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INTRODUCTION TO EVOLUTION


   
    What is Evolution? Evolution is the process by which all living things

have developed from primitive organisms through changes occurring over

billions of years, a process that includes all animals and plants. Exactly how

evolution occurs is still a matter of debate, but there are many different

theories and that it occurs is a scientific fact. Biologists agree that all living

things come through a long history of changes shaped by physical and

chemical processes that are still taking place. It is possible that all organisms

can be traced back to the origin of Life from one celled organims.



The most direct proof of evolution is the science of Paleontology, or

the study of life in the past through fossil remains or impressions, usually in

rock. Changes occur in living organisms that serve to increase their

adaptability, for survival and reproduction, in changing environments.

Evolution apparently has no built-in direction purpose. A given kind of

organism may evolve only when it occurs in a variety of forms differing in

hereditary traits, that are passed from parent to offspring. By chance, some

varieties prove to be ill adapted to their current environment and thus

disappear, whereas others prove to be adaptive, and their numbers increase.

The elimination of the unfit, or the "survival of the fittest," is known as

Natural Selection because it is nature that discards or favors a















articular being. Evolution takes place only when natural selection
operates on a

population of organisms containing diverse inheritable forms.




HISTORY




Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis (1698-1759) was the first
to

propose a general theory of evolution. He said that hereditary material,

consisting of particles, was transmitted from parents to offspring. His
opinion

of the part played by natural selection had little influence on other
naturalists.




Until the mid-19th century, naturalists believed that each
species was

created separately, either through a supreme being or through
spontaneous

generation the concept that organisms arose fully developed from soil or
water. The

work of the Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus in advancing the
classifying of

biological organisms focused attention on the close similarity between
certain

species. Speculation began as to the existence of a sort of blood
relationship

between these species. These questions coupled with the emerging
sciences of

geology and paleontology gave rise to hypotheses that the life-forms of
the day

evolved from earlier forms through a process of change. Extremely
important was

the realization that different layers of rock represented different time
periods and

that each layer had a distinctive set of fossils of life-forms that had
lived in the past.




Lamarckism




Jean Baptiste Lamarck was one of several theorists who
proposed an

evolutionary theory based on the "use and disuse" of organs. Lamarck
stated that

an individual acquires traits during its lifetime and that such traits
are in some way

put into the hereditary material and passed to the next generation. This

was an attempt to explain how a species could change gradually over
time.

According to Lamarck, giraffes, for example, have long necks because for
many

generations individual giraffes stretched to reach the uppermost leaves
of trees, in

each generation the giraffes added some length to their necks, and they
passed this

on to their offspring. New organs arise from new needs and develop in

the extent that they are used, disuse of organs leads to

their disappearance. Later, the science of Genetics disproved
Lamarck's theory, it

was found that acquired traits cannot be inherited.




Malthus




Thomas Robert Malthus, an English clergyman, through his
work An Essay

on the Principle of Population, had a great influence in directing
naturalists toward

a theory of natural selection. Malthus proposed that environmental
factors such as

famine and disease limited population growth.




Darwin




After more than 20 years of observation and experiment,
Charles Darwin

proposed his theory of evolution through natural selection to the
Linnaean Society

of London in 1858. He presented his discovery along with another English

naturalist, Alfred Russel Wallace, who independently discovered natural
selection at

about the same time. The following year Darwin published his full
theory,

supported with enormous evidence, in On the Origin of Species.




Genetics




The contribution of genetics to the understanding of
evolution has

been the explanation of the inheritance in individuals of the same
species. Gregor

Mendel discovered the basic principles of inheritance in 1865, but his
work was

unknown to Darwin. Mendel's work was "rediscovered" by other scientists
around

1900. From that time to 1925 the science of genetics developed rapidly,
and many

of Darwin's ideas about the inheritance of variations were found to be
incorrect.

