’t create 36 cat species… but WWFSMD?

Page 24: Evolution By Natural Selection

That’s the Basic Idea• Populations of organisms change over

time, driven by the pressure of natural selection.

• Natural selection has 3 basic requirements.

• Although evolution by natural selection can’t be PROVEN,– It is the most parsimonious explanation

of observed facts.– It is supported by several well-

established lines of observable evidence.– It can be (and has been) used to make

testable predictions.