Bio Note For Grade 12
Bio Note For Grade 12
Bio Note For Grade 12
of evolution’ starting with the origin of life and ending with the current biodiversity- and of
course there must have been extinctions along the way.
For new species to appear, groups of organisms - population - have to change not just
single organism. For them to change, their genes must change, as the genes define what
they will be by controlling protein synthesis. Therefore the process of evolution can be
stated as the change in genetic composition of a population over successive generations,
which may be caused meiosis, hybridization, natural selection or mutation. This leads to a
sequence of events by which the population diverges from other populations of the same
species and may lead to the origin of a new species.
The special creationism theory about the origin of life is nearly always linked to religion,
whereas the acceptance of evolution is linked to scientific thinking. Science describes the
natural world around us using a means of observation and empirical testing using
instruments. These observations then result in the development of scientific theories.
Religion mainly focuses on spiritual matters that, by their very nature, cannot be seen,
touched or measured effectively.
Religion
deals with philosophical matter that relates to morality and concerns between human and
their God
Is less concerned with empirical observable facts and testable hypotheses but rather with
faith, the belief on things that cannot be proven.
In general, science relies on provable events; religion relies on believing in that which
cannot be proven. Special creation states that at some stage, some supreme being created
life on Earth. There are many different versions of special creation, linked with different
religions:
Young earth creationism
Old earth creationism
Day-age and gap creationism
Progressive creationism
Theistic evolution/ Evolutionary creationism
Intelligent design
A. Young Earth Creationism
Suggests the earth is only a few thousand years old
Often believe that the earth was created in six 24-hour days
Agree that the earth is round and moves around the sun
Interpret all geology in the light of Noah’s flood
B. Old Earth Creationism
They are several types and vary in different aspects of how they explain the age of the earth
while still holding to the story found in Genesis. Those who believed in old earth
creationism accept the evidence that the earth is very old but still maintain that all life was
created by God.
Gap creation discusses a large gap between the formation of the earth and the creation of all
the animals and humans. The gap could be millions or billions of years. This gets around the
scientific evidence that the earth is several billion years old without having to believe in the
process of evolution itself.
Day-age creationism is similar in the length of time but talks about each of the six ‘days’ as
really meaning a billion years or so of geologic time the six ‘days’ are just symbolic.
D. Progressive Creationism
This type of creationism accepts the Big Bang as the origin of the universe. It accepts the
fossil record of a series of creations for all of the organisms catalogued. However, it does
not accept these as part of a continuing process; each is seen as a unique creation. Modern
species are not seen as being genetically related to the ancient ones.
Promoted by the pope for the Catholic Church and also espoused by most maintain
Protestants.
F. Intelligent Design
This is the newest version of creationism and maintains that God’s handiwork can be
seen in all of creation if one knows where to look.
Advocates of intelligent design offer sophisticated arguments, often based on cell
biology and mathematics, to give impression of complex scientific arguments and to
create equal stature with mainstream scientific thoughts.
The term intelligent design is used to mask the fact that it’s a form of creationism
cloaked in scientific sounding ideas.
Spontaneous generation suggests that life can evolve ‘spontaneously’ from non-living
objects. It was only a few hundred years ago that people still believed this to be true.
Figure 4.2 Examples of spontaneous generation. A) Muddy soil gave rise to the frogs B)
Mice came from the moldy grain C) Sewage and garbage turned in to the rats and D)
Rotting meat turned into flies.
The work of Francisco Redi disprove the idea of rotting meat producing flies and the work
of Louis Pasteur to finally show that not even micro-organisms could be produced by
spontaneous generation.
In Redi’s experiment illustrated in figure 4.3, flies only appeared in the jars where flies had
access in the first place. Exclude the flies, as he did with some jars, and the meat does not
produce either maggot or flies.
Louis Pasteur showed that broth (or wine) only went sour if micro-organisms were allowed
to enter. Also no micro-organisms appeared in the broth unless they were allowed to enter
from the outside-they were not formed from the broth itself.
These two scientists showed that both macro organism (Redi) and micro-organisms (Louis
Pasteur) can only arise from pre-existing organisms, disproving the theory of spontaneous
generation.
But what about the first ever cell? Unless we believe that life is eternal, with no beginning
and no end, there had to be a first cell. And it could not have come from a pre-existing cell
because it was the first.
Scientists have proposed a method whereby the necessary components of life could be
formed and believe that, somehow they managed to assemble themselves into a primitive
cell. This is a kind spontaneous generation.
How does the eternity of Life theory seek to explain Life on Earth?
In this theory of life, there is no beginning and no end to life on Earth and so it
neither needs special creation nor does it need to be generated from non-living
matter.
Supporters of this theory believe that life is an inherent property of the universe and has
always existed-as has the universe. At the time when such theories were being
propounded, many eminent scientists-including Albert Einstein-believed that the
universe was unchanging. They reasoned that ‘if life is found today in unchanging
universe, then it must always have been there’.
The idea of cosmozoan theory was proposed by Richter in 1865 and supported by
Arrhenius in 1908 and by other contemporary scientists. The theory did not gain any
significant support as it lacks evidence. It strongly linked to the ‘eternity of life’ theory
of the origin of life on Earth.
In the 19th C, Hermann Richter put forward the idea that life has always existed in the
universe, propagating itself from one place to another by means of ‘Cosmozoa’ (germs
of the cosmos). In this theory, life has existed and will exist for all eternity across the
universe, and so there is no need for an explanation of its origin. Two other eminent
scientists of the time- Lord Kelvin and Herman Von Helmholtz-also took the same
view.
In 1908, the Swedish physical chemist Svante Arrhenius put forward a new version of
the cosmozoan theory, and gave it the name Panspermia.
Arrhenius contribution was a new theory of the mechanism by which life could be
transported between planets; he proposed that bacterial spores were propelled through
inter-planetary space by radiation pressure.
Cosmozoan theory had assumed transport was by means of meteorites or by comets.
However, the very high temperatures that meteorites create on entering the Earth’s
atmosphere seemed to rule this out.