Only since 1925 has natural selection again been recognized as essential

in evolution. The modern theory of evolution combines the findings of
modern

genetics with the basic framework supplied by Darwin and Wallace,
creating the

basic principle of Population Genetics. Modern population genetics was
developed

largely during the 1930s and '40s by the mathematicians J. B. S. Haldane
and R. A.

Fisher and by the biologists Theodosius Dobzhansky , Julian Huxley,
Ernst Mayr ,

George Gaylord SIMPSON, Sewall Wright, Berhard Rensch, and G. Ledyard

Stebbins. According to the theory, variability among individuals in a
population of

sexually reproducing organisms is produced by mutation and genetic

recombination. The resulting genetic variability is subject to natural
selection in the

environment.




POPULATION GENETICS




The word population is used in a special sense to describe
evolution. The

study of single individuals provides few clues as to the possible
outcomes of

evolution because single individuals cannot evolve in their lifetime. An
individual

represents a store of genes that participates in evolution only when
those genes are

passed on to further generations, or populations. The gene is the basic
unit in the

cell for transmitting hereditary characteristics to offspring.
Individuals are units

upon which natural selection operates, but the trend of evolution can be
traced

through time only for groups of interbreeding individuals, populations
can be

analyzed statistically and their evolution predicted in terms of average
numbers.




The Hardy-Weinberg law, which was discovered independently
in 1908 by

a British mathematician, Godfrey H. Hardy, and a German physician,
Wilhelm

Weinberg, provides a standard for quantitatively measuring the extent of

evolutionary change in a population. The law states that the gene
frequencies, or

ratios of different genes in a population, will remain constant unless
they are

changed by outside forces, such as selective reproduction and mutation.
This

discovery reestablished natural selection as an evolutionary force.
Comparing the

actual gene frequencies observed in a population with the frequencies
predicted, by

the Hardy-Weinberg law gives a numerical measure of how far the
population

deviates from a nonevolving state called the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
Given a

large, randomly breeding population, the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium will
hold

true, because it depends on the laws of probability. Changes are
produced in the

gene pool through mutations, gene flow, genetic drift, and natural
selection.




Mutation




A mutation is an inheritable change in the character of a
gene. Mutations

most often occur spontaneously, but they may be induced by some external

stimulus, such as irradiation or certain chemicals. The rate of mutation
in humans is

extremely low; nevertheless, the number of genes in every sex cell, is
so large that

the probability is high for at least one gene to carry a mutation.




Gene Flow




New genes can be introduced into a population through new
breeding

organisms or gametes from another population, as in plant pollen. Gene
flow can

work against the processes of natural selection.




Genetic Drift




A change in the gene pool due to chance is called genetic
drift. The

frequency of loss is greater the smaller the population. Thus, in small
populations

there is a tendency for less variation because mates are more similar
genetically.




Natural Selection




Over a period of time natural selection will result in
changes in the

frequency of alleles in the gene pool, or greater deviation from the
nonevolving

state, represented by the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.




NEW SPECIES




New species may evolve either by the change of one species
to another or

by the splitting of one species into two or more new species. Splitting,
the

predominant mode of species formation, results from the geographical
isolation of

populations of species. Isolated populations undergo different
mutations, and

selection pressures and may evolve along different lines. If the
isolation is sufficient

to prevent interbreeding with other populations, these differences may
become

extensive enough to establish a new species. The evolutionary changes
brought

about by isolation include differences in the reproductive systems of
the group.

When a single group of organisms diversifies over time into several
subgroups by

expanding into the available niches of a new environment, it is said to
undergo

Adaptive Radiation .




Darwin's Finches, in the Galapagos Islands, west of Ecuador,
illustrate

adaptive radiation. They were probably the first land birds to reach the
islands, and,

in the absence of competition, they occupied several ecological habitats
and

diverged along several different lines. Such patterns of divergence are
reflected in

the biologists' scheme of classification of organisms, which groups
together animals

that have common characteristics. An adaptive radiation followed the
first conquest

of land by vertebrates.




