History and Evidence of Evolution

Contributed by:
Sharp Tutor
This presentation gives a brief introduction to the different theories that support the reality of evolution. Evolution is a change in the heritable characteristics of biological populations over successive generations. These characteristics are the expressions of genes that are passed on from parent to offspring during reproduction.
1. Historical Background
Plato (427-347 BC) – Believed in 2 worlds: the real world
(ideal and eternal), and an illusionary world (imperfect and
perceived through the senses). Typological view of nature
– individual variation as the imperfect manifestation of
Aristotle (384-322 BC) – Believed that all living organisms
could be arranged in a “scale of nature” or Great Chain of
Being. The ladder of life consists of graduation from
inanimate material through plants, through lower animals
and humans to other spiritual beings.
2. The Great Chain of Being
3. Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) – Established the
modern system of taxonomy in an attempt to discover
order in the diversity of life “for the greater glory of
 Groupings based on similarity
 Hierarchal relationships of organisms
4. Early Ideas About Evolution
 Earth formed according to laws
of physics and chemistry
 Older than previously thought
 Life emerged as distinct types
 Transformed when environment
changed
Georges Buffon
(1707-88)
5. Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de
Monet, Chevalier de Lamarck
1809 Philosophie Zoologique
First articulated theory of evolution:
 Organisms continually arise by spontaneous generation.
 “Nervous fluid” acts to move each species up the “great
chain of being”.
 Organisms develop adaptations to changing environment
through the use and disuse of organs. (Heavy use attracts
more “nervous fluid”.)
 Acquired characteristics are inherited.
6. LAMARCKIAN EVOLUTION
SCALE OF ORGANIZATION
“Chain of
Being”
TIME
7. Problems with Lamarck’s ideas:
1) There is no evidence of spontaneous generation.
2) There is no evidence of an innate drive toward complexity.
- E. coli - Parasites - Cave
dwelling
organisms
3) There is no evidence of inheritance of acquired
characteristics. (BUT…..epigenetics???)
8. How Old is the World?
Calculated in 1664 that the Earth
was precisely 5,668 years old.
“Heaven and Earth, Centre and
substance were made in the same
instant of time and clouds full of
water and man were created by
the Trinity on the 26th of October
4004 B.C., at 9:00 in the Morning.”
Archbishop James Ussher
9. Record of Historical Change
Nicolas Steno (1638-86):
Father of geology and
10. Geologists recognized that change was
gradual
• James Hutton
– Observable processes
produce small changes
that accumulate over time
– The earth must be old
• William Smith
– Different rock layers William Smith
contain distinct fossils (1769-1839)
Smith’s first Geological Map
11. Emerging field of GEOLOGY lead
to a new concept of the age of the
Earth.
 The history of the earth extends
back through vast time periods.
 The processes at work today are
the same as those that have been
operating throughout the entire Charles Lyell
history of Earth. Principles of Geology
These concepts became known as
UNIFORMITARIANISM or
ACTUALISM.
12. Paleontology provided evidence that life
changed
• Georges Cuvier (1769-1832)
 Fossils resemble but are not exactly the same as modern
species
 Many past species are extinct
Mary Anning discovered several
species of extinct marine reptiles
13. Charles Robert Darwin
(1809-1882)
 Briefly studied medicine at Edinburgh.
 Studied for the clergy at Christ’s
College, Cambridge University.
 Interacted with some natural scientists
(John Henslow and Adam Sedgwick) at
Cambridge.
 Offered a position (in 1831) as the
ship’s naturalist on the H.M.S. Beagle,
which was going on an expedition to
chart the waters of South America.
14. The Voyage of the Beagle (12/27/1831 to 10/2/1836)
15. VARIATION IN BILL
SHAPE AMONG
GALAPAGOS FINCHES
 Closely related species that
occupy different ecological
settings tend to have different
characteristics.
 Populations that are
physically isolated tend to
differ.
16. ARMADILLO
GLYPTODONTS
TREE SLOTHS
 Recent fossils are closely related
to extant species.
 Adjacent layers in the fossil
record contain similar organisms
GROUND SLOTHS  Law of Succession
17. OBSERVATIONS FROM DOMESTIC ANIMALS:
 High levels of variability within a species
(SPORTS).
