T. A. Blakelock Grade 11 Biology Evolution Name: Period: Class: 1 UNIT 2 EVOLUTION A. THE ORIGIN OF LIFE 1. The Early Earth a. the earth was formed about ___________ billion years ago b. it was _________, volcanic and bombarded by particles & __________ rays from space c. it took about ____________ million years to settle down 2. Early Life factor a. Factors needed for early life What was available on the early Earth _____, _____, _____ and _____, were in the atmosphere; Basic organic molecules in the lab, adding __________ & a ____________ to these gases in a Miller-Urey apparatus will result in __________ & other molecules of life certain types of ____________ converts ___________ Organizing basic organic molecules Energy source carbon-based molecules to _____________ ones at hydrothermal vents _____________ energy; _________________ energy provide lots of energy ____________________ will spontaneously form Protective capsule ______________________ which are double layered membranes Reproductive molecule __________ can reproduce without any enzymes because of an effect called _________________ b. Threats to early life Threat strong UV LIGHT – no ozone [DNA can only reproduce with enzymes] How early life coped by living in the ocean _________________ stops UV light use deep sea vents as source of If they avoid UV light, how do they get enough energy __________________ therefore early life has to be ________________________ EXTREME TEMPERATURES – lots of volcanoes DESSICATION – low atmospheric pressure so air very dry 3. Significant events in early life water ________________ temperature changes although it remains at temperatures over _________ water is _________________ see Timeline 2 3 4.0 by 3.0 by 2.0 by prokaryote with __________ membranes _______ abundant in the atmosphere 0.0 1.0 by endosymbiotic life _____________ lifeforms with __________ the first __________ life forms endosymbiotic life with ___________ 600 my 500 my 400 my 300 my 200 my 100 my 0.0 ___________ on land early dinosaurs _________ appear _________ invertebrates first _________ appear first __________ _______ ________fishes __________ invade land ___________ appear early __________ first ________ ___________ __________ invade land __________ fish in seas 4 4. Mass extinctions WHEN? WHAT? WHY? _______ million years ago trilobites, brachiopods, molluscs and echinoderms. _______ million years ago Echinoderms, trilobites, nautiloids but not as severe as the last one _______ million years ago _____% of all species vanished climate change, in this case a global _________, was mostly in the sea and lakes an important factor _______ million years ago _____% of all marine species were lost _______ million years ago sponges, cephalopods, brachiopods, insects and many vertebrate groups _______ million years ago ____% of all species including the dinosaurs, many fishes and many plants either died out completely or suffered heavy losses change in _______ level occurred at this time, sea levels ____________ rapidly & the beginning of the ___________ fluctuations in sea-level, a change in ocean _________ and __________ activity plus climate change climate change seem to be important and, in particular, an increase in _____________ a giant _____________ crashing into the earth, severely disrupting the earth's ecosystem or ________________, climate change, environmental pollution B. Types of Fossils and Their Formation INTRODUCTION: A fossil is any evidence of a __________________ organism. This includes casts, molds, footprints, track ways & feeding traces. Ordinarily, only the _______________ parts of organisms are preserved (for example, the __________ of invertebrates, & the _________ or __________ of vertebrates). One of the keys to preservation is the absence of _______ & the presence of _________. I. Body Fossils - actual ____________ or body parts of an organism are preserved, whether altered or not. a. Unaltered Remains -fossils which have undergone little or no change in ____________ and _______________. -these are quite ________ as conditions to form them seldom occur 1. Encrustations -_____________ minerals in water form a thin crust on whatever lies in it. When we dissolve away the encrustation, ________________________ This is usually __________________; Can study how organisms ____________________ 5 2. Amber Entombment -insects may become trapped in ________, which may harden into amber. We get original ___________________ We may be able to extract ___________________ If the insect has bitten a _________________________________________ 3. Refrigeration -during the ______________ animals became trapped in ice. This preserves lots of __________________ From this we may extract ______________________________ b. Altered Remains As sediments become compressed by the __________ of overlying sediments, they slowly undergo the process of ________________ [turning into stone]. 