Evolution New
Evolution New
ORIGIN OF LIFE:
Origin of life:
Early Greek thinkers thought units of life called spores were transferred to different planets
including earth.
‘Panspermia’ is still a favorite idea for some astronomers.
For a long time it was also believed that life came out of decaying and rotting matter like straw,
mud etc.This was the theory of spontaneous generation.
Careful experimentation demonstrated that life comes only from pre-existing life.
He showed that in pre-sterilized flasks, life did not come from killed yeast while in another flask
open to air, new living organism arose from ‘killed yeast’.
This disproved the theory of spontaneous generation.
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Oparin of Russia and Haldane of England proposed that the first form of life could have come from
pre- existing non-living organic molecule (e.g. RNA, protein etc.).
Formation of life was preceded by chemical evolution i.e. formation of diverse organic molecule
from inorganic constituents.
In 1953, S.L. Miller an American Scientist created similar conditions in a laboratory scale.
o He created electric discharge in a closed flask to raise temperature upto 800oC as it
was in primitive earth.
o Used CH4 H2, NH3 and water vapor inside the flask.
o He observed the formation of amino acids.
Miller observed the synthesis of amino acids from simple inorganic chemicals in simulated
condition in the laboratory.
In similar experiments others observed, formation of sugars, nitrogen bases, pigment and fats.
Analysis of meteorite content also revealed similar compounds indicating that similar processes are
occurring elsewhere in space.
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Theory of biogenesis:
The first non-cellular forms of life could have originated 3 billion years back.
They would have been giant molecules (RNA, proteins, Polysaccharides, etc).
These capsules reproduced their molecules perhaps, named as coaservates.
The first cellular form of life did not possibly originate till about 2000 millions years ago.
The first cellular forms of life were probably unicellular.
All life forms were in water environment only.
This theory of biogenesis from non-living molecules was accepted by majority.
Observation made during a sea voyage in a sail ship called H.M.S. Beagle round the world. Charles
Darwin concluded that existing life forms share similarities to varying degrees not only among
themselves but also with life forms that millions of years ago.
Many such life forms exist any more. There had been extinctions of different life forms in the years
gone by just as new forms of life arose at different periods of history of earth.
There has been gradual evolution of life forms.
Any population has built in variation in characteristics.
Those characteristics which enable some to survive better in natural conditions (climate, food,
physical factors, etc) would outbreed others that are less-endowed to survive under such natural
condition.
Survival of the fittest. The fitness according to Darwin refers ultimately and only leaves more
progeny than others.
These, therefore, will survive more and hence are selected by nature. He called it as natural
selection.
Alfred Wallace, a naturalist who worked in Malay Archipelago had also come to similar
conclusions around the same time.
The geological history of earth closely correlates with the biological history of earth.
Paleontological evidence:
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They represent the extinct organisms (e.g. Dinosaurs).
A study of fossils in different sedimentary layers indicates the geological period in which they existed.
The study showed that life-forms varied over time and certain life forms are restricted to certain geological
time-span.
Hence new lives have arisen at different times in the history of earth.
All this called Paleontological evidence.
Comparative anatomy and morphology shows similarities and differences among organisms of today and
those that existed years ago.
Divergent evolution:
Whale, bats, cheetah and human share similarities in the pattern of bones of forelimbs.
These forelimbs perform different functions in these animals, they have similar anatomical structure – all of
them have humerus, radius, ulna, carpals, metacarpals and phalanges in their forelimbs.
Hence in these animals, the same structure developed along different directions due to adaptation to
different needs.
This is divergent evolution and these structures are homologous.
Homology indicates common ancestry.
Other examples of homologous organ are vertebrate hearts and brains.
Thorn of Bougainvilleaand tendrils of Cucurbitarepresent homology.
Convergent evolution:
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Wings of butterfly and of birds look alike.
They are anatomically similar structure though they perform similar function.
Hence analogous structures are a result of convergent evolution.
Eye of octopus and eye of mammals.
Flippers of Penguins and Dolphins.
Sweat potato (root modification) and potato (stem modification).
Biochemical evidences:
Similarities in proteins and genes performing a given function among diverse organisms give clues to
common ancestry.
Proposed by Ernst Heckel based upon observation of certain features during embryonic stage common to
all vertebrates that are absent in adult.
The embryos of all vertebrates including human develop a row of vestigial gill slits just behind the head but it
is a functional organ only in fish and not found in any other adult vertebrates.
This is disproved on careful study performed by Karl Ernst von Baer. He noted that embryos never pass
through the adult stages of other animals.
Excess use of herbicides, pesticides etc., has only resulted in selection of resistant varieties in a much lesser
time scale.
This is also true for microbes against which we employ antibiotics or drugs against eukaryotic
organisms/cell.
Hence resistance organisms/cells are appearing in a time scale of months or years and not in centuries.
These are the examples of evolution by anthropogenic action.
Evolution is a stochastic process based on chance events in nature and chance mutation in
the organisms.
