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DO NOW 1. What is fitness? 2. If an organism does not have high fitness what will happen to it? What will happen to its species? 3. In natural selection, what decides the best traits to “keep” 4. What are changes in genetic info called? 5. What is a fossil?

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DO NOW. What is fitness? If an organism does not have high fitness what will happen to it? What will happen to its species? In natural selection, what decides the best traits to “keep” What are changes in genetic info called? What is a fossil?. Evidence for Evolution. Objectives: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: DO NOW

DO NOW

1. What is fitness?2. If an organism does not have high

fitness what will happen to it? What will happen to its species?

3. In natural selection, what decides the best traits to “keep”

4. What are changes in genetic info called?

5. What is a fossil?

Page 2: DO NOW

EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION

Objectives:Understand homologous structuresBe able to give an example of a vestigial structureKnow that molecules can also be vestigial

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Vocabulary

Homologous structures Analogous structures Vestigial structure Homologous Protein Homologous Genes

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Evidence for Evolution

• By Darwin’s time, scientists had noted that all vertebrate limbs had the same basic bone structure.

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Common Descent

Common descent – all organisms on this planet come from a single common ancestor

This was from Monday’s vocabulary

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Comparing Anatomy and Embryology

– The front limbs of amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals contain the same basic bones.

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Homologous

• Darwin proposed that animals with similar structures evolved from a common ancestor with a basic version of that structure.

• homologous structures - Structures that are shared by related species and that have been inherited from a common ancestor

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Homologous Structures

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Analogous Structures

Analogous structures – structures that share a common function, but not structure

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Vestigial Structures

Vestigial Structures – structures that have lost much or all of their original function

Vestigial structures/ vestigial genes are some of the strongest evidence for evolution

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Brainstorm!

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Vestigial Structures

Dolphins have hip bones that do nothing, heck they aren’t even attached anymore!

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Vestigial Structures

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Vestigial Structures

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Refresher

Proteins are made of amino acids The instructions for making proteins

comes from DNA The flow of information in a cell (any

cell) is DNA -> RNA -> Protein Question:

If the DNA is changed what happens to the protein?

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Vestigial Genes

In our Genome (our DNA) we have the genes that code for things our ancestors had, but we no longer need.

These genes have been sitting in our DNA for millions of years

Every once in a while, these genes are expressed.

Because they have been dormant for so long they often do not work very well.

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Atavisms

Atavisms also are called "throwbacks" and can be found in modern horses and their relatives despite millions of years of evolutionary separation from their fossil horse ancestors.

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Atavisms

Atavisms are caused because we still have the DNA from our ancient ancestors.

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Chicken With Teeth

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Homologous Molecules

Homologous proteins – proteins that share extensive structural and chemical properties.

That means that they do the same job and look similar.

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Homologous Genes

Homologous genes – are genes that perform the same task

These are NO DIFFERENT that homologous alleles

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Homologous Genes

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Embryology

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DNA these letters also spell DAN Everything we are is just an

expression of DNA Your eye for example, is at its core

nothing more than thousands of T’s G’s C’s and A’s.

If one of those T’s G’s C’s or A’s is changed then it is possible that the structure of the eye will change as well.

Every time your cells go through mitosis mistakes are made in the DNA

Over time these mistake add up We can actually tell how closely

related to species are by looking only at these mistakes

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Exit Ticket

1. What is the difference between a homologous structure and an analogous structure?

2. Give an example of a vestigial structure.