In Arrhenius version of the theory, spores arriving at the Earth (possibly attached to
grains of interstellar dust) could fall slowly to the ground without being subjected to
high temperatures due to air friction.
One of the motivations for Arrhenius panspermia theory was that it also seemed to
provide a solution to disproof by Louis pasture’s Experiments of spontaneous
generation in bacteria. Arrhenius theory was dropped by most scientists when it became
apparent that the bacterial spores would be subject to UV radiation and X-radiation,
zones of charged particles which would inevitably destroy them.
However, another version of the cosmozoan theory or panspermia does have some evidence
to back it up. This version-called weak panspermia or pseudo-panspermia-is the theory
that organic compounds arrived from outer space and added to the chemicals on earth that
give rise to the first life.
In 1969 a meteorite landed in Australia that was 12% water and contained traces of 18
amino acids. This evidence points not only the presence of organic compounds in outer
space, but also to the capacity of such compounds to reach Earth. Complex organic
molecules have been detected in star-forming clouds, further adding to the evidence for
organic molecules in space.
The steady state theory of the universe is strongly linked to the eternity of life theory for
scientists now generally accept that the universe began with a ‘Big Bang’ and will either
expand forever or will eventually contract again, ending in a ‘Big Crunch’. However, for the
early part of the 20th C, a number of eminent astronomers and physicists believed that the
universe was in a steady state’. It had always existed the way it was and always would.
Figure 4.6 Clouds of inter-stellar gas have been shown to contain
organic molecules.
This theory states that the first form of life evolved from a set of chemicals formed as a
result of biochemical reactions. The theory is sometimes called as abiogenesis which owe to
two biologists working early in the twentieth century.
The two Biologists who put forward ideas about abiogenesis are:
Aleksandar Oparin (in 1924), a Russian Biologist
John Haldane (in 1929), an English biologist.
These two biologists suggested that:
The primitive atmosphere of the Earth was a reducing atmosphere with no free oxygen-
as opposed to the oxygen rich atmosphere of today.
There was an appropriate supply of energy such as lightening or ultraviolet light and
this would provide the energy for reactions that would synthesize a wide range of
organic compounds, such as amino acids, sugar and fatty acids.
The coacervates were able to absorb and assimilate organic compounds from the
environment in a way similar to the metabolism of cells.
These coacervates were the precursors of cells and would be subject to natural selection,
eventually leading to the first true cells. Figure 4.7 below shows some coacervate droplets
containing amino acids and small polymers of one of the nitrogenous bases in DNA.
Figure 4.7 Coacervate droplets – pre-cells?
When he analyzed the liquid in the water trap, he found it contained a number of simple
organic molecules-hydrogen cyanide (HCN) was one of them. He found that by leaving the
equipment for longer periods of time, a larger variety and more complex organic molecules
were formed including:
The Oparin- Haldane hypothesis has been supported by considerable evidence but with its
problems. These include:
Why are only ‘Left handed’ amino acids found in living things when both Left-handed
and right-handed type are possible?
Although nitrogenous bases can be synthesized in the laboratory, purines (adenine and
guanine) are not synthesized under the same conditions as pyrimidine (thymine, Uracil
and cytosine); this is quite a series problem for the theory.
Although Miller was able to demonstrate the formation of monomers in his
investigation, he was unable to demonstrate the next significant step of polymerization
of these monomers.
In 2009, John Sutherland, a chemist at the University of Manchester in England, found that,
instead of making the nitrogenous base and sugar separately from chemicals likely to have
existed on the primitive earth, under the right conditions the base sugar could be built up as
a single unit (a nucleotide) and so did not need to be linked. It has been shown that
polymerization can occur under appropriate conditions and a solution is in sight for the
‘handedness’ problem.
John Desmond Bernal suggested that there were a number of clearly defined ‘stages’ in
explaining the origin of life.
Bernal suggested that evolution may have commenced at sometime between stage 1 and
2.The first two stages have been demonstrated as being possible in the conditions of the
primitive earth, and research on stage 3 is well advanced.
The fossil record shows that cyanobacteria had been producing oxygen by photosynthesis
from about 3.5 billion years ago but that for almost 1 billion years the levels in the
atmosphere did not rise because the oxygen was absorbed by the vast among of iron in the
earth-it rusted!! But by 2.4 billion years ago, the concentration began to rise and the rate of
increase accelerated from 2.1 billion years ago.
Cyano-bacteria are photo-autotrophs. They use light as a source of energy, and CO2 as
source of carbon (photosynthesis). They are among the earliest of autotrophs using, not
chlorophyll, but another pigment, phycocyanin (which gives them their blue-green
appearance), to capture light energy.
Figure 4.10 Phycocyanin absorbs different wavelengths of light from
chlorophyll
Other primitive autotrophs used not light as source of energy but chemical reactions and are
called chemo-autotrophs. Chemo-autotrophs use the energy from chemical reactions to
synthesis all necessary organic compounds, starting from carbon dioxide. They generally
only use inorganic energy sources. Most are bacteria or archea that live in hostile
environments such as deep sea vents and are primary producers in ecosystems on the sea
beds.
Bacteria are the only life forms found in the rocks for a long time, 3.5 to 2.1 billion
years ago.
Eukaryotes become numerous 1.9 to 2.1 billion years ago and
Fungi- like organisms appeared about 0.9 billion years ago.
The oxygen produced by the photo-autotrophs had made it possible for aerobic respiration
to evolve as an energy releasing pathway. As this process release far more energy than does
the anaerobic pathway more active organisms could now evolve-the animals, perhaps 600 to
700 million years ago.
Figure 4.11 Life on Earth has evolved over billions of years
But how does this happen? What drives the population to become a new species? Among
many more theories Charles Darwin (natural selection), who put forward the idea to the
Royal society in 1858, suggested that those organisms that were best adapted to their
environment would have an advantage and be able to reproduce in greater numbers than
other types, and pass on the advantageous adaptations. Because he knew nothing of genetic,
he was unable to suggest how this takes place.
