Lecture 1 - History of Evolution Flashcards

1
Q

What is variation?

A

The genetic variation of all life forms within a population.

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2
Q

What is inheritance?

A

Genetic traits are passed from parents to offspring.

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3
Q

What is selection?

A

When organisms with more favourable traits for survival and reproduction are more likely to pass their genes to the next generation.

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4
Q

What did Dobzhansky define evolution as?

A

A change in the frequency of an allele within a gene pool.

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5
Q

Who defined evolution as a change in the frequency of an allele within a gene pool?

A

Dobzhansky

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6
Q

Describe the understanding of evolution in hunter gatherers.

A

Required a classification system.

Coud recognise organisms, fruits and plants as a key to their survival.

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7
Q

Describe the understanding of evolution in early agriculture.

A

Required the domestication of livestock and crops and selection of improved variants, thus some understanding of inheritance and artificial selection.

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8
Q

When was Aristotle present?

A

3rd century BC

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9
Q

Describe Aristotle’s classification system.

A

Classified organisms into a ‘Natural Ladder’ / Scala naturae, from less complex/non-living beings (e.g. rocks) to more complex (humans).

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10
Q

What is the Christian ‘evolution’ theory known as?

Describe this theory.

A

Special creation.
Species are unchanging and created independently.
Earth is young and species created recently.

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11
Q

How old was the Earth believed to be in 1650?

A

400 years old.

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12
Q

How did Compte de Buffon (1779) predict the age of the Earth?

A

Observing how long it takes a ball of material to cool.

Predicted it to be 2-3 million years old.

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13
Q

How did James Hutton (1788) predict the ae of the Earth?

A

Observed that the erosion of rocks takes a long period of time, introducing ideas on gradualism.

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14
Q

Name two important palaeontologists.

A
  • Georges Cuvier

- Mary Anning

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15
Q

Describe the work of Mary Anning.

A
  • At Lyme Regis
  • Identified Icthyosaur and fish fossils
    Important contribution to evolutionary biology
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16
Q

Describe the theory of Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck.

A
All species (inc. humans) derived by gradual evolution by other species.
Characteristics can be acquired through an organism's lifetime and passed on to other species, e.g. giraffe stretching neck to reach high leaves.
17
Q

Who were Lamarck’s theories of gradual evolution also discussed by?

A

Erasmus Darwin

18
Q

What influenced Charles Darwin’s theories?

A

Observations made during a voyage as a naturalist on the survey ship The Beagle; visited many islands, which are microcosms for evolutionary biology.

19
Q

What date did Charles Darwin first formulate the theory of natural selection?

A

1838

20
Q

What date was ‘The Origin of Species’ first published?

A

1859

21
Q

Describe the work of Alfred Russell Wallace.

A

Independently thought of idea of natural selection as the method of evolution.
1855 sent theory in manuscript to Darwin, prompted Darwin to publish his own ideas.

The Wallace Line = the line that separates Asia from Australia in terms of fauna and flora that occur.

22
Q

What are the four postulates for the theory of Natural Selection?

A

1) Individuals within species are variable.
2) Some of the variations are passed to offspring.
3) In most generations, more offspring are produced than can survive.
4) Survival and reproduction are not random: individuals with the highest reproductive success are those with the most favourable variations.

23
Q

How did Darwin describe inheritance?

A

As ‘blending’ - the inheritance of two alleles that are somehow ‘blended’ to give a new form (e.g. red and white hair = pink hair).

24
Q

Describe Gregor Mendel’s work.

A

Bred carden peas observing pea morphologies, discovering how traits are passed on.
Said that inheritance is particulate, and discrete particles (now known to be genes) are passed from parents to offspring.

25
Q

Describe some evidence in small scale patterns for evolution.

A

Evidence of species changing over time. Seen in:

  • Domestication of organisms (in artificial selection and agriculture)
  • Natural selection in wild populations
  • Experimental evolution
26
Q

Describe how artificial selection gives evidence for evolution.

A

Domestication of dogs and evolution of dog breeds:

  • Dogs domesticated 16,000 years ago.
  • 15 breeds of dog in Darwin’s childhood
  • 50 when ‘The Origin’ was published
  • 400 breeds of dog today.
27
Q

Give an example of natural selection.

A

In Deer mice in North America; different populations have different coloured coats in soils of different colour.
Pale coats in populations found in sand dunes.

28
Q

Describe the work of Richard Lenski.

A

Worked on experimental evolution.
Long-term adaptation of E. coli to a lab environment, with glucose as the sole carbon source.
After 10,000 generations, fitness of bacteria increased.
After 30,000 generations, one of strains also switched to using citrate, evolving an entirely new biochemical pathway.

29
Q

Describe an example of large scale patterns as evidence of speciation.

A

Viewing vestigial structures: a useless body part with an important function in other closely allied species, e.g. hairs of bodies in humans used for dominance displays in chimpanzees.

30
Q

Give an example of a vestigial structure.

A

In marine sticklebacks, experience large predators, sticklebacks have armours and spikes.
In freshwater, less predators, reduced armour but still remanence in their skeletal structures.

31
Q

Give an example of homology as evidence for speciation.

A

Same organ found in related animals with a variety of different functions, e.g. the vertebrate limb: fins in whales, arms in humans, legs in mammals/reptiles, wings for flight in birds and bats.

32
Q

Give an example of succession as evidence for natural selection.

A

Organisms occurring in distinct geographical regions are related to one another, e.g. fossil Glyptodon and the armadillo.

33
Q

Who said ‘nothing makes sense, except the light of evolution’?

A

Dobzhansky