The Theory of Biological Evolution
The Theory of Biological Evolution
What Is It?
1. A theory that explains the diversity of life on planet earth.
2. Evolution is the process of random change in the inherited traits of
groups of organisms from one generation to the next.
3. Evolution suggests that ALL life on planet EARTH comes from a common
ancestor, the earth is very, very old (billions of years),
that life appeared very gradually, and that life is a result of random
changes.
4. This theory was first introduced by Charles Darwin in 1859, in his famous
book, The Origin of the Species. His theory came from his observations
of finches during his trip to the Galapagos islands.
5. This theory opposes the ideas presented by creationism.
Natural Selection
Process where traits that are helpful for survival and reproduction become
more common in a population and harmful traits become more rare.
This occurs because individuals with helpful traits are more likely to
reproduce, so more individuals in the next generation will inherit these
traits.
Over time adaptations are produced through small random changes in traits
and natural selection of traits best suited for the environment.
Genetic Drift
Random changes in the frequency of traits in a population, caused by
mutation.
Mutation
Mutation is a change in the sequence of nucleotides in an organism’s
DNA. The change can occur from an addition or deletion of nucleotides in
the sequence.
Nucleotides are the basic units that make up DNA. DNA is the special
codes inside a cell’s nucleus that provide instructions on how to make
specific proteins.
Abiogenesis
the idea that life came from non-living material.
Evidence Supporting Evolution
1. Radiometric dating suggests that the earth is indeed very, very old.
2. Intermediate forms discovered
A. The theory of evolution predicts that intermediate forms of organisms
should exist, if evolution does indeed occur.
B. Intermediate forms (or transitional forms) have been discovered in
the fossil record.
i. Intermediate forms, organisms that are “in-between” one type of
species and another.
ii. E.g. Tiktaalik is an intermediate-form between fish and tetrapods
(four-legged land creatures)
iii. E.g. Archaeoteryx is an intermediate form between dinosaurs and
birds.
3. Common structures and behaviors suggest common ancestors
A. E.g. Chimpanzees and humans
B. It is believed that apes and humans shared a common ancestor that
no longer exists.
4. Evolution explains how many plants and animals are geographically
distributed.
A. Mammals in North and South America. Originally the two continents
were connected. However, then the land masses separated creating
different creatures.
B. South America developed anteaters, sloths, opossums, and
armadillos, but North America, horses, bats, wolves, and saber-
toothed cats. We find fossils of each group only in their respective
location.
C. However, later on the land masses reconnected and the different
groups of animals spread across the two continents.
Creationism
The that a supernatural power or powers, i.e. God, created the universe and
the life in it at one time.
Creationism suggests:
1. the earth is very young
2. life came from a creator, not a series of random occurrences
3. life appeared suddenly
4. the kinds of organisms on the planet have not changed
5. all life was designed for certain functions and purposes.
Problems with Evolution
Irreducible Complexity
-some structures, do not work with intermediate forms. This is called the
problem of irreducible complexity. E.g. the human eye. “Half-eyes” would not
give an organism or population a beneficial trait that would passed onto future
generations.