Darwin’s Finches:
In Galapagos Islands Darwin observed small black birds later called Darwin’s Finches.
He realized that there were many varieties of finches in the same island.
All the varieties, he came across, evolved on the island itself.
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Form the original seed-eating features, many other forms with altered beaks arose, enabling them to become
insectivorous and vegetarian finches
This process of evolution of different species in a given geographical area starting from a point and literally
radiating to other areas of geography (habitats) is called adaptive radiation.
Australian marsupial:
A number of marsupials each different from the other evolved from an ancestral stock. But all within the
Australian island continent.
When more than one adaptive radiation appeared to have occurred in an isolated geographical area
(representing different habitats), one can call this convergent evolution.
Placental mammals in Australia also exhibit adaptive radiation in evolving into varieties of such placental
mammals each of which appears to be ‘similar’ to a corresponding marsupial (e.g. placental wolf and
Tasmanian wolf-marsupial).
BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION:
French Naturalist Lamark had said that evolution of life forms had occurred but driven by use and disuse of
organs.
He gave the example of Giraffes who in an attempt to forage leaves on tall trees had to adapt by elongation of
their necks.
They passed on this acquired character of elongated neck to succeeding generations.
Giraffes, slowly over the years, came to acquire long necks.
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MECHANISM OF EVOLUTION:
In the first decade of twentieth century, Hugo deVries based on his work on evening primrose brought
fourth the idea ofmutations.
Mutation is the large difference arising suddenly in a population.
How deVries theory of mutation differs from Darwin’s theory of natural selection?
It is the mutation which causes evolution and not the minor variations that Darwin talked about.
Mutations are random and directionless while Darwinian variations are small and directional.
Evolution for Darwin was gradual while deVries believed mutation caused speciation and hence called
itsaltation (single step large mutation).
In a given population one can find out the frequency of occurrence of alleles of a gene on a locus.
This frequency is supposed to remain fixed and even remain the same through generations.
Hardy-Weinberg principle stated it using algebraic equations.
The principle states that allele frequencies in a population are stable and is constant from generation to
generation.
The gene pool (total genes and their alleles in a population) remains a constant. This is called genetic
equilibrium:
Sum total of all the allelic frequencies is 1.
(p + q)2 = p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1.
When frequency measured, differs from expected values, the difference (direction) indicates the extent of
evolutionary change.
Disturbance in genetic equilibrium, or i.e. change of frequency of alleles in a population would then be
interpreted as resulting in evolution.
Gene migration: When migrations of a section of population to another place occur, gene frequencies
change in the original as well as in the new population. New genes /alleles are added to the new population
and these are lost from the old population.
Gene flow: Gene migration occurs many time is termed as gene flow.
Genetic drift: change in gene frequency takes place by chance.
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Founder effect: sometimes the change in allelic frequency is so different in the new sample of population
that they became a different species. The original drifted population becomes founder species and the
effect is called founder effect.
About 2000 million years ago (mya) the first cellular forms of life appeared on earth.
Some cellular form had the ability to release O2.
Slowly single cell organisms became multi-cellular life forms.
By the time of 500 mya invertebrates were formed and active.
Jawless fish probably evolved around 350 mya.
Sea weeds and few plants existed probably around 320 mya.
Coelacanth a lobe finned fish discovered in South Africa in 1938 evolved into first amphibians that lived on
both land and water. These were ancestors of modern day frogs and salamanders.
The amphibian evolved into reptiles.
Reptiles’ lays eggs which don not dry up in sun unlike those of amphibians.
Giant ferns (pteridophytes) were present but they fell to form coal deposits slowly.
Some of the reptiles went back into water to evolve into fish like reptiles probably 200 mya
( Ichthyosaurs)
The land reptiles were the dinosaurs.
The biggest dinosaurs are Tyrannosaurus rex was about 20 feet in height and had huge fearsome dagger
like teeth.
About 65 mya the dinosaurs suddenly disappeared from the earth.
Some of them evolved into birds.
The first mammals were like shrews. Their fossils were small sized.
Mammals were viviparous and protected their unborn young inside the mother’s body.
Due to continental drift, pouched mammals of Australia survived because of lack of competition from
any other mammals.
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o They hunted with stone weapons.
o Essentially ate fruit.
The first human-like being the hominid and was called Homo habilis.
o Brain capacity wee between 650 – 800 c.
o They did not eat meat.
Fossils discovered in Java in 1891 revealed the next stage i.e. Homo erectus about 1.5 mya.
o Had large brain around 900 cc.
o Probably ate meat.
Neanderthal man:
o Brain size 1400 cc
o Lived in east and central Asia between 1, 00,000-40,000 years back.
o They used hides to protect their body.
o Buried their dead.
Homo sapiens:
o Arose in Africa and moved across continents and developed distinct races.
o During ice age between 75,000-10,000 years ago modern Homo sapiens arose.
o Pre historic cave art developed about 18,000 years ago.
o Agriculture came around 10,000 years back and human settlement started.
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