Darwin's Theory of Evolution
Notable Figures
Economist who also studied population growth:
Thomas Malthus
His work helped Darwin understand population growth and applied this knowledge to different species
Developed a theory of evolution involving a constant growth pattern from simple --> complex:
Jean Lamarck
Acted as Darwin's correspondent for geology:
Charles Lyell
Fossil Record
Geology and the Fossil Record contributed to Darwin's understanding of evolution and the origin of species
Developed our modern theory for evolution:
Charles Darwin
Patterns in Evolution
Different organisms in a same group develop differently leading to new species:
Divergent Evolution
These organisms develop:
Homologous Features
Geographically isolated organism develop similar phenotypes based on similar pressures:
Convergent Evolution
These organisms develop:
Analogous Features
Different species evolving as a response to each other:
Co-evolution
Can be caused by symbiotic relationships where:
Both organisms benefit:
Mutualism
One organism benefits, the other receives a negative effect:
Antagonism
One organism benefits, the other isn't affected:
Commensalism
Adaptive Radiation
Biogeography
An example of biogeography and adaptive radiation:
Galapagos Islands
Observed during:
Voyage of the Beagle
Speciation
Reproductive Isolation
Isolation occurring before the formation of a zygote:
Prezygotic Isolation
Ecological Isolation
Habitat Isolation
Temporal Isolation
Behavior Isolation
Mechanical Isolation
Gamete Isolation
Isolation occurring after the formation of a zygote:
Postzygotic Isolation
Zygote Mortality
Hybrid Inviability
Hybrid Infertility
Examples:
Liger
Mule
Biological Species
Evolutionary change without selection:
Founder Effect
Bottleneck Effect
Models of speciation:
Allopatric Speciation
Sympatric Speciation
Selection
Reproduction
Genes
Alteration of genes:
Mutations
Vestigial Features
Humans choose which traits are favourable and unfavourable:
Artificial Selection
Ex. Dog breeding
Selection of different traits which occurs naturally:
Natural Selection
Selection against one extreme favouring another extreme:
Directional Selection
Selection against average traits favouring extremes on either end:
Disruptive Selection
Selection against extremes on both ends favouring the average trait:
Stabilizing Selection
Sexual Selection