For many years in Europe, the christen belief had been that the Earth and all species had
been created about 6000 years ago. In the mid-1700s, George Buffon challenged this idea,
suggesting that:
Figure 4.12 Lamarck’s idea of use and disuse and the inheritance of acquired
traits of evolution
According to Lamarck, a given giraffe could, over a life time of straining to reach high
branches, develop an elongated neck. However, Lamarck could not explain how this might
happen. He talks about a natural tendency towards perfection - but this not really an
explanation.
Another example: - The toes of water birds – webbed toes.
Disuse example:-The wings of penguins have become smaller than those of other birds
because penguins do not use them to fly.
Lamarck believed that traits changed or acquired during an individual’s lifetime could be
passed on to its offspring. Giraffes that had acquired long necks would have offspring
with long necks rather than the short necks their parents were born with. However,
Lamarck did believe that evolutionary change takes place gradually and constantly.
He studied ancient seashells and noticed that the older they were, the simpler they appeared.
From this, he concluded that species started out simple and consistently moved towards
complexity, or as he termed it, closer to perfection. This idea we still retain today.
50 years later, in 1858, Charles Darwin published his famous paper on Natural selection. In
the same year, another Biologist, Alfred Russell Wallace, had come to similar conclusions
and they jointly published the scientific paper to the Linnaean society of London.
Some of the Darwin’s evidence came from a visit to the GalapagosIslands. Darwin visited
five of the Galapagos Islands and made drawings and collected specimens.
Darwin, particularly studied the finches found on the different islands and noted that there
were many similarities between them, as well as the obvious differences. He concluded that
the simplest explanation was that an ‘ancestral finch’ had colonized the islands from the
mainland and in the absence of predators, been able to adapt to the different conditions on
the islands and eventually evolve in to different species.
Figure 4.13 Darwin’s finches
Some of the finches had evolved into insect eaters, those with pointed beaks. Others had
evolved into seed eaters with beaks capable of crushing the seeds.
150 years later on and geneticist have been able to confirm Darwin’s ideas and even
produced a ‘family tree based on the similarity of their DNA. Biologists wanted to test how
well the finches were adapted to their ‘niche’. They analyzed the size of the seeds eaten by
the three different ground finches.
Figure 4.14 The different sizes of seeds eaten by three species of ground finch
from the Galapagos Islands
Although there is a little overlap, as fig 4.14 depicts, each finch eats seeds of a different size
and their beaks are adapted to obtain and crush these different-sized seeds.At the same time,
Darwin called this ‘descent with modification’ and believed it to be key evidence in support
of his theory of natural selection. Now this is called ‘adaptive radiation’.
Natural selection is the process by which individuals, which are well adapted to their
environment, survive. This increases their chances to survive and reproduce. Poorly adapted
individuals die. The theory of natural selection was based on the following observations and
deductions, overproduction, struggle for existence and variation.
2. Struggle for existence (competition). The struggle for existence arises largely from
competition. Individuals compete with one another for the limited resources that enable
them to survive such as food, space and light. Limitation of resources would result in a
struggle for existence between individuals of the same species. This kind of struggle is
called intraspecific struggle. If individuals of two different species compete, it is called
interspecific struggle.
3. The survival of the fittest or natural selection. In the struggle for existence only those
individuals that are best suited to new conditions of life will survive. The ones that are
the least fit will be the first to perish. This principle is known as Survival of the fittest.
4. Variation – In any species there is variation between individuals. Some individuals are
better adapted to the environment than others. These individuals will be more likely to
survive than others. They will be most likely to reproduce and pass on their good
characteristics to their offspring.
Suppose all allele determines a feature that gives an organism an advantage in its
environment. The following will happen
Those individuals with the advantageous allele of the gene will survive to produce in
greater numbers than other types
They will pass on their advantageous allele in greater numbers than other type
The frequency of the advantageous allele in the gene pool of the population will be
higher in the next generation.
This process repeats over many generations and the frequency of advantageous
allele in the gene pool increases with each generation that passes.
Mutations are important in introducing variation into populations. Any mutation could
produce an allele which:
Confers a selective advantage; the frequency of the allele will increase over time.
Is neutral in its overall effect; the frequency may increase slowly, remain stable or
decrease (the change in frequency will depend on what other genes /alleles are
associated with the mutant allele).
Is advantageous; the frequency of the allele will be low and could disappear from the
population
Neo- Darwinism
Take into account our knowledge of genetics
It encompasses our understanding of animal behavior- sometimes referred to as
ethology.
Many ethologists and evolutionary psychologist believe that behavioral patterns confer
survival advantage than physical features - or not.
The evidences for evolution are derived from various branches of science. The important
sources of evidence are:
1. Evidence from paleontology (the study of fossils)
2. Evidence from body structure
3. Evidence from comparative embryology
4. Evidence from comparative biochemistry
5. Evidence from plant and animal breeding
The word ‘paleontology’ refers to the study of ancient life and comes from the Greek words
palaios (ancient) and logos (study). Fossils form the basis of this science as they are the
main direct evidence about past life. Fossils (from Latin word fossus, meaning ‘having been
dug up’) are the remains of animals, plants and other organisms from the remote past. We
can group fossils into two categories:
Category 1: the remains of the dead animals or plant or the imprint left from the remains,
including:
Bones
Teeth
Skin impressions
Hair
The hardened shell of an ancientinvertebrate such as a trilobite or an ammonite
An impression of an animal or plant, even if the actual parts are missing
Category 2: Something that was made by the animal while it was living that has since
hardened into stone; this are called trace fossils and include:
Footprint
Burrows
Coprolite (animal faeces)
B
Figure 4.15 A - Dinosaur’s foot print; B – Dinosaur
Type 1 fossils can be the actual organism or part of the organism, like a piece of bone or
hair or feather as it actually was.
For example: the spider trapped inside the amber for million years gets completely
unchanged Amber is a fossilized resin from trees. This is because; the spider is protected
from micro-organism within the amber. Amber is fossilized resin from trees.