Natural selection can also lead populations of different
species living in

similar environments or having similar ways of life to evolve similar
characteristics.

This is called convergent evolution and reflects the similar selective
pressure of

similar environments. Examples of convergent evolution are the eye in
cephalod

mollusks, such as the octopus, and in vertebrates; wings in insects,
extinct flying

reptiles, birds, and bats; and the flipperlike appendages of the sea
turtle (reptile),

penguin (bird), and walrus (mammal).




MOLECULAR EVOLUTION




An outpouring of new evidence supporting evolution has come
in the 20th

century from molecular biology, an unknown field in Darwin's day. The

fundamental tenet of molecular biology is that genes are coded sequences
of the

DNA molecule in the chromosome and that a gene codes for a precise
sequence of

amino acids in a protein. Mutations alter DNA chemically, leading to
modified or

new proteins. Over evolutionary time, proteins have had histories that
are as

traceable as those of large-scale structures such as bones and teeth.
The further in

the past that some ancestral stock diverged into present-day species,
the more

evident are the changes in the amino-acid sequences of the proteins of
the

contemporary species.




PLANT EVOLUTION




Biologists believe that plants arose from the multicellular
green algae

(phylum Chlorophyta) that invaded the land about 1.2 billion years ago.
Evidence is

based on modern green algae having in common with modern plants the same

photosynthetic pigments, cell walls of cellulose, and multicell forms
having a life

cycle characterized by Alternation Of Generations. Photosynthesis almost
certainly

developed first in bacteria. The green algae may have been preadapted to
land.




The two major groups of plants are the bryophytes and the
tracheophytes;

the two groups most likely diverged from one common group of plants. The

bryophytes, which lack complex conducting systems, are small and are
found in

moist areas. The tracheophytes are plants with efficient conducting
systems; they

dominate the landscape today. The seed is the major development in
tracheophytes,

and it is most important for survival on land.




Fossil evidence indicates that land plants first appeared
during the Silurian

Period of the Paleozoic Era (425-400 million years ago) and diversified
in the

Devonian Period. Near the end of the Carboniferous Period, fernlike
plants had

seedlike structures. At the close of the Permian Period, when the land
became drier

and colder, seed plants gained an evolutionary advantage and became the
dominant

plants.




Plant leaves have a wide range of shapes and sizes, and some
variations of

leaves are adaptations to the environment; for example, small, leathery
leaves found

on plants in dry climates are able to conserve water and capture less
light. Also,

early angiosperms adapted to seasonal water shortages by dropping their
leaves

during periods of drought.




EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION




The Fossil Record has important insights into the history of
life. The order

of fossils, starting at the bottom and rising upward in stratified rock,
corresponds to

their age, from oldest to youngest.




Deep Cambrian rocks, up to 570 million years old, contain
the remains of

various marine invertebrate animals, sponges, jellyfish, worms,
shellfish, starfish,

and crustaceans. These invertebrates were already so well developed
that they must

have become differentiated during the long period preceding the
Cambrian. Some

fossil-bearing rocks lying well below the oldest Cambrian strata contain
imprints of

jellyfish, tracks of worms, and traces of soft corals and other animals
of uncertain

nature.




Paleozoic waters were dominated by arthropods called
trilobites and large

scorpionlike forms called eurypterids. Common in all Paleozoic periods
(570-230

million years ago) were the nautiloid ,which are related to the modern
nautilus, and

the brachiopods, or lampshells. The odd graptolites,colonial animals
whose

carbonaceous remains resemble pencil marks, attained the peak of their

development in the Ordovician Period (500-430 million years ago) and
then

abruptly declined. In the mid-1980s researchers found fossil animal
burrows in

rocks of the Ordovician Period; these trace fossils indicate that
terrestrial

ecosystems may have evolved sooner than was once thought.




Many of the Paleozoic marine invertebrate groups either
became extinct or

declined sharply in numbers before the Mesozoic Era (230-65 million
years ago).