1. Permineralization -___________ in bones, shells, and plant stems become filled with mineral deposits. We can see the _____________________, especially of _________________________ __________________ the original material is present so _______________ Usually we do not get __________________________ 2. Replacement -____________ groundwater dissolves a hard structure in an organism trapped in sediments & simultaneously _____________ a mineral in its place--molecule by molecule. -this results in fossils with a great deal of ______________. Here we can see the feathers, or even see their ______________! 3. Recrystallization -conversion of the fossil usually to a new _______________ or to coarser crystals of the original mineral. Crystals often form inside ____________________. The lack of original material means ___________ The large size of the crystals mean we do not get ___________ 4. Carbonization -under ________________ the volatile (liquid or gaseous) components are forced out, leaving only a film of _______________. Because of how they form, these fossil typically are of ______________ There are _____________ fragments remaining and only outside _________________ II. TRACE FOSSILS 1. Animal tracks Can calculate the ___________ and therefore how the animal ___________ Also allows calculations of the ____________ of the animal. 6 2. Gastroliths -these are smooth, polished stones that helped herbivore dinosaurs ___________ vegetable matter in their ___________________ The surface ________________________ on these stones allow us to determine the type of ____________________ eaten 3. Coprolites -fossil ____________ can be sometimes give definitive knowledge __________. In carnivores, we find _____________________ and in herbivores we find ______________________________ III. DATING FOSSILS 1. few fossils can be dated __________________ 2. the system depends on the rule that older things are buried _____________ 3. this works by sediments being deposited over time by _____________ A C B creature dies near site of Dead creature is _________ over time, remains of newer __________ and parts do & other creatures die dead creatures are buried not decompose in same area ____________ older remains SOIL SURFACE 1. We know that A is ___________ than volcanic ash # 1 A 2. We know that B, C and E are ________ VOLCANIC ASH # 1 VOLCANIC ASH OR LAVA # 2 than volcanic ash # 1 and ________ than volcanic ash # 2 C B E D 3. We know that D is _________ than volcanic ash # 2 4. We assume that C is ________ than B and E because it is shallower 5. We assume that B & E are the ______ age by distance above volcanic ash # 2 7 C. RADIOMETRIC DATING 1. Radio-isotopes --- atoms that decay with a set _______________ 2. half life --- time required for ½ of the ________ isotope to decay to a _________ isotope _______ % PARENTAL ISOTOPE ______ % DAUGHTER ISOPTOPE % P A R E N T A L I S O T O P E 75 ______ % PARENTAL ISOTOPE ______ % DAUGHTER ISOTOPE 50 ____ % PARENTAL ISOTOPE ____ % DAUGHTER ISOTOPE 25 _____ % PARENTAL ISOTOPE _____ % DAUGHTER ISOTOPE 12.5 ______ % PARENTAL ISOTOPE ______ % DAUGHTER ISOTOPE _____ % PARENTAL ISOTOPE _____ % DAUGHTER ISOTOPE ¼ ½ 1 2 3 4 5 half lives of the isotope 6 4. Examples of commonly used isotopes PARENTAL ISOTOPE DAUGHTER ISOTOPE carbon – 14 14 potassium – 40 40 uranium – 235 235 C K U HALF LIFE in years RANGE in years nitrogen – 14 14 N 100 – 100000 yrs argron – 40 40 Ar 100000 – 4.6 billion lead – 207 207 Pb Best for 10 million – 4.6 billion 5. What age are the following? a. 3.125 % of the original 14C remains. b. 87.5 % of the original 40K remains. 8 Questions on the relative age of fossils. Soil surface E Volcanic ash #1 A I B C Volcanic ash #2 F J D Volcanic ash #3 K G L H Researchers have found 12 fossils in an area where there have been three volcanic ash deposits over time. There is also evidence of an earthquake as all three ash layers have a split in them. Samples of volcanic ash #1 shows that only 0.78125 % of the 40K has decayed into 40Ar. Samples of the rock at volcanic ash #2 shows that 3.125% of the 235U has decayed into 207Pb. Samples of volcanic ash layer #3 indicate that 96.875% of 40K still remains. 1. Show your calculations for the ages of each volcanic ash layer. [6 marks] 2. EXPLAIN the relative age of each of the 12 fossils found. [12 marks] 3. EXPLAIN which fossil will cause the researchers the most problem in aging, either relative age OR absolute age. [2 marks] 4. EXPLAIN for which fossil(s) we can most accurately determine the actual age. [2 marks] 5. EXPLAIN for which fossil(s) we can determine very little about the actual age. .