In many fossils, the soft parts of the body have been lost, but the exoskeleton is perfectly
preserved. In some cases, however, the entire body remains.
2. Sedimentation
As time passes sediments bury the remaining hard parts of the organism.
Fossilization is more likely if this happens quickly than if it happens more slowly.
The chemical makeup of the sediments affects the color of the fossil will be.
The nature of the sediments themselves influences the nature and quality of the fossil
Iron-rich sediments could give the rock (and the fossil) a reddish color. Phosphates may
darken the rock so that it is grey or black.
3. Permineralisation
As the sediments accumulate, the lower layers become compacted by the weight of the
layers on top. Over time, this pressure turns the sediments into rock. If water rich in
minerals percolates (seeps) through the sediments, the mineral particles stick to the particles
of sediment and effectively glue them together into a solid mass. Over the course of
millions of years, these mineral particles dissolve away the original hard parts of the
organism, replacing the molecules of exoskeleton with molecules of calcite (calcium
carbonate) or another mineral. In time, the entire shell is replaced by mineral particles and
these also are compressed into rock in the shape of the original organism. As this rock is not
the same as the surrounding rock, it is visible as a fossil in the exact shape of the original
organism.
4. Uplift
As continental plates moves around the Earth, colliding with each other, mountains formed
sea floors are lifted up and become dry land.
Figure 4.17 Earth movements may expose rocks that were deep beneath the
surface
Figure 4.17 shown above depicts, the depth of the strata is related to their age. The thickness
of each stratum is a measure of the time period during which that stratum is formed.
The commonest method used by scientists to determine the ages of rocks and hence fossils
trapped in them is radiometric dating. This method depends on the fact that some isotopes
of certain elements are radioactive. They are unstable and decay at a constant rate. This is
known as radioactive decay. Radioactive parent elements decay to stable daughter elements.
When a molten rock cools and solidifies and radioisotope trapped in the rock will begin to
decay into its daughter elements. Thus, by measuring the amount of parent and daughter
elements in the rock and by determining the rate at which the parent element decays into its
daughter element, the date at which the rock was formed and the fossil was deposited can be
estimated. The rate of decay is expressed in terms of the half – life of that isotope. Half –
life refers to the time taken for the radioactive isotope to fall by half. The shorter the half –
life, the faster is the rate of decay. Examples of radioisotopes commonly used in the
determination of the ages of rocks are carbon – 14, potassium 40 and uranium 235. Note
the number is the mass number.
14
The ratio of C to C12 in living things is about 1, 1x1012(trillion) this has always the same,
12
burring their lives living things lose C14 (as CO2 and other execratory products) and also
gain it in the food they eat (or make it in the case of autotrophs).
Figure 4.19 Half-life of a radioactive element
But when living things die, the C14start to decay in to non-radioactive nitrogen, and clearly
not replaced. So after 5730 years (one half-life of C14), only 50% of the original carbon 14
atoms will remain and the ratio of C 14 to C12 will be 1 to 2 trillion (or 0.5 to 1 trillion). After
11,460 years, 25% of the original C 14 atoms remain and the ratio is 1 to 4 trillion (or 0.25 to
1 trillion). The percentage of C14 atoms and the ratio of carbon 14 to C12keep having with
each half-life that passes.
So, if we analyzed a fossil and found that it had only 6.25% of its original C 14 atoms, we
would know that it was 22 920 years old. Potassium- argon dating works in the same way,
but the half-life in this case is 1.3 million years. This makes potassium-argon dating
suitable for dating rocks millions of years old, whereas radio carbon dating is really only
accurate with rocks up to 60,000 years old.
How does Comparative anatomy Support the theory of Evolution?
This is one of the strongest forms of evidence for evolution. Comparative anatomy looks at
structural similarities of organisms and uses these to determine their possible evolutionary
relationships. It assumes that organism with similar anatomical features are closely related
evolutionarily, and that they probably share a common ancestor.
Homologous structure- organisms with similar anatomical structure, but very different in
function best example of homologous structures is the forelimbs of mammals.
The forelimbs of humans, whales, cats and bats are all very similar in structure.
For examples, early in development, all vertebrate embryos (including us) have gill slits and
tails, shown in fig 4.21. However, the ‘gill slits’ are not gills; they connect the throat to the
outside, but in many species they close later in development. However, in fish and larval
amphibians they contribute to the development of gills.
The embryonic tail does not develop into a tail in all species, but in humans, it is reduced
during development to the coccyx, or tailbone. The more similar the patterns of embryonic
development, the more closely related species are assumed to be. The similarity in the
pattern of development of the vertebrates suggests, again, a common ancestor.
DNA hybridization technique measures the extent to which a strand of DNA from one
species can bind with (or hybridize with) a strand of DNA from another species. In this
technique, the double Helix of the DNA molecule is heated to separate it into single strands
and then the single- stranded DNA (ss DNA) from both species is mixed and the mixture
cooled.
Although the ss DNA from species A and species B will hybridize (bind) as it cools, it will
not do so along all its length. There will be regions that are mismatched (the base pairs are
not complementary) and so do not bind and there are techniques available to measure the
percentage of this mismatching. The hemoglobin molecule is similar in all animals that
possess it, but there are differences. For example, the hemoglobin of the lamprey (a
primitive fish-like animal) has only one poly peptide chain, not four. Most animals have
hemoglobin with four chains, but the chains do vary.
How does plant and animal breeding support the theory of Evolution?
Humans have been trying to improve the yields of their crop plants and stock animals for
thousand years using selective breeding, in which
Those animals/ or plants/ that show the desired trait are selected and mated, and
E. g: High milk yield
Large number of seeds per pod
The offspring are monitored carefully, and again only those with the desired trait are
allowed to breed
Over many generations, selective breeding can bring about significant changes to the
organisms involved. Example: the modification by selective breeding then natural selection
should also be able to produce new varieties, and eventually new species.
Figure 4.24 The wild bear has been selectively bred to produce
the domestic pig
Natural selection is the ‘driving force’ behind evolution. It is the process that brings about
changes (over time) in populations that can, eventually lead to different populations of the
same
species becoming different species. Natural selection eventually leads to speciation (the
formation of new species).
