Topic 4

Evolution

The gradual change in inherited characteristics of populations over successive generations, driven by natural selection — proposed by Charles Darwin in 1859.

A. Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection

Four Key Principles

  • Overproduction: All organisms produce more offspring than can possibly survive — resources are limited
  • Variation: Individuals within a population show natural variation in their traits (heritable differences)
  • Struggle for Existence: Competition for limited resources — food, mates, territory
  • Survival of the Fittest: Individuals with advantageous traits survive longer and reproduce more successfully
  • Heredity: Favourable traits are inherited by offspring — passed to the next generation
  • Speciation: Over many generations, accumulated changes can lead to the formation of new species
⚡ "Survival of the Fittest" coined by Herbert Spencer (not Darwin). "Fittest" means best adapted to the environment — not necessarily strongest or fastest.

B. Key Evolutionary Concepts

Definitions

ConceptDefinition
Natural SelectionThe process by which organisms with favourable heritable traits survive and reproduce more than those without
VariationHeritable differences among individuals of the same species — the raw material for evolution
AdaptationAn inherited trait that increases an organism's fitness (survival and reproduction) in a specific environment
SpeciationFormation of a new, distinct species from an existing ancestral species over time
MutationA change in the DNA sequence — the primary source of new heritable variation in populations
Genetic DriftRandom change in allele frequencies in a population, especially significant in small populations (bottleneck effect)
Gene FlowTransfer of genetic material between populations through migration of individuals
FitnessAn organism's ability to survive AND reproduce successfully in its environment — measured by reproductive success

C. Evidence for Evolution

Six Lines of Evidence

EvidenceExplanationExample
Fossil RecordShows gradual morphological changes in species over geological timeHorse fossils showing increase in size and reduction of toe bones
Homologous StructuresSame underlying bone structure, different function — same evolutionary origin (common ancestor)Human arm, whale flipper, bat wing, horse leg — all have same bones (humerus, radius, ulna)
Analogous StructuresSame function, different evolutionary origin (convergent evolution)Bird wing vs insect wing — both for flight but evolved independently
Vestigial OrgansReduced, non-functional remnants of structures that were useful in ancestorsHuman appendix, coccyx (tailbone), wisdom teeth, whale hip bones
Molecular BiologyDNA and protein sequence similarities between species indicate common ancestryHumans and chimpanzees share ~98.7% of DNA
EmbryologyEarly embryos of different vertebrate species look strikingly similar — suggests common ancestryFish, reptile, bird and human embryos all have gill slits and tails at early stages
⚡ MCQ Trick Homologous = same ORIGIN, different function. Analogous = same FUNCTION, different origin. Vestigial = reduced/non-functional remnant. Mutation = PRIMARY source of variation.

D. Lamarck vs Darwin

Comparison Table

FeatureLamarckDarwin
TheoryInheritance of Acquired CharacteristicsNatural Selection
Mechanism"Use and disuse" of organs — used organs grow stronger; unused organs shrinkNatural variation + selection pressure + heredity
Giraffe exampleGiraffes stretched necks during lifetime → offspring born with longer necksRandom variation in neck length → longer-necked giraffes survived better → passed trait to offspring
InheritanceAcquired traits (gained during lifetime) are inheritedOnly heritable (genetic) traits are passed on
Accepted?❌ Rejected — acquired traits are NOT inherited (disproved)✅ Widely accepted — supported by genetics and molecular biology

Quick MCQ Revision

FactAnswer
Darwin's theoryNatural Selection (1859)
Lamarck's theoryInheritance of Acquired Characteristics — REJECTED
Primary source of new variationMutation (change in DNA sequence)
Homologous structuresSame origin, different function (e.g. human arm, whale flipper)
Analogous structuresSame function, different origin (e.g. bird wing, insect wing)
Vestigial organsNon-functional remnants of ancestral structures (e.g. human appendix)
FitnessAbility to survive AND reproduce in an environment
Genetic driftRandom allele frequency change — significant in small populations
Key