Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GCSE AQA Biology 2 Fossils, Extinction & Speciation
- Fossil formation
- Fossils: the remains of organisms from
many years ago, which are found in rocks
- Provide evidence that organisms lived a long time ago
- Formed in 3 ways:
- From gradual
replacement by minerals
- Things like teeth, shells & bones, which don't
decay easily, can last a long time when buried
- Eventually they are replaced by minerals as
they decay, forming a rock-like substance
shaped like the original hard part
- Surrounding sediments also turn to rock but
fossil stays distinct in rock until it's dug up
- From casts &
impressions
- Organism is buried in soft material
(like clay), clay hardens around it &
organism decays, leaving cast behind
- Burrows & roots can
be preserved as casts
- Footprints can be pressed into these materials
when soft - leaving an impression when it hardens
- From preservation in places
where no decay happens
- In amber & tar pits there's no oxygen/moisture
- In glaciers it's too cold
- In peat bogs it's too acidic
- No one knows how life began
- Fossils show how many species
have evolved - but where did the
first living thing come from....
- There are various hypotheses - but no one knows
- First life forms came into existence in
primordial swamp? Simple organic molecules
were brought to Earth on comets?
- Can't be supported/disproved
- lack of valid & reliable evide
- Lack of evidence - early organisms
were soft-bodied & soft tissue
tends to decay away completely
(fossil record is incomplete)
- Fossils may have been
destroyed by geological activity
- Extinction
- Species can become extinct if:
- The environment changes too quickly
- A new predator kills them all
- A new disease kills them all
- They can't compete with
another (new) species for food
- A catastrophic event happens that kills them all
- A new species
develops
- Speciation
- Species: group of similar
organisms that can reproduce
to give fertile offspring
- Speciation: development of a new species
- Occurs when populations of the same species become so different
that they can no longer breed together to produce fertile offspring
- 1) Species is isolated due to physical barrier
- 2) Conditions on either side will be slightly different -
different characteristics will become more common
in each population due to natural selection...
- 3) Each population shows genetic
variation due to wide range of alleles
- 4) In each population, individuals with characteristics that
make them better adapted to their environment have a better
chance of survival & are more likely to breed successfully
- 5) Alleles that control beneficial characteristics are
more likely to be passed onto the next generation
- 6) Eventually, individuals from different populations will become
so different that they won't be able to breed with one another to
produce fertile offspring - 2 groups are now 2 separate species