[2 marks] 9 D. DARWIN, WALLACE and OTHERS 1. PRE-DARWIN a. pre – 1700’s: the Bible was taken as fact and the earth was only _________ years old, _______________ since God created it b. 1700’s: people started to study the earth and find _________________, noticing that ________________ happened over time c. Cuvier – 1700’s: - catastrophism – series of God sent _________________ had changed earth Hutton – late 1700’s - actualism – slow processes such as _______________ changed the earth Lyell – early 1800’s - uniformitarianism i] the past & present are ruled by the same _______ & forces ii] geological change is very __________ [earth millions of years old] d. biological theories before 1850 i] God created life ________________ ii] Buffon & Erasamus Darwin said that life ______________ over time – from a ____________ species to _____________ species iii] Lamarck – life changed because it _________________ traits and then ________________ these traits to the next generation eg. a giraffe stretches to get food its offspring will be born with longer necks 2. DARWIN and WALLACE Darwin -well ______________ -well __________________ -young & _________________________ - careful _____________________________ -lots of time to _____________________ 10 HMS Beagle -____ year trip around the _______________ - Darwin as a __________________ companion & then as a _________________________ - stopped many places in ______________________________ - noted pattern of life ________________________ as he went south - found ______________ fossil species that resembled_____________ species there Galapagos Islands -____________________ islands 1600 km from South America -very few ________ animals present; all of which arrived ___________ - each island had _______________________ with slightly different beaks and feeding habits - Darwin’s Finches: each had different ________ & different ________. - the giant tortoises on each island had slightly different __________ and ate slightly different __________________. Darwin back in England -did more ______________________ on collected specimens for the next _____ years [1835-1855] -every Royal Navy vessel that landed on the Galapagos was required to collect ____________________ & note _______________ they were shot. -he was ____________________ of his own theories as they related to the ____________________ Galapagos finches -each _________________ has unique finches -finches ________________ match their diet -mainland only has _______________ finch -DARWIN thought that _____________ may have helped select or shape the __________________ of the finches 11 Wallace - not well __________ -___________________ specimens he collected - careful __________________ - visited ________________ Wallace observed Sailing 1000km from Java to Bali, saw only _____________ eating large fruit with big seeds After crossing 32km of ocean, at Lombok, saw only _____________ eating large fruit with big seeds Wallace wondered: why had God had created two such ___________________ birds to eat the _______________ large fruit on two islands that were right ______________ each other? Wallace concluded: the _____________________ had selected the best ____________________ bird [the hornbill] and the best __________________ bird [the cockatoo] to match the same fruit Darwin / Wallace each concluded: -__________________ somehow shapes species -species vary due to ______________________ 12 Natural selection Darwin & Wallace were both influenced by: ______________ – “Essay on populations” key idea – more_________ occur than can be supported so only the ______ survive Wallace wrote to Darwin -they shared similar ________________ -Darwin was afraid Wallace would_________________ him -they agreed to publish a_________________ 1855 DARWIN published: 1859 “On the Origin of ________________ by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.” Reaction to “The Origin of Species" _________________ fled to his country house and would see no visitors ___________________________ was a friend who agreed to speak for Darwin. He became known as “Darwin’s __________________” There was a famous evolution ____________________ on June 30, 1860 between Huxley and Bishop ____________________. Bishop Wilberforce was ________________ the debate until he strayed into Human Evolution. At some point he challenged Huxley about his __________. Huxley responded that “I would rather be descended from an _________________ than from a ____________________ like you!”. E. DARWIN’S EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION 1. Fossils - fit a _______________ 2. Homologous structures [pg 523] similar structures doing very different functions a. ___________ in adults b. ____________ in embryos 13 3. vestigial features [pg 525] structures with ____________ in one organism but have a __________ in similar organisms eg human ______________, whale ______________ 4. artificial selection a. ________________ b. _________________ 5. Mechanisms of Darwinian Evolution by Natural Selection ASSUMPTIONS 1. offspring _______________ 2. some of this variation is __________________ 3. more offspring are born than can ________________ 4. populations generally do not increase in ________________ INFERENCES 1. individuals of the same species will ___________________ 2. the survivors will pass on their ‘favourable’ ___________ to the next generation 3. over time, there will be more ___________ from the survivors in the population 6. Macroevolution vs Microevolution Macroevolution – change to form new ___________ eg Darwin’s finches this takes a very ___________ time [________________ of years] Microevolution - change _________________ a species this takes only a __________ time [_____________ of years] eg bacteria _____________ resistance; weeds ____________ resistance eg. peppered moths -in this one species there are two ____________ of moth -prior to industrialization the ______________ form was most common -after industrialization, the _______________ form became the most common -studies showed that _________________ selected the easier to find moths EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION # 1-7 14 EVIDENCE OF EVOLUTION Identify if it is evidence of ‘MICRO-EVOLUTION’[with-in a species], ‘MACRO-EVOLUTION’ or ‘NOT EVIDENCE’ EXPLAIN your choices 1 For over 100 years, nicotine has been used on islands to control grasshopper populations. Nicotine is a deadly poison that kills all animals exposed to it. Most islands where nicotine has been used now have fewer grasshoppers. 