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EVOLUTION THE INSPIRATIONS THOMAS MALTHUS 1766-1834

EVOLUTION THE INSPIRATIONS THOMAS MALTHUS 1766-1834. Thomas Malthus , author of An Essay on the Principle of Population that inspired both Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace in their separate discoveries of natural selection.

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EVOLUTION THE INSPIRATIONS THOMAS MALTHUS 1766-1834

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  1. EVOLUTIONTHE INSPIRATIONSTHOMAS MALTHUS 1766-1834 • Thomas Malthus, author of An Essay on the Principle of Population that inspired both Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace in their separate discoveries of natural selection. • Was arguing for limits of human population growth, not concerned with how species change. • The limits for populations to increase is controlled by availability of resources. • The latter was extended to all organisms by Darwin and Wallace.

  2. EVOLUTIONTHE not-such-an INSPIRATIONGEORGES CUVIER 1769-1832 • Georges Cuvier: An opponent to Lamarck, Cuvier explained the fossil record as the result of a succession of catastrophes followed by new creation events. • CATASTROPHISM: The view that the earth’s geological landscape is the result of violent cataclysmic events. France

  3. EVOLUTIONCONTEMPORARIES OF DARWINCHARLES LYELL 1797-1875 • A lawyer, geologist, and, for Charles Darwin’s friend and mentor. • Before meeting Darwin in 1836, Lyell had earned acceptance in Europe’s most prestigious scientific circles, thanks to his praised Principles of Geology, published during the years 1830–1833.

  4. EVOLUTIONCONTEMPORARIES OF DARWINJAMES HUTTON & CHARLES LYELL • UNIFORMITARIANISM: The theory that the earth’s features are the result of long-term natural processes (i.e. wind, water erosion, local flooding, frost, decomposition, volcanoes, earthquakes, and glacial movements) that continue to operate in the present as they did in the past. • Proposed by James Hutton, elaborated on by Lyell, this theory opposed catastrophism and contributed strongly to the concept of immense geological time. James Hutton 1726-1797

  5. Charles Darwin (1809-1882) • Ideas were formed while serving as a naturalist on the 5-year voyage of the HMS Beagle. • Darwin’s Dangerous Idea: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=910dz5sCb1I • Darwin saw the importance of biological variation within a species. • Recognized that sexual reproduction increased variation, but did not yet know why.

  6. The Struggle for Existence • The idea that in each generation more offspring are born than survive to adulthood, coupled with the notions of competition for resources and biological diversity led to the theory of evolution. • Darwin wrote, “ It at once struck me that under these circumstances favourable variations would tend to be preserved, and unfavourable ones to be destroyed.”

  7. Domestic Dogs • All domestic dogs share a common ancestor, the wolf. The extreme variation exhibited by dog breeds today has been achieved in a relatively short time through artificial selection.

  8. Alfred Russell Wallace(1823-1913) • Suggested species descended from other species and new species were influenced by environmental factors. • Presented joint paper, coauthored with Darwin, on evolution and natural selection to the Linnean Society of London

  9. Over long periods of geological time, successful variations accumulate in a population • Later generations may be distinct from ancestral ones, or a new species can appear.

  10. Geographical isolation (distance, natural barriers such as oceans) contributes to the formation of new species as individuals begin to adapt to different environments. • Selective pressures (differential ecological circumstances) cause distinct species to develop. Such as the 13 species of Galápagos finches presumably all descended from a common South American ancestor.

  11. Evolutionary Change Through Natural Selection • A trait must be inherited if natural selection is to act on it. • Natural selection can’t occur without population variation in inherited characteristics. • Fitness is a relative measure that changes as the environment changes. • Natural selection can only act on traits that affect reproduction.

  12. Processes of Natural Selection cont. • The environmental context determines whether or not a trait is beneficial. Hence, favorable traits become most advantageous are the results of a natural process. • Traits are inherited and passed on to the next generation. Individuals who produce more offspring are said to have a greater reproductive success, or fitness.

  13. Processes of Natural Selection cont. • Variations accumulate over long periods of time, so later generations may be distinct from ancestral ones. • As populations respond to pressures over time, they may become distinct species, descended from a common ancestor.

  14. Fitness • Pertaining to natural selection, a measure of relative reproductive success of individuals. • Fitness can be measured by an individual’s genetic contribution to the next generation compared to that of other individuals. • Ex: Ramesses II and Ghengis Kahn…

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