 Variants can pass these characteristics to
offspring.
 Artificial selection can rapidly alter the
characteristics of a breed.
18. Essay on the Principle of Populations
1798
 Populations reproduce
exponentially.
 Natural populations have a
large capacity to reproduce
and if left unchecked they will
increase at a rapid rate.
 MANY MORE ORGANISMS Thomas Malthus
1766-1834
ARE BORN THAN CAN
POSSIBLY SURVIVE.
19. As more individuals …are born than
can possibly survive, and as,
consequently, there is a frequently
recurring struggle for existence, it
follows that any being, if it vary
however slightly in a manner
profitable to itself, will have a better
chance of surviving, and thus be
Charles Darwin naturally selected. – The Origin of
Species 1859
20. SEPTEMBER 28, 1838:
“… it at once struck me that under
these circumstances favourable
variations would tend to be
preserved and unfavourable ones
to be destroyed.”
21. “Then it suddenly flashed
upon me that this self-acting
process would necessarily
improve the race, because in
every generation the inferior
would inevitably be killed off
and the superior would
remain – that is, the fittest
would survive.”
Alfred Russell Wallace
(1823-1913)
22. DARWIN’S FOUR “THEORIES” OF EVOLUTION
1. Evolution has occurred. Species are not unchanging
entities, but evolve over time. All species derive from
very different species living in the past. This theory was
not entirely new, but Darwin provided convincing
evidence for it.
2. The primary cause of evolutionary change is
natural selection. Species change over time because
bearers of different traits have different probabilities of
contributing offspring to the next generation.
23. DARWIN’S FOUR “THEORIES” OF EVOLUTION
3. Splitting of single species into two or more species
has occurred. Darwin postulated that all life originated
with one or a few species. Because many species exist
today, there must have been a process whereby one
species can split into at least two species.
The necessary conclusion from this view is:
All species share common ancestors.
4. Evolutionary change is gradual. Evolution occurs by
the gradual transformation of populations over long
periods of time (hundreds to millions of years) rather
than by a species changing nearly instantaneously into
something different.
24. WHAT ARE THE ELEMENTS OF EVOLUTION BY
NATURAL SELECTION?
Many more individuals are born than survive (COMPETITION).
Individuals vary in traits directly related to their ability to
survive and reproduce (VARIATION).
These advantageous traits are passed on to offspring
This process is repeated generation after generation over long
periods of time (ITERATION).
25. Decline in population
size
Change in environment
(Resources)
26. DIFFERENTIAL SURVIVAL
27. VARIATION & HERITABILITY
28. CHANGE ACROSS
GENERATIONS
29. “If I were to give a prize for the single best idea anybody
ever had, I’d give it to Darwin for the idea of natural
selection. Ahead of Newton, ahead of Einstein, because
his idea unites the two most disparate features of our
universe: the world of purposeless, meaningless matter
in motion on the one side, and the world of meaning and
purpose and design on the other. He understood that
what he was proposing was a truly revolutionary idea.”
Daniel Dennett, philosopher, 2001
30. BIOLOGY’S LAW
EVOLUTION BY NATURAL SELECTION – a necessary
outcome of differential survival and reproduction,
provided the characteristics that caused those
differences are heritable.
 A mechanism, as mechanical as any physical law.
 Acts on individuals, but only populations evolve.
 Opportunistic, not goal seeking – backward-looking,
not anticipatory.
 Not the only mechanism of evolution.
31. What is the Evidence for Evolution?
32. Principles of Homology and Common Descent
 Evolution can be viewed as a series of bifurcations in a
phylogenetic tree – all life can be traced back to a
common ancestor.
 Groups of species that share a common ancestor derive
attributes from that ancestor through common descent.
 Once related lineages are reproductively isolated,
evolution can lead to modifications of the basic plan.
 Nevertheless, future evolutionary paths are constrained
by past history.
33. Evidence for Evolution: Homology of the Vertebrate Limb
 Comparative anatomy shows  Similarity between species that is not
that the same skeletal elements functionally necessary.
appear in very different species.