2. The findings of ancient crocodiles, sharks and rhinos indicates that in the past, representatives of these families were much larger than current species. 3. The proteins for eye lenses in moths, fish, cows, mice and frogs are all quite similar, with those from mice and cows being the most similar. 4. When digging down into the earth, scientists encounter older samples at deeper depths. At 8.2 metres, no trees were found with seeds possessing coats. At 2.4 metres, all trees had seeds bearing seed coats. At 4.7 metres, some trees had partial seed coats. [consider these depths!] 5. On most islands with heavy lead pollution from mines, few grass plants can grow. However, on some islands with long term lead mining, researchers have noticed populations of grass growing quite well. 6. A study of birds, bats and flies indicates that in the egg or womb they all show well developed eyes & wings. 7. The fish in small lakes differ more from the fish in similar, but distant, small lakes than they do from fish found in large lakes located nearby but not attached by rivers. F. RANDOM CHANGE IN A POPULATION evolution happens with ______________________, NOT individuals we say that a population has ___________________ when it is different from the original population in its allele_____________________ or genetic make-up this difference in genetic make-up results from ____________ alleles being passed on to the next generation in a ____________________ pattern 1. Genetic Drift in small populations, alleles can be lost at __________________ from the population eg. if there are two populations each with a _____________ allele at a frequency of 1% in one population of 50,000 [_______ have it] and in another population of 500 [____ have it] if some random event kills 20 % of the population it may kill the _______ who have it, but is unlikely to kill all of the ________________ in the larger population 15 1b. Bottleneck Effect this is a large, usually temporary, _______________ in the population that usually results in a significant genetic drift eg. there were once ____________ elephant seals but we hunted them by the 1890’s there were only _____________ elephant seals now there are ____________ elephant seals and all are descended from the ____________ so much genetic __________________ was lost eg. cheetahs were once captured by Romans to use as ________________ pets now if we do skin transplants among these cheetahs, all __________ Africa cheetahs _____________ foreign tissue which implies limited diversity with __________ African cheetahs, we see lots of ______________ implying diversity 1c. The Founder Effect this results when a small population___________________ a new area, again causing a limited number of ___________ to be present which is a form of genetic drift eg. 1990 a video camera noted the arrival of ________________ from a floating log onto one of the islands in the Caribbean that previously had ________________ of this species there were 5 lizards, 3 ____________ and 2 ________________ all of the _____________________ will from these 5 animals and so will differ at _______________________ from related lizards on other islands 2. Gene Flow often animals live in __________________ colonies; however, once a year, _____________ are ______________ of the home colony and move to a new colony [eg lions] depending on the species, ______________ may be driven out instead [eg bees]; in either case, these individuals bring their ____________ with them and will likely ________ the genetic balance in the new colony 3. Mutation the random process of making ____________ in alleles themselves most mutations appear to be ___________ [no visible change] or ____________ but a very few will be _________________. 