During the Mesozoic, shelled ammonoids flourished in the seas, and
insects and

reptiles were the predominant land animals. At the close of the Mesozoic
the once-

successful marine ammonoids perished and the reptilian dynasty
collapsed, giving

way to birds and mammals. Insects have continued to thrive and have
differentiated

into a staggering number of species.




During the course of evolution plant and animal groups have
interacted to

one another's advantage. For example, as flowering plants have become
less

dependent on wind for pollination, a great variety of insects have
emerged as

specialists in transporting pollen. The colors and fragrances of flowers
have evolved

as adaptations to attract insects. Birds, which feed on seeds, fruits,
and buds, have

evolved rapidly in intimate association with the flowering plants. The
emergence of

herbivorous mammals has coincided with the widespread distribution of
grasses,

and the herbivorous mammals in turn have contributed to the evolution of

carnivorous mammals.




Fish and Amphibians




    During the Devonian Period (390-340 million years ago) the vast
land areas

of the Earth were largely populated by animal life, save for rare
creatures like

scorpions and millipedes. The seas, however, were crowded with a variety
of

invertebrate animals. The fresh and salt waters also contained
cartilaginous and

bony Fish. From one of the many groups of fish inhabiting pools and
swamps

emerged the first land vertebrates, starting the vertebrates on their
conquest of all

available terrestrial habitats.




    Among the numerous Devonian aquatic forms were the Crossopterygii,

lobe-finned fish that possessed the ability to gulp air when they rose
to the surface.

These ancient air- breathing fish represent the stock from which the
first land

vertebrates, the amphibians, were derived. Scientists continue to
speculate about

what led to venture onto land. The crossopterygians that migrated onto
land were

only crudely adapted for terrestrial existence, but because they did not
encounter

competitors, they survived.




    Lobe-finned fish did, however, possess certain characteristics
that served

them well in their new environment, including primitive lungs and
internal nostrils,

both of which are essential for breathing out of the water.

Such characteristics, called preadaptations, did not develop because the
others were

preparing to migrate to the land; they were already present by accident
and became

selected traits only when they imparted an advantage to the fish on
land.




    The early land-dwelling amphibians were slim-bodied with fishlike
tails, but

they had limbs capable of locomotion on land. These limbs probably
developed

from the lateral fins, which contained fleshy lobes that in turn
contained bony

elements.




    The ancient amphibians never became completely adapted for
existence on

land, however. They spent much of their lives in the water, and their
modern

descendants, the salamanders, newts, frogs, and toads--still must return
to water to

deposit their eggs. The elimination of a water-dwelling stage, which was
achieved

by the reptiles, represented a major evolutionary advance.




The Reptilian Age





    Perhaps the most important factor contributing to the becoming of
reptiles

from the amphibians was the development of a shell- covered egg that
could be laid

on land. This development enabled the reptiles to spread throughout the
Earth's

landmasses in one of the most spectacular adaptive radiations in
biological history.




    Like the eggs of birds, which developed later, reptile eggs
contain a

complex series of membranes that protect and nourish the embryo and help
it

breathe. The space between the embryo and the amnion is filled with an
amniotic

fluid that resembles seawater; a similar fluid is found in the fetuses
of mammals,

including humans. This fact has been interpreted as an indication that
life originated

in the sea and that the balance of salts in various body fluids did not
change very

much in evolution. The membranes found in the human embryo are
essentially

similar to those in reptile and bird eggs. The human yolk sac remains
small and

functionless, and the exhibits have no development in the human embryo.

Nevertheless, the presence of a yolk sac and allantois in the human
embryo is one

of the strongest pieces of evidence documenting the evolutionary
relationships

among the widely differing kinds of vertebrates. This suggests that
mammals,

including humans, are descended from animals that reproduced by means of

externally laid eggs that were rich in yolk.




    The reptiles, and in particular the dinosaurs, were the dominant
land

animals of the Earth for well over 100 million years. The Mesozoic Era,
during

which the reptiles thrived, is often referred to as the Age of Reptiles.




