- Fossil Record -rich sedimentary rock shows what species lived long ago
- These fossils include soft-bodied creatures and some of the first animals with hard parts
- Some ancient animals resemble modern ones, while others are now extinct
- A time scale helps show when different organisms first appeared
first fish, then amphibians, then reptiles, then mammals and birds.
- transitional fossils helps explain how groups of organisms are connected
- Transitional fossils show steps between older and newer species
body parts or behaviours that were once useful in ancestors but have lost most or all their original function in modern species
Ex: wisdom teeth or goosbumps
- Island animals : often resemble animals from the nearest continent, showing they evolved from mainland ancestors.
ex: Canary Island lizards are similar to West African lizards.
- Identical fossils found on different continents suggest the landmasses were once connected.
- Continents slowly move over time (continental drift); Africa and South America were once joined in Gondwana.
- Vertebrate forelimbs perform different functions (flying, running, swimming) but share the same basic bone structure, explained by common ancestry.
- Homologous structures : Have similar structure and origin, but may have different functions.
- Structural similarity does not always mean species are closely related if the similarity is only functional.
Analogous structures:
- Have similar functions but different structures and origins.
- Evolved independently in unrelated species.
- Example: wings of insects vs. birds and bats
- Evolve in species from different evolutionary origins living in similar environments.
- Embryology looks at early development before birth
- Early embryos of many animals look very similar
- Shared features, like throat pouches, point to a common ancestor
- DNA shows how species are related
- Similar DNA patterns suggest a shared ancestor.
- Gene studies show dogs and bears are related, and whales and dolphins are related to hoofed animals.
- Shows how mutations change DNA and pass on traits
- Changing percentages, or frequencies, of alleles within populations are the small events that lead to evolution within a population, or microevolution
1.Mutations
2. Gene Flow (migration)
3. Non-random mating
4. Genetic drift
5. Natural Selection
• A mutation is a change in an individual’s DNA
• Heritable mutations can affect an entire gene pool
• More genetic variation gives a population a better chance to adapt
- Gene flow is the movement of alleles between populations.
- It happens when individuals migrate and join new groups.
• Mating can be random or based on specific traits
• Non-random mating happens when individuals choose mates by certain looks or behaviours
• Random mating is like a draw where any pair is possible
• Non-random mating limits which traits get passed on
• Only the chosen mates add their traits to the next generation
- Allele frequencies in small groups can change by chance.
- This random change is called genetic drift.
- Large groups usually stay closer to expected results.•
- Some alleles can disappear while others become the only one left.
- New alleles can return only through mutation or movement from other groups.
- New isolated populations are formed by a few individuals
Example ;
- strong winds may carry a single, pregnant lady bug to a previously unpopulated island.
- find a new colony and produce offspring
- will carry some but not all of the alleles from the original population
- If a single allele gives even a slight selective advantage, the frequency of the allele in the population will increase from one generation to the next
types of natural selection:
1. stabilizing selection
2. directional selection
3. disruptive selection.
- Favours an intermediate phenotype and acts against extreme variants of the phenotype.
- Favours the phenotypes at one extreme over the other.
- Common during times of environmental change or when a population
migrates to a new habitat that has different environmental conditions
- takes place when the extremes of a range of phenotypes are
- favoured over intermediate phenotypes.
Both extremes are favoured
- involves competition between males through fighting or through visual displays
- leading to traits that enhance reproductive success
- Is the formation of new species from existing species. It is also called macroevolution.
- This occurs when two populations become reproductively isolated over time due to little or no gene flow between them.
- These are called reproductive isolating mechanisms
Pre-zygotic Isolating Mechanisms
Prevention of mating:
Behavioural isolation - Ex. Birds singing different songs to attract specific species
Temporal isolation - organisms reproduce at different/incompatible times, such as day/night, seasons, years, etc,
Ecological/habitat isolation - live in different locations, such as land vs water snakes
Mechanical isolation - genital anatomy doesn't match up, or flower structure is incompatible with pollen structure
Gametic isolating mechanism - egg and sperm are unable to unite and fuse
Revention of hybrids:
hybrid inviability - offspring of different species are weak or sterile, ex. Some plants
hybrid breakdown- hybrid embryos break down due to genetic incompatibility
hybrid sterility - hybrid offspring are produced but are infertile, ex. Mules
Sympatric speciation : speciation in which populations within the same geographical areas diverge and become reproductively isolated. More common in plants than animals.
Allopatric speciation : speciation in which a population is split into two or more isolated groups by a geographical barrier
Divergent evolution : common ancestor diverges to become distinct species. Ex - zebras and horses
Convergent evolution : unrelated species have evolved similar traits. Ex - birds and insects have wings but they evolved separately
- Gradualism : model of evolution that suggests slow and steady is the mechanism of change.
- Punctuated equilibrium : model of evolution in which long periods of stasis, interrupted with periods of divergence.
- Both models are supported by the fossil record, depending on the organisms studied