16 3b. Gene Duplication a segment of a chromosome or a single gene is accidentally ________________ during DNA replication this duplication has no ________________ effect, positive or negative Possible benefits of gene duplication the organism now has a ________________ copy of a gene so that when a change is made, in the duplicate a _________________ copy remains if the change produces a _______________ useful protein, the organism still has the original and so does not _____________________ if the change produces a ____________ useful protein, then organism directly ______________ G. TYPES OF SELECTION in all populations, individuals are born in which there is a _______________ in the size of a trait if there was _______ selection, the population would become more and more __________ over time in theory, you could have a _______________ in which both an elephant and a weasel were just two extremes of the same species this does not normally happen, due to ________________ for specific traits in a population range for the trait frequency of individuals in the population with a trait mean value for the trait 17 1. Stabilizing Selection this is the most ____________ form of selection in which the extreme values for a trait are selected _________ over time, the mean of the populations remains _____________ , but the range is _______________ 2. Directional Selection selection___________________ one of the extremes and so over time the population mean shifts ________ or ___________ and the range generally ________________ a bit 3. Disruptive Selection selection favours both of the __________________ in a population and so the result is _______________ populations each with an _____________________ mean and a ______________________ range 18 4. Sexual Selection Human Beauty Some of the benefits to attractive looking people are: -their partners tend to be more _______________________; -they are thought to be more ___________________ and sociable by their teachers who tend to give them ___________________ grades in school; -the _________________ tend to treat them more leniently. Good looks were a sign of being __________ and relatively _____________free. Research shows that even _____ month old babies stare at photos of the faces of _____________ people __________________ than at photos of unattractive people. ____________________ in men is attractive-it suggests dominance, status, and power and therefore the possibility of resources. Those faces considered to be the most _________________ are typically those which have the greatest number of facial features _______________ to any particular culture/race. It is thought that the typically _________________ is attractive because this suggests something which has ___________ to its environment and is _______________. SELECTION by the FEMALE # 8 –10 In many species, the female selects a mate based on characteristics that she perceives will help her offspring. In each of the situations below, the female selects the ‘b’ male. EXPLAIN why she does so in each case. 8. Peacocks: a] the male has a short tail, is not brightly coloured and flies well, hiding from or avoiding most predators b] the male has a long tail, colourful body and flies poorly, getting chased by more predators and having a high fatality rate 9. Cheetah a] The male stays with the female and attempts to help raise the young b] The male impregnates the female and then immediately moves away 10. Squirrels a] The male spends some time keeping a small area free from competitors and eats quite well, keeping itself vigorous b] The male spends all its time keeping a very large area free from competitors and eats poorly, letting itself get run down 19 H. REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATING MECHANISMS in order for one population to become very __________________from another, they must be reproductively _____________, this means that there will no longer be a free exchange of _________________ between the two populations there are Prezygotic mechanisms that prevent ___________ or ______________ and Postzygotic mechanisms that prevent development of a ___________________ 1. PREZYGOTIC MECHANISMS a. Ecological Isolation two populations do not exchange ___________ with each other because they are in different ______________ places or at different places within the same ________________ eg. _____________ and ___________ do not meet because one is in Africa and one in Asia eg. Asiatic lion and Bengal tiger are both in northern India, but lion is on _______________ and tiger in _________________ b. Temporal Isolation two populations do not exchange alleles because they are only _______________ to exchange alleles at different __________________ of year or even of the day eg. morning glory opens its flower at __________; cactus opens its flowers at ___________ eg. purple finch mates in __________ so babies have access to lots of berry seeds; goldfinch mate in ___________ so that babies have access to lots of thistle seeds c. Behavioural isolation two populations do not exchange alleles because they do not _______________ to each others ______________ rituals eg. male grey crickets rub legs at ___________ times a second and male black crickets at ________ times a second the females of each species only ____________ to the sound made by the male of that same species 20 d. Mechanical Isolation two populations do not exchange alleles because of some physical ____________ that prevents this eg. many insects have modifications on their _______________ such that the male and female parts are a perfect ________________ fit eg. orchids are shaped so that only certain beetles can reach the _________ and therefore pick up the ________, that beetle will the go to another orchid of the same type to deposit the pollen e. Gametic isolation two populations exchange sperm and eggs but __________ markers prevent the eggs from being fertilized by the ______________ sperm and so no alleles are exchanged eg. wind blows the pollen of _______ onto the flowers of _________, but the pollen can not grow down through the stigma because it does not possess the correct _________ eg. clams and fish both shed eggs and sperm into the same ________, but the clam sperm can not penetrate the fish eggs and vice versa, due to_______________ not being able to eat through zona pellucida REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATING MECHANISMS # 11-17 Identify the type of reproductive isolating mechanism and EXPLAIN your choices. 