This phenomenon only makes
sense as a process of descent
with modification. See Fig. 2.17 in Z&E
34. Common descent makes sense of puzzling
patterns in nature
35. DNA
UNIVERSAL GENETIC MATERIAL
36. Evolution of the genetic code: “Universal” mRNA Code
37. 2 7
38. Vestigial Organs: Snakes with legs Cohn & Tickle
Nature 1999
39. Vestigial Genes: Blind Cave Fish
 Loss of complex eye structure as an adaptation to cave
dwelling
 Transplant experiments from closely related fish show that the
genes for eye development are still present and fully
functional.
40. Forms in
the Fossil
Record:
Whales
From Gingerich et al. Science 2001
41.
42. Finding Missing Links in the Fossil Record
43. Forms in
the Fossil
Record:
Trilobites
44. Major Evolutionary
Transitions: The Tetrapod
Fig 4.22 Z&E
45. The lineage of lobe-finned
fish leads to tetrapods
 What genetic and
developmental changes
occurred during this
transition?
Fig 4.19 & 4.21 in Z&E
46. Understanding the evolutionary transformation of fish fins into tetrapod limbs is a
fundamental problem in biology. The search for antecedents of tetrapod digits in fish has
remained controversial because the distal skeletons of limbs and fins differ structurally,
developmentally, and histologically. Moreover, comparisons of fins with limbs have been limited
by a relative paucity of data on the cellular and molecular processes underlying the development
of the fin skeleton. Here, we provide a functional analysis, using CRISPR/Cas9 and fate mapping,
of 5′ hox genes and enhancers in zebrafish … we find that a marked reduction and loss of fin rays
is associated with an increased number of endochondral distal radials. These discoveries reveal
a cellular and genetic connection between the fin rays of fish and the digits of tetrapods
and suggest that digits originated via the transition of distal cellular fates.
Nature 1–4 (2016) doi:10.1038/nature19322
47. Fate mapping of cells
Adult fin phenotypes of
marked by the activity of
hox13 deletion series
hox enhancers
Nature 1–4 (2016) doi:10.1038/nature19322
48. Long-term Selection Experiments:
Two-way selection for oil-content of maize seeds. Six replicate lines of D. melanogaster selected
(After Dudley 1997) upwards for abdominal bristle number. Selection was
suspended at the points marked. (After Yoo 1980)
From Falconer & Mackay 1996
49. Response to Artificial Selection:
(Introduction to Quantitative Genetics Falconer & Mackay 1996)
50.  Evolutionary response
to the introduction of
the flat-podded golden
rain tree in the 1920’s
Observed changes in
phenotype as a
consequence of changing
51. MAJOR LINES OF EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
 The proposed genetic mechanisms of evolution have all
been documented experimentally.
 Just as erosion is a fact in physical geology, natural
selection is a fact in biology – it is a necessary outcome
of heredity and variation.
 HOMOLOGY AND COMMON DESCENT-
 Vestigial characters
 Different sets of data yield similar phylogenetic trees.
52. MAJOR LINES OF EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
 THE FOSSIL RECORD-
 “Intermediate types” are being reported continually
from the fossil record.
 Different dating methods yield similar ages for fossil
deposits, and they all indicate that the earth is “old”.
 Stratification in the fossil record – life forms that we
believe to be more recently evolved only appear in
more recent fossil deposits.
53. MAJOR LINES OF EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
 DIRECT OBSERVATION OF EVOLUTIONARY
CHANGE THROUGH TIME
 Through artificial selection experiments, the mean
phenotype can be rapidly advanced, and
phenotypes can be produced that are well beyond
the range of variation in a base population.
 Direct observation of change in the fossil record.
 Evolutionary change in response to changing
environmental conditions. Often referred to as
“Contemporary Evolution” or “Evolution in Ecological
Time”.
54. What lessons can
we learn from the
example of whale
55. What is the significance of a
developmental perspective?
56. Key Concepts?
57. Chapter 1…
 Biological evolution is a process by which populations of
organisms change over time.
 Mutations are changes in the genome of an organism. They can
be neutral, detrimental, or beneficial.
 Natural selection occurs when heritable characteristics cause
some individuals to survive and reproduce more successfully
than others.
 Natural selection is a mechanism of evolution that can cause
the genetic composition of a population to shift from generation
to generation.
 Evolutionary biologists use many different lines of evidence to
test hypotheses about evolution.
 Evolutionary theory explains the patterns of life observable in
the natural world and the processes by which that life has
evolved.