For example: - thicker fur (longer hair) in foxes is an advantage in cold climate. Thinner fur
in foxes is advantage in a hot climate.
Overtime, selection operates against the disadvantaged extreme and in favour of the other
extreme. The mean and range of values shift towards the favored extreme.
Both allopatric and sympatric speciation involves isolating mechanisms that prevent
different populations from interbreeding for a period of time. The two population become
‘reproductively isolated’ and effectively become distinct species when mutations that arise
in one population cannot be passed to the other, different selection pressures in the different
environments, genetic differences between the two populations increases.
Polyploidy has been important in plant evolution because it has allowed otherwise infertile
hybrids to become fertile again. When different species form hybrids, very often the hybrids
cannot produce offspring because all the chromosomes cannot form bivalents (homologous
pairs) in meiosis. So they cannot form sex cells and cannot reproduce.
Figure 4.29 Hybridization and polyploidy in the evolution of modern wheat
If the chromosome number were to double, then all chromosomes are able to form
homologous pairs. Meiosis and sex-cell formation can take place and the hybrid is now
fertile. Hybridization and polyploidy have been important in the evolution of modern
wheat from
wild grasses. Fig 4.28 shown above depicts how Hybrid B is infertile because each cell
contains one set of chromosome (7) that came from Aegilops squarrosa and one set of
chromosomes (14) that came from Triticum durum. Clearly, with 21 chromosomes per
cell, there are not enough chromosomes for them all to form homologous pairs- even if
they were homologous. But when the hybrid doubled its chromosome number, there
were two of each chromosome. Now homologous pairs can form in meiosis and the
hybrid is fertile.
They are not related evolutionary, but all feed on ants and must obtain ant from narrow
cracks in the ground. The similarity between the four is the result of convergent
evolution. Convergent evolution is also responsible for the wings of a bird, a bat and the
extinct pterodactyl.
Who are we and where have we come from? A loose language used in describing human
evolution. We heard people saying we evolved from chimpanzees’ or we evolved from
monkeys or ‘we evolved from apes’. None of these statements are accurate.
There has been a ‘line of evolution’ for millions of years that has given rise to old world
monkeys, a new world monkeys, the great apes and the different species of humans that
have lived. But we are Homo sapiens and we are the latest of several humans to live on
the planet. We have two features in particular that distinguish us from other primates.
These are:
A very large brain, and
Bipedalism the ability to truly walk on just two legs
Even though there existed debate among biologist about which comes first and about
exactly how this evolutionary tree has given rise to the various groups, and disagree
over the details, they all agreed about the idea- a line of evolution that has branched to
give the different groups of primates (including apes and humans) that exist today and
have existed in the not
too distant past. Humans and chimpanzees both evolved from a common ancestor that
lived about 6 million years ago.
Fig 4.32 shows a timeline for the major hominin and hominid species according to
currently available fossil evidence. Fossils of many of the species along the early part of
the timeline were found in Ethiopia. It is indeed the ‘cradle of mankind’.
Figure 4.33 A timeline for the major hominin and hominid species
Lucy was also partly arboreal (tree-dwelling). She was about 107cm (3’6’’) tall and
about 28Kg (62lbs) in weight. When she was discovered, Lucy represented one of the
oldest fossil hominis. The proportions of her humerus and femur were mid-way between
those modern humans and chimpanzees.
Figure 4.34 A- The original Lucy fossil; B- The Lucy display including the reconstructed
parts
Lucy had brain size about the same size as that of a chimpanzee, so her discovery was
able to settle a debate amongst biologists at the same time which came first, large brain
or bipedalism? Clearly bipedalism came before big brains.
The Ardi fossil (together with many other similar fossils) was first discovered in 1992,
in the Afar desert in Ethiopia, but it was only in 2009, after many year analysis, that
research paper published that gave Ardi a unique position in human evolution.
The brain of Homo sapiens uses 25% of the resting energy requirement, compared with
8% in the great apes. A large brain allows humans to:
As humans moved from Africa into different areas of the world, they encountered
different environments. Different selection pressures in the different environments
resulted in the different human populations evolving along different lines.
For example, as humans encountered colder climates body features that gave a survival
advantage by helping to conserve heat were selected. These include:
A shorter, squatter body shape
These reduces the surface-area-to volume ratio and so reduces the rate of heat loss
by radiation
An increased layer of adipose time under the skin to act as insulation.
Increased hairiness; this reduces heat loss by convection
Humans have been evolving into different ‘races’ for thousands of years. There are three
main races with several subdivisions with difficult and disagreement on classification
bases of these races. Of course it is based on a recent genetic analysis of different races.
African (Negroid), 100 million people from Africa and Melanesians of the south
pacific
Eurasian (Caucasoid), 1000 million people with variable skin color ranging from
white to dark brown. Three subdivisions exit.
Nordic- often tall, blonde and narrow-headed includes people from Scandinavian
and Baltic countries, Germany, France, and Britain.
Mediterranean- usually lighter in body build, dark and narrow headed; includes
people from southern France, Spain, Italy, Wales, Egypt, Jews, Arabs, Afghanistan,
Pakistan, India.
Alpine- usually broad-headed, square Jaws, olive skin, brown hair; includes people
from countries from Mediterranean to Asia.
East Asia (Mongoloid), most numerous of the present-day populations and split into
three groups:
However, this classification does not include the central African pigmies, the Bushmen
and the Australoids. Some thousands of years ago the human populations or races might
have been beginning to evolve into separate species with certain physical and genetic
difference emerged between the different races. However, our large brain has intervened
into major ways:
We developed the skill to design and manufacture all kinds of thinner from
buildings to tools to clothes. This effectively allowed us to become able to adapt to
it.
We developed global travel. This has allowed humans of all races to interbreed,
throwing many of the genetic differences that have revolved into a huge human
melting pot.
5.1 AN INTRODUCTION TO BEHAVIOR
What is behavior?