11. Two snake populations share an over-wintering burrow and eat the same diet, but mate at different optimal temperatures. 12. Two grasshopper populations are different in colour & so do not share the same predators, one grasshopper type eats tree leaves & one eats grass leaves. 13. Two turtle populations share a pond & general diet; but the female of one type has a tall shell and the other a flat shell; the male of the first has a hollow in its lower shell, the second male has a flat lower shell. 14. Two sparrows populations share a similar diet, winter in different places but share mating & breeding grounds with one type singing from the tops of trees and one type from small bushes. 15. Two vole populations hibernate in different places, occasionally mate but the sperm & egg do not fuse. 16. One short, bushy, red hibiscus flower type is pollinated by bees and a tall, white hibiscus is pollinated by hummingbirds 17. One hawk type returns north in April and builds a new nest in mid-May, a second hawk type returns north in mid-May and uses an old nest at that time. 21 2. POST-ZYGOTIC ISOLATING MECHANISMS a. Zygotic mortality - even though the zygote is created, it fails to __________ to maturity b. Hybrid inviability- even though the hybrid is born, it does not live long or is not as ____________ c. Hybrid infertility - even though the hybrid is healthy and vigourous, it is not able to ___________ eg. donkey X horse --> healthy, strong mule but mules are sterile 3. SPECIATION when two populations become completely ____________ and no longer exchange ____________, they are said to have formed separate ______________ a. Allopatric speciation - this is a situation in which the two populations are geographically ___________ prior to them becoming separate species b. Sympatric speciation - this is a situation where the two populations remain in _______________ with each other but still stop exchanging alleles and become separate species I. DIVERGENT and CONVERGENT EVOLUTION 1. Divergent evolution results from two or more species evolving increasingly different __________ as a result of _______________ selective pressures this is what we classically think of as _____________: start with one cat and over time get tigers, lions, leopards, cheetahs, jaguars, pumas, bobcats, ocelots etc. 2. Convergent Evolution results from two unrelated species being subjected to _____________ selective pressures with the result that they produce ________________ phenotypes eg. _____________ are a bony fish, ______________ are a mammal but sharks and dolphins both ________________ fish in the open ocean as a result, both have a similar body __________ and similar type and number of fins 22 eg. in Australia there never were any ______________ mammals so all of the niches had to be filled by marsupials, many of whom greatly _______________ their placental mammal counterpart pg 603 shows equivalent species J. NATURAL SELECTION 1. when a new allele arises in a population, one of three fates awaits it a. if it confers an advantage, _____________ of the allele will appear in the population b. if it conveys a disadvantage, ______________ of the allele will appear in the population c. if it has no effect on survival, it will _______________ at its current level 2. alleles that confer an advantage must affect one of the following: a. increase the __________________ of offspring with this allele that survive until they are of _________________ age b. increase the survival of _________________ with this allele even though children may be _________________ c. increase the survival of ____________ with the same allele such as nephews or nieces 3. alleles that confer a disadvantage may take several forms a. directly __________________ the number of offspring born b. reduce the __________________ of offspring that reach reproductive age even while increasing the number _________________ c. keep the allele in a ______________ population such that random chance is more likely to completely __________________ all of those individuals with the allele NATURAL SELECTION # 18-25 23 NATURAL SELECTION - nature selects for alleles in populations. If the allele is passed on in large numbers, it is successful regardless of how odd the phenotype may seem to us. Some allele will become more common and some less common through the selection process. SELECTION IN EARLY HUMANS [Assume all traits are like modern humans unless otherwise stated] If an allele is selected for, it will produce a population with: ‘MORE of ALLELE’; if an allele is selected against, it will produce a population with ‘LESS of ALLELE’, and if an allele is neutral in effect it will produce a population with ‘SAME amount of ALLELE’. Identify which of these will occur for # 18 – 25 and EXPLAIN for each: Be sure to consider all of the aspects outlined on the previous page. 18. A new allele causes females to have children every 18 months instead of every 27 months. 