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Patterns of Evolution

Patterns of Evolution

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Patterns of Evolution. Coevolution. Two or more species that interact may evolve together. Examples: Predator-prey Parasites and hosts Plants and their pollinators. Convergent Evolution. Organisms that appear to be very similar, are not closely related at all. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Patterns of Evolution

Patterns of Evolution

Page 2: Patterns of Evolution

Coevolution Two or more species that interact may evolve

together. Examples:

Predator-prey Parasites and hosts Plants and their pollinators

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Convergent Evolution

Organisms that appear to be very similar, are not closely related at all.

The environment selects for the phenotype Examples:

Sharks and Dolphins

Analogous structures are associated with convergent evolution

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Divergent Evolution When closely related species become

more dissimilar usually because of different habitats

Adaptive radiation: related species evolve from a single ancestral species

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Things that effect evolution change in climate/habitat: a trait that

was an advantage may no longer be an advantage

genetic drift: change in allele frequency by chance

events greater impact on small populations

migration: species can be seperated or exposed to new environments

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geographic isolation: a species can be seperated geographically (canyon, different islands, etc.)

mutations: new variations can arise by random chance

reproductive isolation: something prevents organisms from sucessfully breeding examples: different mating seasons, different mating calls

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Classification Taxonomy: the branch of biology that

names and groups organism according to their characteristics and evolutionary history.

Aristotle was the first to use this method but was replaced due to confusion

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Carolus Linnaeus (1707-1778) Swedish Naturalist Devised a system of grouping organisms

into categories based upon form and structure

Created seven different levels of organization

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7 Levels of Classification Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species

Kindly Pass Connie Over Fresh Green Salad

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Binomial Nomenclature

Two Name Naming System

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Binomial Nomenclature System that gives organisms two-part

scientific name Genus species Genus is capitalized and both are in

italics

Examples: Homo sapiens Lynx rufus

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3 Domain System Recently, scientists have added a group

above Kingdom.  Three groups, called DOMAINS.

Domain Eukarya - includes organisms composed of eukaryotic cells (plants, animals, fungi, protists)

Domain Bacteria - includes all prokaryotic cells, Kingdom Eubacteria

Domain Archaea - includes only "ancient" bacteria, Archaebacteria

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Tree of life Phylogenetic Tree:

showing evolutionary relationships among various species based upon similarities and differences in their physical and/or genetic characteristics.

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Phylogenetic Trees Use a combination of:

Shared anatomical structures Pattern of embryological development Types of proteins DNA sequencing

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Node

Derived Character: Characteristics that appear more recently in a group but are not seen in older organisms

Closely Related

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1. ______ Wings2. ______ 6 Legs3. ______ Segmented Body4. ______ Double set of wings5. ______ Jumping Legs6. ______ Crushing mouthparts7. ______ Legs8. ______ Curly Antennae

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Dichotomous Keys A step-by-step guide to help identify an

organism Follows a series of choices that lead you

to the organism’s name

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Dichotomous Keys

1. Has green colored body ......go to 2

Has purple colored body ..... go to 4

2. Has 4 legs .....go to 3

Has 8 legs .......... Deerus octagis

3. Has a tail ........ Deerus pestis

Does not have a tail ..... Deerus magnus

4. Has a pointy hump ...... Deerus humpis

Does not have a pointy hump.....go to 5

5. Has ears .........Deerus purplinis

  Does not have ears ......Deerus deafus

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answersA. Deerus magnusB. Deerus pestisC. Deerus octagisD. Deerus purplinisE. Deerus deafusF. Deerus humpis