Behavior can be defined in a number of ways, depending on our perspective, or view point.
Some definitions of behavior are listed below:
The observable response a person make to any situation
A manner of acting or conducting yourself
The way a person behaves towards other people
The actions or reactions of a person or animal in response to external or internal
stimuli
The response or reactions or movements made by an organism in any situation.
However, from a biological view point, none of these is quite complete. Therefore, Behavior is
defined as co-ordinated response of an organism to an internal or external stimulus. It is
brought about because of sensory, neural and hormonal factors. Behavior includes activities
of organisms such as feeding, mating, courtship, nest building and communications. Ethology
is the study of behavior in its natural habitat. It involves investigating the relationship of
animals to their physical environment as well as to other organisms.
For an organism to show a co-ordinated response, then any behavior must have these
components
A receptor of some kind to detect the stimulus
An effector of some kind to produce the response and
Some kind of linking system or co-ordinating system that is influenced by the
receptor and can influence the effector.
Stimulus Receptor
Co-ordinating system
Response Effector
Figure 5.2 Plant stems grow towards the area of greatest light intensity
The benefit in plant stems growing towards the greatest intensity of light is that stem
automatically direct their leaves for the chlorophyll and other pigments in the leaf cells can
absorb the maximum amount of light for photosynthesis.
This response is co-ordinated by plant growth substances called auxins which are produced in
the short tip in response to light and move downwards and away from light to the ‘dark’ side of
the shoot. The auxins stimulate the shoot cells to divide and enlarge so that growth is greatest
on the side away from light. As this side grows more, it causes the shoot to bend towards light.
The root grows more or less downwards because of the unidirectional stimulus called gravity.
The response of plants to this stimulus is called geotropism. Plant roots are positively
geotropic while plant shoots are negatively geotropic. This means that the roots will grow
towards an environment in which they can anchor the plant, absorb water and absorb mineral
ions.
How do Simple Animals respond to Stimuli?
There are two different types of responses in simple organisms. These are:
Taxes (sing Taxis) – in which the animals moves along a gradient of intensity of a
stimulus towards the greatest intensity of the stimulus (a positive taxis) and
sometimes away from the greatest intensity (a negative taxis).
For example: a unicellular protoctistan Euglena swims (using its flagellum)
towards areas of increased light intensity. This is positive photo taxis and allows the
organism to photosynthesis efficiently.
Kinesis (sing Kinesis), in which a change in the intensity of the stimulus brings
about a change in the rate of movement.
For example: woodlice increase their rate of movement in bright light. This
increases the probability that they will move into a dark area, where it is usually
more humid and they will lose less water.
Detected by ocelli
(Simple eyes)
Nerve cells transmit impulses to/from central Nervous system
Basic research on circadian and other endogenous rhythms in animals has led on to
research relevant to humans in areas such as coping with jet-lag or shift-working.
Animal behavior researchers look at the behavior and well-being of animals in the Lab and in
their natural environment. Such research has ensured reasonable and effective standards for
the care and well-being of research animals. Improved conditions for farm animals, breeding
of endangered species and proper care of companions’ animals all require information about
behavior patterns.
Example: - Migratory behavior of some birds and locusts, spinning of a web by spider and the
way the honeybees share out all the work in the hive.
Examples of innate behavior include:
The withdrawal of our hand from a hot object (reflex)
Blinking when some dust gets in our eye (reflex)
The kineses of woodlice in response to changes in light intensity and humidity
(orinetational)
Nest-building (instinctive)
Imprinting (instinctive)
Weaving a web (instinctive)
How are Reflex actions brought about?
There are two main kinds of reflex actions:
A. Those that involve our special senses (eyes, ears, pressure detectors, etc.) and produce
a response by muscle, called Somatic Reflexes. These include the ‘knee-jerk reflex’ and
the ‘withdrawal from heat’ reflex many of these reflexes are protective.
B. Those that involve sensors in internal organs and produce responses also in internal
organs, called Automatic reflexes. These include the reflex actions controlling heart
rate and breathing rate.
One has to look at the structure of the nervous system to understand how these two types of
reflex action operate. Our nervous system is divided physically into two major components:
1. The central nervous system (CNS) - Comprises brain and spinal cord, and
2. The peripheral nervous system (PNS) - Comprising the cranial and spinal nerves each
containing many sensory and motor neurons.
They will persist with a period of about 24-hours in the absence of environmental cues.
They can synchronies to a 24 hour cue, such as the light-dark cycle; this is called
entrainment.
The biological clock of mammals and of some other animals is found in a small area of the
hypothalamus of the brain, called the suprachiasmatic nucleus. This sends impulses to a gland
called the pineal gland, which secretes a hormone called melatonin during the night, which
promotes sleepfulness and so controls the sleep-wake cycle. Because of this if we did not have
other cues to wake us and send us to sleep; we might expect to have a different sleep-wake
cycle in the summer compared to the winter.
Clearly the shorter nights of summer have an effect but not quite what one would expect. The
subjects woke earlier in summer, but also went to bed earlier. However, the shorter nights did
result in a reduction of 21 minutes of sleep.
The feeding behavior of herring gulls is an example of instinctive behavior. The orange spot on
the beak is the key stimulus and pecking is the fixed action pattern. This is not much more
complex than some reflex actions. However, aggression in sticklebacks (fish) involved more
complex responses.
Male sticklebacks are very territorial; they will attack any other male that invades their
territory. The ethologist Niko Tinbergen, in some famous experiments, was able to show that
the key stimulus was the red belly of the entering male. The defending male attacked any non-
fish model that had red on its ventral (lower) surface.
However, it turns out that the red belly-the key stimulus- provokes a very different fixed action
pattern in female sticklebacks. They find it irresistible and it stimulates mating behavior.
In an investigation into nesting behavior in lovebirds, there is some evidence that some fixed
action patterns can be modified slightly by experience- two different species of love birds with
different nesting behavior were interbred.
Female Fischer’s lovebirds cut short strips of nesting material, which are carried individually
to the nest. Female peach-faced love birds cut short strips and carry several at a time by
tucking them into their back feathers.
