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LF263 Evolution L1-3


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[Front]


What did people believe at the time of Darwin?
[Back]


Immutability of species and Neutral Theory.

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What did people believe at the time of Darwin?
Immutability of species and Neutral Theory.
What is evolution and why people think it did not occur?
Evolution is organism change by descent over time; needed to explain: complexity, similar /same species occurring in the same area and how species cannot interbreed
Darwins Arguments
Uniformity, Sequence, Consilience and Discordance
Variation under Domestication
-Each domesticated species come from a single wild species -Cannot cross true breeds to produce a stable new breed -We produce new races by crossing the same races.
Variation under Nature
-Species definition is problematic -Variation occurs in every part of an organism -intraspecific variation is important
Struggle for existence
The tendency for geometric expansion through reproduction for all species. Without check they would over run the planet in a very low number of generations; ergo they are in check
Natural Selection
The Preservation of favourable variations and the rejection of injurious variations
Conditions of Selection
-Large population -Rapid Reproduction -Locally restricted -Isolated
Diversions of Character
-Divergence allows new niches to be occupied -Ancestral forms are quickly extinct -Australia is a poor example of diversification
Laws of variation
-Law of compensation -Correlation of growth effects of disuse -Analogous variation between related species -Traits in one species will show greater variation than the rest of the genus, because NS(natural selection) still in action
Why are species discrete? - Difficulties on theory
-Intermediate forms are outcompeted -More of a problem with hybrid zones
Intermediate zone
It is a small zone that cannot produce variants quickly, therefore no intermediate variant becomes established.
Large transitions in habitat - Difficulties on theory
-Transition from land to water is minor to explain -Flight is a real problem - no transition allied species -Organs of extreme perfection
Instinct
Involved just like organs
Hybridism
2 Categories of sterility: -When species are first crossed, - sterility of hybrids Animals are generally less interfertile No line between the end and start of new species
Imperfection of fossils
-Fossils are laid down by specific circumstances -Land loss is a time of extinction -Immigration and emigration can look like extinction and speciation -New forms are likely to be highly fecund and locally restricted
Geological Succession of Organic Beings
-Forms of life changed in the world; New World forms resemble European fossils more than extant European forms -Fossils connect ancient lineages to the rest of life -Fossils should approach one another in similarity away from extant forms -Intermediates should occur in mid succession -Later forms should be more developed - Similar fossils and extant forms occur in same areas
Geographical Distribution
-Similar climates have different faunas -Barriers correspond to abrupt fauna changes -Niches are filled in parallel in different areas by different species -Disjunct species distributions explained by migration
Means of dispersal
-Climate can open close migration routes -Islands are a big problem because they are isolated -Glacial periods are important, contribute to isolation and many doubtful forms and varieties can be seen
Geographic distribution Pt2
-Fewer species on oceanic islands -Endemics explained by isolation -Poor competitors relative to continental invaders -Remote islands deficient in classes - niches with atypical groups
Classification: morphology
-Features that are external and adaptive were considered important for classification -Adaptive resemblances give false unity -Aberrant species sit on the end of many extinct intermediates -Use "unity of type"
Classification: embryology
-Ancestral forms are present at embryonic stages
Classification: rudimentary organs
-Tend to be larger in embryos because of weakness of selection at that stage -Their existence is useless, imperfect and waste
What did Darwin Achieve?
- Show species wee not separately created -Natural Selection was the main agent of change
3 alternatives to Darwinism
Lamarckism Saltation Orthogenesis
Lamarckism
-Variation was directed -Soft inheritance -Mechanism of adaptation -Popular until genetics rise
Orthogenesis
-By William Haacke -Formalist approach to explain embryological development -Variations are directional -Species may be doomed to extinction
Saltation 1
-Francis Galton -Believer of NS -Did not accept that variations need to be small, larger will be more effectively selective -Eugenics
Saltation 2
-William Bateson -Env. variation is continuous -Species are discontinuous, and so change
Saltation 3
-Hugo de Vries -Believer of NS -Larger mutations were selected for and responsible for speciation -Rediscovered Mendel's Laws
Hardy-Weinberg Equilibria
-Calculate the expected genotype proportions -The resultant p and q show that do not change from gen to gen -Variation is preserved under particulate inheritance
Modern Synthesis
-Phase 1: The fusion of Mendelism and Darwinism -Phase 2: The linking of subdisciplines of biology
1st Strand
-RA Fisher -Darwinism requires a particulate inheritance to work -Large mutations are deleterious -Rate of increase fitness = its genetic variance
2nd Strand
-JBS Haldane -Different species have no adaptive significance -introduced Pluralism -Mutations lead to loss of complexity - didn't have to be small
3rd Strand
-JS Huxley -Pluralist -NS is a major force
4th Strand
-S Wright -Evolution in Mendelian pop. -Genetic drift important for pop. -Adaptive landscapes -Basis of genetics
Neo-Darwinism
-Hereditary variation of discontinuous characters is due to particulate genes -Small differences in reproductive fitness can bring evolutionary change -Selection can maintain genetic variation in a pop. -NS is a major force of change
Hardy-Weinberg Assumptions
-Panmixis -No selection -Pop. not at equilibrium, then 2 assumptions have been broken
Genetic Drift
-More pronounced in small populations and its effects are rapid -small pops are carrying less diversity -Drift removes variation
Wright’s fixation indices (Fst)
-To measure structure -Fst gives a measure of how differentiated populations are: range from 0-1 -When a pop is fractured into subpopulations, the heterozygosity decreases -Fst = 1/ (1+4Nm)
Inbreeding
-Reduces heterogenicity but allele frequencies are unaffected -F = (Ho-H1) / Ho
Founder effects
-The founding of a new population by very few individuals representing fraction of the genetic variation of the source population - Can lead to high frequencies of unexpected genotypes -Proposed as a mechanism for speciation