19. A new allele reduces human life span to 40 years. 20. A new allele causes females to pretend to be monogamous, but she has [the same number] of children with several different fathers. 21. A new allele causes males to shun hunting with their brothers and choose to hunt with non-relatives. 22. A new allele causes males to frequently scold and yell at children and partner. 23. A new allele causes females to continue ovulation well past 60 years of age. 24. A new allele causes males to become infertile at age 45. 25. A new allele causes females to kill all of their very sickly children. 24 K. RATES of EVOLUTION 1. Theory of gradualism a. ____________________ changes result from many small changes b. this implies there should be as many of the ________________ form as of the final forms c. the evidence is that there are few _______________ forms 2. Theory of punctuated equilibrium a. large changes happen relatively ___________________ followed by long periods of little or no _____________________ here ‘rapidly’ refers to 100,000 years or a 1000 ________________________ b. this corresponds to large and sudden changes in the ______________________ c. ex. 65 million years ago the ________________ disappeared and we saw lots of new _______________________ in a short period of time MODEL gradualism puncuated equilibrium no change in both models, the time of change from box to circle is the ____________________ but.....in punctuated equilibrium the actual change was more ___________________ and the transition forms[hexagon & octagon] are less ___________________ as they are around for less ______________________ L. PHYLOGENY - the theoretical evolutionary ______________________ of a species 1. Cladogram – diagram depicting the proposed evolutionary ____________________ of a group of species - these are also called phylogenetic____________ or family___________ 25 a. example 1 A is the common ancestor of all _______________________ B is the common ancestor of all land ___________________ C is the common ancestor of all ________________ shell laying animals D is the common ancestor of all animals with ___________ covering some or all of body E is the common ancestor of all animals with a single opening in side of __________ F is the common ancestor of all animals with ‘___________-like’limb bones RAY-FINNED FISHES AMPHIBIANS TURTLES CROCODILES BIRDS DINOSAURS MAMMALS TIME PRESENT note that all _______________ species end up at the same point on the page eg. dinosaurs are __________ the length of the line indicates how long it has been since the species ___________________________ b. example 2 pg 608 and 609 builds another caldogram note that all living species end up at the same point on the page the length of the line indicates how long it has been since the species branched off c. pg 609 TRY THIS do this as exercise d. Using Genetic Evidence pg 611 e. there will be an in class [work on your own] assignment on this 26 CLADOGRAM WORKSHEET 1. Construct a simple cladogram based on the table below. TRAITS thylacine Lamprey Rhesus monkey placenta Bullfrog X paired appendages X X Human Snapping turtle Tuna X X X X skull atop spine X X paired legs X dorsal nerve chord X amniotic sac X mammary glands X species is extinct X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 2. The example below makes for a more complex cladogram, that will require more planning to ensure that the set up works out logically. TRAIT COW covered in hair X has keeled sternum ROBIN WOMBAT OSTRICH X has placenta X eggs with no shell FROG RAT X X X X X X X X X covered in feathers skin must stay moist HORSE X rotates shoulder joint has vertebrae HUMMING BIRD X X split hooved has hooves TOAD X X X X X X X X X X X X X 27 Restriction Map of Human and Various Primate DNA in a Cluster of Genes Coding for Hemoglobin Elizabeth Zimmer and Alan Wilson developed the map reproduced below (as cited in Alberts, et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell. Garland Publishing, 1983). From the following list, predict which are the most and which are the least closely related: human, chimp, pygmy chimp, gorilla, orangutan, and gibbon. A difference in the maps above exists if the LETTER for the allele is moved, or is absent in the ‘ape’ compared to the human pattern Compare each map to humans and determine the number of differences. Use that to complete the cladogram to the right. Questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Hemoglobin is the molecule in the bloodstream which transfers oxygen from the lungs to the body's cells; it is, therefore, important that it work properly. Is an animal born with large changes in its hemoglobin likely to survive to produce