Hybrid females from the crosses exhibited the following behavior. In the first mating season
they
Cut intermediate length strips
Tried, but failed, to transport them by tucking into back feathers
Learned to carry strips in their beaks
Imprinting is another kind of instinctive behavior in which the fixed action pattern is for newly
born/ hatched organisms to imprint on (or become attached to) the first thing they see that has
certain general features (those of an adult of its species). Many species of birds like swans,
chickens, ducks and geese will follow the first moving object they see for two or three days after
hatching and will continue to show this following response as they mature. The phenomenon is
known as imprinting. Under natural circumstances, the first object they would normally see is
their mother. Imprinting is a simple and specialized sort of learning which only occurs in very
young animals.
In his most famous study, Konrad Lorenz divided the newly hatched goslings (a gosling is a
young goose) leaving some with the mother and the rest are kept with himself for a few hours.
The goslings started to follow Lorenz around as if he was their mother. From that day on, they
followed Lorenz and showed no recognition of their own mother or other adults of their own
species. The young reared by the mother showed normal behavior following their mother. This
early imprinting lingered into adulthood. The birds continued to prefer the company of Lorenz
and other humans to that of their own species and sometimes even tried to mate with humans.
However, if the goslings are not offered any object to follow within a couple of days after
hatching, they lose their readiness to imprint. This shows us that imprinting will only take place
during a sensitive period in their lives and will never be repeated later on. Thus it appears that
the young animals are primed during a short sensitive period early in their lives to form a
learned attachment to a moving object, normally their mother. Imprinting is a type of learned
behavior with a significant innate component acquired during a limited critical period. Critical
period is a limited time during which learning can occur, a feature that distinguishes
imprinting from other forms of learning. Lorenz considered that imprinting, unlike other forms
of learning is irreversible, is restricted to the brief sensitive period just after hatching.
Figure 5.11 Imprinting. A) Konrad Lorenz and the geeze B)The young goosling and
their mother
Unlike innate behavior, learned behavior patterns are rarely fully functional the first time they
are performed. At the very simplest level of learning, trial and error brings about an
improvement in the effectiveness of the behavior pattern.
Table 5.2 describes the main differences between innate behavior and learned behavior.
Innate behavior Learned behavior
Genetically determined and common to all The behavior is changed by, or develops through,
members of a species experience and may vary from individual to individual
Behavior is fully functional at the first The animal develops the behavior through trial and
attempt error or by insight
Generally no modification of the behavior The behavior may be modified by new experiences
Adaptive behavior that has been retained as Behavior is learned a new by each member of the
a result of natural selection species and may not be adaptive
It is more important in lower organisms It is more important in higher organisms
What is habituation?
Habituation is the simplest form of learning. It is a progressive loss of responsiveness to
repeated stimulation. Habituation is the fall or elimination of response to frequently occurring
stimuli that have no effect on the animal’s well-being. Habituation- is a process which results a
decreased response to a stimulus after repeated exposure to that stimulus over a period of time.
Example: - noticing a strong smell on entering a room, but some time later we don’t even
notice that there is any odor present- i.e. our sense of smell has demonstrated habituation
smelling has stopped responding to the odor even though it is still present.
Habituation can occur at different levels in the nervous system. It can happen because:
Sensory systems may stop, after a while, sending signals to the brain in response to a
continuously present or often repeated stimulus; this is sensory habituation.
The brain still perceives the stimulus is still present, but has simply decided no longer to
pay attention.
Example: - Prairie dogs –habituated to humans when located near their areas regularly while
they give alarm calls when large mammals, large birds or snakes approach them.
What is Sensitization?
Sensitization is an increase in response to a harmless stimulus when that stimulus occurs after
a harmful stimulus. It is learning to be hypersensitive to a stimulus. After encountering an
intense stimulus, such as an electric shock, an animal may often react vigorously to a mild
stimulus that it would previously ignored. For example touching the siphon of Aplysia gently
causes the animal to withdraw its gill-until it becomes habituated to the harmless stimulus.
However, if the gentle touch on the siphon is preceded by an electric shock (or other mildly
harmful stimulus) to the tail, then the gill withdrawal response is much stronger. The events in
one pathway of neurons (the painful stimulation of the tail) are clearly affecting the reflex arc
that controls the gill withdrawal reflex. The strength and duration of the sensitized response
depend on the extent of the initial sensitization.
In higher animals, peripheral sensitization refers to the sensitizations that result from changes
in neurons of the peripheral nervous system. Central sensitization refers to the same process
occurring in neurons of the central nervous system.
When behavior has favorable consequences, the probability that the act will be repeated is
increased. This relationship may result because the animal learns to perform the behavior in
order to be rewarded. In this type of associative learning, the timing of events is very
important. The difference between classical conditioning and operant conditioning is that in
operant conditioning, the behavior must be spontaneously emitted. It is not initiated by a
stimulus as it is in classical conditioning. But the favorable result or reinforcement must follow
it closely.
When the reinforcer is withheld the response rate gradually declines. This happens in the same
way as the strength of the conditioned reflex decreases when the conditioned reflex was
presented many times without the unconditioned reflex. The process similarly is also called
extinction.
Reinforcement Increased
The term ‘operant conditioning’ was first used by B.F. skinner, a behaviorist psychologist who
carried out a great deal of pioneering research in this area. Skinner identified three types of
responses that he called operant that can follow behavior.
Neutral operant: response from the environment that neither increases nor decreases the
probability of a behavior being repeated.
Reinforces: response from the environment that increase the probability of a behavior
being repeated, rainforcers can be either positive or negative.
Punishers: response from the environment that decreases the likelihood of a behavior
being repeated.
Skinner carried out much of his research on rats and other animals using a box called Skinner
box.
Animal trainers use a technique called shaping; which is based on operant conditioning, to
train animals to perform in specific ways. Specific examples where shaping is used include:
Training guide dogs for the blind
Training horses
Training dolphins and killer Whales at marine parks
Training zoo animals
What is latent learning?