    In terms of evolutionary success, the larger the animal, the
greater the

likelihood that the animal will maintain a constant Body Temperature
independent

of the environmental temperature. Birds and mammals, for example,
produce and

control their own body heat through internal metabolic activities (a
state known as

endothermy, or warm-bloodedness), whereas today's reptiles are thermally
unstable

(cold-blooded), regulating their body temperatures by behavioral
activities (the

phenomenon of ectothermy). Most scientists regard dinosaurs as
lumbering,

oversized, cold-blooded lizards, rather than large, lively, animals with
fast metabolic

rates; some biologists, however--notably Robert T. Bakker of The Johns
Hopkins

University--assert that a huge dinosaur could not possibly have warmed
up every

morning on a sunny rock and must have relied on internal heat
production.




    The reptilian dynasty collapsed before the close of the Mesozoic
Era.

Relatively few of the Mesozoic reptiles have survived to modern times;
those

remaining include the Crocodile,Lizard,snake, and turtle. The cause of
the decline

and death of the large array of reptiles is unknown, but their
disappearance is

usually attributed to some radical change in environmental conditions.




    Like the giant reptiles, most lineages of organisms have
eventually become

extinct, although some have not changed appreciably in millions of
years. The

opossum, for example, has survived almost unchanged since the late
Cretaceous

Period (more than 65 million years ago), and the Horseshoe Crab,
Limulus, is not

very different from fossils 500 million years old. We have no
explanation for the

unexpected stability of such organisms; perhaps they have achieved an
almost

perfect adjustment to a unchanging environment. Such stable forms,
however, are

not at all dominant in the world today. The human species, one of the
dominant

modern life forms, has evolved rapidly in a very short time.




The Rise of Mammals




    The decline of the reptiles provided evolutionary opportunities
for birds and

mammals. Small and inconspicuous during the Mesozoic Era, mammals rose
to

unquestionable dominance during the Cenozoic Era (beginning 65 million
years

ago).




    The mammals diversified into marine forms, such as the whale,
dolphin,

seal, and walrus; fossorial (adapted to digging) forms living
underground, such as

the mole; flying and gliding animals, such as the bat and flying
squirrel; and

cursorial animals (adapted for running), such as the horse. These
various

mammalian groups are well adapted to their different modes of life,
especially by

their appendages, which developed from common ancestors to become
specialized

for swimming, flight, and movement on land.




    Although there is little superficial resemblance among the arm of
a person,

the flipper of a whale, and the wing of a bat, a closer comparison of
their skeletal

elements shows that, bone for bone, they are structurally similar.
Biologists regard

such structural similarities, or homologies, as evidence of evolutionary
relationships.

The homologous limb bones of all four-legged vertebrates, for example,
are

assumed to be derived from the limb bones of a common ancestor.
Biologists are

careful to distinguish such homologous features from what they call
analogous

features, which perform similar functions but are structurally
different. For

example, the wing of a bird and the wing of a butterfly are analogous;
both are

used for flight, but they are entirely different structurally. Analogous
structures do

not indicate evolutionary relationships.




    Closely related fossils preserved in continuous successions of
rock strata

have allowed evolutionists to trace in detail the evolution of many
species as it has

occurred over several million years. The ancestry of the horse can be
traced

through thousands of fossil remains to a small terrier-sized animal with
four toes on

the front feet and three toes on the hind feet. This ancestor lived in
the Eocene

Epoch, about 54 million years ago. From fossils in the higher layers of
stratified

rock, the horse is found to have gradually acquired its modern form by
eventually

evolving to a one-toed horse almost like modern horses and finally to
the modern

horse, which dates back about 1 million years.




CONCLUSION TO EVOLUTION




    Although we are not totally certain that evolution is how we got
the way we

are now, it is a strong belief among many people today, and scientist
are finding

more and more evidence to back up the evolutionary theory.



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