* Evolution (Ch 29-30) Flashcards
*Fossils
- Fossils are the preserved remains of organisms which may be infiltrated by minerals to become petrified. Various types of fossils include entire organisms in ice/ amber, hard skeletal materials, imprints
Formation of fossils
- When organism died, their soft body parts decayed while their hard body parts buried in the sand and mud
- These hard body parts are infiltrated by mineral salts and became hardened
- Under the great pressure of the earth layers, the hardened body parts became petrified
- Fossil as evidence for evolution
- Most fossils found demonstrated a close resemblance between fossils and living species, indicating present life forms arose from pre-existing life forms
- A greater diversity of fossils is found in the younger rock -> existing organisms stemmed from a common ancestry
- Fossils in younger rocks are more complex than those in older rocks -> organisms evolved from simple to complex form
- Limitations of fossil records
- There are missing links in fossil records
- Some fossils are incomplete or damaged
- Some fossils are found inaccessible areas
- Some organisms having a soft body may not be fossilized
Comparing DNA base / amino acid sequences of similar proteins to establish phylogenetic relationship between organisms
- The genetic code is universal, all organisms use the same DNA triplet code to code for the same amino acid in polypeptide synthesis
- Mutation in a codon would result in a different amino acid sequence of similar proteins of the organisms, the closer is the phylogenetic relationship
- The greater the similarities between the amino acid sequence of similar proteins of the organisms, the closer is the phylogenetic relationship between them
Criteria for identification of homologous structures
- Similar anatomical pattern of bones and joints
- Similar body position
- Same embryonic origin
- Strong resemblance in nerves, blood vessels and muscles
Mixing DNA of two species -> the more closely related the species, the higher the separation temperature
- More closely related -> more similarities in DNA -> more hydrogen bonds formed by complementary base pairing -> need higher temperature to separate
Darwinism vs Lamarckism
Both: organisms become more adaptive to the environment over generations
Darwinism:
- Variations exist naturally among individuals
- Individuals with favourable variations have a higher chance to survive and reproduce while those with unfavourable variations will be eliminated
- Favourable variations have a higher chance to be passed to the next generation
Lamarckism
- Changes in environment create needs that cause the organisms to modify the existing organs
- Repeated use of the organs will make them become more efficient while the disused organs will be degenerated
- Acquired character can be inherited to the next generation
Struggle for existence, survival of the fittest
- Evolution (by natural selection)
- Genetic variation existed in the X populations, some are A and some are B
- Individuals with A has greater ability to…
- They have greater chance to survive and reproduce
- The population of the subsequent generations would have a greater proportion of X with A
- Speciation
- Separation due to geographical change resulted in isolation of two groups of X, stopping gene flow between the two groups of ancestors
- Each isolated group was subjected to a different set of environmental conditions
- They evolved differently from each other due to natural selection
- Until their genetic compositions were different that they cannot interbreed to give fertile offspring