Latent learning can be defined as the association of stimuli or situations without reward. The
essential difference between latent learning and trial and error learning (operant conditioning)
is the absence of reward in latent learning. There are situations in which animals learn without
any obvious reward. Animals explore new surroundings and learn information which may be
useful at a later stage. The word latent means something that is stored or hidden until it is
needed in the future. Much of experiments about latent learning were conducted on rats by
Edward Tolman, a behaviorist psychologist, in 1938.
Example: - One teacher drives another to school every day. Then, on one day, the ‘driver’ is
ill. The other teacher drives himself to school without getting lost. He learned the route to
school without reinforcement, but never had to use it until the usual driver was ill.
Much of the pioneering research on insight learning was carried out by Wolfgang Kohler,
working with chimpanzees. For the experiments, the chimpanzees were placed in an enclosed
area. Kohler placed desirable ‘Lures’ such as fruit outside the enclosure and out of their reach.
He placed a variety of objects that could be used to obtain it inside the enclosure. The
chimpanzees had to work out a way of using one or more of the objects to obtain the ‘Lure’.
The chimpanzees learned to use boxes to obtain bananas placed on the top of enclosure. They
dragged them under the banana and climbed on them to reach the fruit. They became quite
accomplished builders, piling box on box to erect structures with a height of four boxes.
Figure 5.15 A chimpanzee assesses the problem Figure 5.16 Through ‘building’ the
chimpanzee achieves
his goal
There are many different methods of communication that are used to attract a mate. These
include:
The use of pheromones by some female insects to attract males from a distance
The use of touch by painted turtles
The courtship songs of frogs heard on spring nights in many different countries
The songs of humpback whale under the sea, which can be heard hundreds of miles away.
In most animals, courtship behavior is innate and consists of a pre-programmed set of fixed
action patterns in response to a key stimulus. Despite being innate, the fixed action patterns are
often complex behaviors with the fixed action pattern in one animal (say the male) serving as
the stimulus for another
fixed action pattern in the other animal (the female). This interaction of fixed action patterns
continues until courtship is successful or until one of the pair tires.
Figure 5.18 The role of each fixed action pattern in the courtship behavior
Fixed action patterns in courtship form an important part of the mating displays of birds.
Territorial animals usually defend areas that contain one or more of:
A nest
A den, or mating site
Sufficient food for themselves and their young
Males are usually the territorial sex, but in some species (such as fiddler crabs) females
maintain a territory also. When conspecific conflicts occur, they usually involve ritualistic
displays and rarely involve the animals actually fighting. Residents of a territory are difficult to
dislodge as they are often older and more experienced.
Defense threat displays may be visual as in the coloring of feathers or fur, auditory as in
birdsong or the howls of gibbons or olfactory through deposition of scent marks. Many
territorial mammals use scent marking (containing pheromones) to signal the boundaries of
their territories. The resident animal usually holds on to his (or her) territory only by
expending considerable time and effort in its defense. Sunbird, for example, can use up to
13000Kjoules per hour patrolling and defending their territory.
Figure 5.20 Ethiopian wolves
The Ethiopian Wolf (Canis simensis) is also a social animal; the wolves live and hunt in packs.
They maintain a group territory by marking with urine (containing pheromones). All adult
animals (male and female) contribute to this marking behavior, particularly during patrols of
the territory. Some of the younger males occasionally mark but younger females never mark.
Defending a territory
Some animals defend their territory by fighting with those who try to invade it. Fighting uses up
a large amount of energy, and can result in injury or death. Marking a territory usually ‘warns
off’ intruders. Animals that do not mark territories use threats from one, or more, of
vocalizations, smell and visual displays.
Figure 5.21 A male robin threatening an intruder by using vocalizations and by exaggerating
its size.
The songs of birds and loud calls of monkeys are warning that carry for considerable
distances, and warn intruders that they are approaching someone else’s territory. If these
warnings are ignored, and the intruder enters the territory, or two animals meet near the
border of their adjacent territories, they usually threaten each other with visual displays. This
displays often either:
Exaggerate an animal’s size by the fluffing up of feathers or fur or
Figure 5.22A younger male zebra challenges the older resident male
Some of the benefits of social behavior are that it allows animals to:
Form stable group (intra-specific aggression is reduced)
Improve the effectiveness of reproduction
Forage more efficiently- especially if source of food is localized
Protect themselves against attack more effectively
Increase the chance of surviving migration - some birds travel in large group-many geese
fly in a ‘V’ formation-to reduce total wind resistance-the lead rotates in position
Communicate across long distances
Increase the chance of surviving extreme conditions
Figure 5.23 Penguins ‘huddling’ to reduce heat loss
If the queen does not produce these pheromones, or if she produces too few eggs, then the
structure of the nest breaks down. She may be attacked by mature workers, one of whom will
replace her. A honeybee colony may last for several years, with the male drones being driven
out of the nest over winter to preserve resources for the workers and the queen more drones
will emerge the following spring.
At the of the colony cycle, the queen, the drones and most workers will die, leaving just a few
large workers, who will assume the status of queens and the following spring, fly away to
establish their own colonies.
Worker bees communicate with each other in a very special way to convey information about a
source of nectar. Foragers perform a ‘wag-dance’ on the honeycomb to inform other workers
of the direction of the nectar source and its distance. The dance takes the form of a ‘figure of
eight’ on the vertical face of the honey comb.
Figure 5.25 A and B show the orientation of the wag-dance on the honeycomb while C shows
the relationship of this dance to the position of the sun and the position of the nectar source.
Recent research shows that the foraging bees also use sound to inform other bees about the
distance of the source, and, perhaps, to help to ‘recruit’ these other workers. The time for
which they produce their sounds is directly correlated with the distance to the nectar source, as
figure 5.26 shows.
Figure 5.26 The length of sound production by foraging workers is proportional to the
distance to a food source.
The roles of the casts are the same in bumblebees and the queen maintains ‘order’ in the same
way. However, these nests are annual nests and a new colony establishes itself every spring.