offspring? Reason? Some small changes in the hemoglobin molecule may give an animal an advantage in one environment and a disadvantage in some other environment. Are these sorts of changes likely to accumulate in the hemoglobin gene over long periods of time, or be changed back and forth as the outside environment changes? Explain. Some small changes in the hemoglobin molecule are selectively neutral--they do not affect the animal's fitness in any change of environment. Are these sorts of changes likely to accumulate in the hemoglobin gene over long periods of time, or be changed back and forth as the outside environment changes? Why? Of the three sorts of change introduced in questions 1 - 3, which sort is the most likely to accumulate in the hemoglobin gene from generation to generation? If the changes we are counting are a) random, b) selectively neutral, and c) tend to persist in the genes from generation to generation, would you expect the genes of two closely related organisms to have more differences or fewer differences than the genes of two distantly related organisms? 28 M. Early hominid evolution Lemurs, lorises, pottos tarsiers New World Monkeys Old World Monkeys Gibbons Orangutans 50 40 30 20 10 0 MILLIONS OF YEARS AGO Proconsul heseloni Distribution of species ______________________ Date of specimen About ___________________ Cranial capacity _________________ than chimpanzee, about 320cc CHANGES in PRIMATES WHERE? ________________ WHEN? ________________ WHY? ________________ 29 CONDITIONS in AFRICA - _______________________________ -land is covered in ___________________ -much of Africa then was like ______________ is now PRIMATES PRESENT THEN - monkeys living in __________________ - -apes living in ____________ or on the _____________ under the trees - lots of ______________, lots of _______________, BUT lots of ___________________ CHANGING CONDITIONS -6 my BP, East Africa became ___________________ -forests began to _______________________ -food ran ___________________ and some primates had to ___________ the forest or ________ OPEN LAND PRIMATES eg. modern baboons -live in _________________ -search for food by _______________ -return to trees for safety _____________________ FOOD TO EAT…..as herbivores? - quality of food is _______________ - availability of food is ______________ FOOD TO EAT – as carnivores? -what is out there? -how to catch it? -how to kill it? COMPETITION SOLUTION ____________ and _______________ Use your _________________ 30 The ancestors of Homo sapiens sapiens Sahelanthropus tchadensis Lived 6-7 million Range Diet Range 4.2 – 3.9 million 3.9 - 3.0 million Australopithecus africanus: million Fruit, nuts, seeds, tubers insects. Soft fruit, nuts, seeds, tubers and bird eggs. Noticed canines, large molars .protruding jaw less than 100 cm cm; sexes differ cm small canines, large molars; protruding jaw 150 cm; sexes differ 30 cm cm; sexes differ cm 150 cm; sexes differ 20 cm 30% / no crest none Paranthropus aethiopicus: Lived Australopithecus afarensis: East africa _____ plants less _____ than chimpanzee Brain size Sagittal crest Tools million Australopithecus anamensis East Africa Jaw Size Ardipithecus ramidus million Ethiopia 38 % / no crest none none???? Paranthropus boisei: Paranthropus robustus 2.3 - 1.2 million 1.9 – 1.0 million East Africa Jaw No canines, massive molars protruding jaw; Size 130 cm; sexes differ 10 cm cm; sexes differ Brain size Sagittal crest 37% / crest Tools none Homo habilis: million Homo rudolfensis: 2.2 – 1.9 million East, south Africa Nuts, tubers, termites, possibly papyrus rhizomes. Diet simple rock cm Nuts, tubers, termites, possibly papyrus rhizomes. No canines, massive molars protruding jaw Omnivorous diet including scavenged meat chiseled incisors; medium molars 140 cm; sexes differ 10 cm 131cm; sexes differ 10 cm cm; sexes differ cm 47 % / no crest complex, shaped stones 31 Homo ergaster Homo erectus: Lived Range Homo heidelbergensis: 1.8 million - c.30,000 all of Africa Omnivorous with quantities of meat. chiseled incisors small molars Size Tools East Africa & ?? Relied heavily on meat. chiseled incisors; small molars 180 cm; sexes differ 20 cm Brain size Sagittal crest / no crest 75 % / no crest complex, shaped stones Homo sapiens idaltu 230,000-28,000 Africa, Europe. Diet Jaw Homo neanderthalis: chiseled incisors; small molars 166cm; sexes differ 10 cm / no crest very complex, shaped stones for many purposes 100% / no crest stone, wood, bone, antler tools including bows Other changes in Hominids over time The pelvis _______________________ as our ancestors became bipedal The feet became__________________, with the_______________ less widely spaced and with a broader _____________ to assist bipedalism 32 Human Evolution Summary Changes from earliest Hominid to Australopithecus Trait Trend Time Range Diet Teeth & Jaw Sagittal crest Height Brain size Tools Changes from Australopithecus to Paranthropus Trait Trend Time Range Diet Teeth & Jaw Sagittal crest Height Brain size Tools Changes from Australopithecus to Homo Trait Trend Time Range Diet Teeth & Jaw Sagittal crest Height Brain size Tools 33 34