Unit 1 - Evolution Notes Dictated
Unit 1 - Evolution Notes Dictated
Evolution definition: And accumulation of inherited genetic changes in a population over time in
response to changing environments
Biology is born out of evolution; without evolution, no biology. Biology assumes organisms
change, and study the ways they change.
The smallest thing that can evolve is a population; it is a population that are subject to
environmental effects.
Darwin did not invent Evolution; he gave us a mechanism, called natural selection.
Darwin
Proposed it in 1859 in his work of the Origin of Species: By means of natural selection.
Darwin took 5 years aboard HMS Beagle, and a 20 in total to write it.
Lamarck's principles: Wrong. He argued for drive toward complexity. Evolution is not driven
toward any One Direction.
1. Multicellular
2. Consumer
3. Ability to move of their own volition
Lamarck's principles:
Darwinian Evolutions key Concepts: Mechanism of evolution is natural selection, with data and
examples.
Natural selection
1. Populations exhibit diversity based on inheritable traits. Every natural population meets the
parameter, as everything can mutate
3. Populations live in environments with limited resources and can reproduce over the carrying
capacity (overreproduce).
Because all members of it population are in competition for limited resources, nature selects
those individuals that are most adapted / fit for that environment.
After these advantageous traits are dispersed through a population, it becomes an adaptation.
Individuals with beneficial inheritable traits leave more offspring therefore the frequency of such
traits increases over time.
Adaptations in post costs as well as benefits. See: Mammals moving: advantageous for
catching prey, but also HUGE energy expenditure.
Darwin was obsessed with diversity of species on Earth and explanation of extinctions
While in class, perpetuated traits are advantageous. However, all advantageous traits also
come with a penalty.
Powers at a cost
Allows us to move and catch prey more easily, but also energy expenditure
Complex movements in higher order animals (birds/mammals)
Coordinated movement of Limbs requires heavy neural pathway Foundation. This means higher
order animals are intolerant of chromosomal change.
As long as the benefits outweighs the cost, nature May select for it.
If the cost outweighs the benefits, nature will likely select against it
Fitness
The more adapted organisms are to their environment the more likely they are to reproduce,
leading to Greater reproductive success.
In a population, there are individuals that are less fits. They still reproduce. These less fit
individuals reproducing give the population diversity.
In the event of environmental change, nature must still have other traits to select from.
All organisms have Fitness. If an embryo has zero Fitness, it would never have survived
embryonic development, and would have perished by a spontaneous abortion (miscarriage)
Natural selection is a mechanism against diversity. As the end result of natural selection is all
organisms display similar traits.
Natural selection is tolerant of diversity, but the degree of Tolerance is dependent on the
intensity of competition
Gradualism
Small and gradual changes accumulate into a large phenotypic differences over large periods of
time.
Opens the gate for speciation
If environment changes, fitness changes as well. If the environment changes, different selective
pressures. The goal is to have enough diversity that the population survives.
Extinction
Species become extinct because they can no longer survive and reproduce in their new
environments.
Extinction can cause the dying population to abandon a niche, allowing other populations to
exploit newly available niches.
Adaptive radiation: The emergence of numerous species from a single ancestral species
introduced to new and diverse ecological niches.
Diversity represents different environments while it's similarities represent the same
environments
Darwin's Tree of Life dictates that all life is a result of descent with modification, known to
Modern biologists as common ancestry.
Modifications depend on the specific selective pressures available at any given time
Don't believe in one universal common ancestor population which all other populations diverge.
Darwin believes that's evolution is a slow, process. Small changes eventually stack into large
phenotypic changes.
Natural selection that chooses the best traits available in the population, not best overall.
Homologous structures: Similar anatomical structures derived from a common ancestor adapted
for different things.
Different species evolved from a common ancestor as different populations are acted upon by
different selective pressures
Sex determination in mammals is polygenic. There is still a range but intersex is not as common
Directional: Was anyone extreme phenotype. To the point of the other one is selected against.
Disruptive: Shift towards both extremes and against the intermediate. Occurs during a transition
between ecosystems (ecotone).
Divergent and convergence evolution
Divergent evolution it dictates that's all similarities are the results of common ancestry
Convergent evolution dictates that similarities can be the result of similar selective pressures
Analogous structures are anatomically different and not the results of a common ancestor.
Example dorsal fin / torpedo shapes between shark / dolphin
Sexual selection the natural selection that increases an animal's ability to attract mates. See
peacocks and lions.
Individuals of one sex are specific in selecting their mates. Generally females are selective sex.
Results in a sexual dimorphism, emails look different from females. Results in difference in
phenotype between males and females through secondary sex characteristics. Example size,
color, ornamentation.
Vestigial structures: Some remnants of an organ which was useful for a previous ancestor
species, which is currently useless but offers no disadvantage
Class 9/30 Microevolution and Beyond
Darwin
Micro Evolution and genotypic change
Gene pool: Collection of all alleles presents in a population at any given time, including
repressed alleles.
Before you can have enough change, you must have genotypic change.
Microevolution and deals in a allele frequency: How often a gamete has an allele.
Sexual reproduction does not change the alleles, it simply shuffles the cards. Always assume a
simple mendelian dominance unless told otherwise.
If allele frequencies change over time, the population is evolving. In any population with two
alleles/genes, p+q=1 where p is the frequency of the dominant and q is the frequency of the
recessive
Bottleneck is caused by sharp reduction in population due to natural disaster, leaves few
survivors behind. Low genetic diversity in overall population.
Founder is caused by one section of the population breaking off and making a new population.
Low genetic diversity in new population.
Class 10/3 Hardy-Weinberg
Hardy Weinberg equation
A population is not evolving when the gene pool is at equilibrium. To be at equilibrium one must
have allele frequencies that do not change.
Hardy Weinberg gives us a point of comparison, to allow us to ascertain information about the
population.
The equation can only be used with a population at equilibrium. As long as the population is at
equilibrium, we can predict allele and genotype frequencies when given any information.
Speciation
Members of the same species can mate to produce a viable, fertile offspring
When enough small changes accumulate in the gene pools of two different populations, they
are eventually unable to produce viable, fertile offspring
Class 10/10 Speciation
Two types: allopatric and sympatric
Punctuated equilibrium is a speciation during which the species evolve very quickly in response
to environmental change, assuming great diversity. Multiple trait changes at once.
Taxonomy/phylogeny
Domain-Eukarya
Kingdom-anamalia
Phylum-chordata
Class-mammalia
Order-primates
Family-hominidae
Genus-homo
Species-sapiens
Phylogeny
Pathogenetic trees depict the line of evolutionary descent from a common ancestor species;
hypothesis based on evidence.
A cladogram is a type of phylogenetic tree based on characteristics. The more related the
species are, the more characteristics they share.