Evidence of Macroevolution Flashcards
Evidence for Macroevolution: Fossils
Remains of traces of an organism or it’s activity.
→ These form when bodies of organisms get trapped in sediments that soon become sedimentary rock
→ Most common are hard body parts like shells, bones and teeth
↪ Can include footprints and chemical remains
→ Fossils in young layers of rock are more similar to today’s species than those found in older, deeper layers of rock
→ Not all types of organisms appear in the fossil record at the same time
↪ E.g. fish found in older layers
↪ Amphibians appear in younger layers
↪ Supports theory that amphibians evolved from ancestral fish
→ There are many ‘gaps’ in the fossil record
↪ This is a point that is often focused on by evolution critics
Evidence for Macroevolution: Molecular/Biochemical
→ Eukaryotic cells have noncoding genes (i.e. ‘junk DNA’) that can be thought of as evidence of evolution
↪ 2% of the human genome is in use while 98% is nonfunctional (thought to be used by an ancestral species)
→ DNA of different species is compared and the number of similarities in genes and genetic sequences can determine how closely related they are
↪ Humans and chimps share 98% of their DNA (doesn’t mean that humans evolved from chimps; rather that we share a recent common ancestor)
Evidence For Macroevolution: Anatomical Features
There are three types of Anatomical Features…
1) Homologous Features
2) Analogous Features
3) Vestigial Features
Anatomical Structures: Homologous Structures
Structures that have a common ancestor
↪ May serve the same or different function
→ Due to Divergent Evolution
Ex: The pentadactyl limb is a similar bone structure found throughout many species but are evolved to have different functions
Anatomical Structures: Analogous Features
Due to similar selective pressures, animals develop features with similar function (These structures do not have a common ancestor and mostly don’t have similar structures)
→ Similarity is due to convergent evolution
↪ Process in which two distinct lineages evolve a similar characteristic independently of one another.
↪ This often occurs because both lineages face similar environmental challenges and selective pressures.
Anatomical Structure: Vestigial Features
These are structures that serve no use to the organism
↪ Like the appendix
→ Vestigial genes are found in DNA, which serve no function but consists of similar sequences
Evidence for Macroevolution: Embryonic Development
→ In early development, the embryos of all vertebrates, including humans, possess a short, bony tail (homologous structure)
→ All vertebrate embryos have paired pouches that become gills. Humans (and other land animals) further develop the gills into ears and throat
↪ This shows common ancestry
Evidence for Macroevolution: Coevolution
Process in which one species evolves in response to the evolution of another species. (Can happen within the same species: Battle of the sexes)
→ Likely to occur when species have close ecological interactions with one another
↪ Predator-prey
↪ Competitive species
↪ Can happen with Sexual Dimorphism? (Look into this)
Ex: When Darwin saw the orchids in Madagascar, he predicted the existence of a moth with a tongue long enough to reach the nectar. Decades later, the giant hawk moth was discovered
Convergent Evolution
The development of similar structures within different species that live in the same environment is known as the convergent evolution.
→ Development of Analogous Structures
Divergent Evolution
Divergent evolution is a process of developing two or more species from a common ancestor.
→ Development of Homologous Structures