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unit 3 evolution & classification ls. bio 9.1, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4, 10.1, 10.…

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unit 3 evolution & classification ls. bio 9.1, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4, 10.1, 10.2
station 5: embryos
embryologic development of common organisms

  1. compare the embryos at their \early\ stages of development.
  2. compare the embryos at their \late\ stages of development.
  3. which embryos are most similar the longest?
  4. which pair of organisms is the most related? is the least related?

how do embryological similarities show evidence for evolution?

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. For early stages: All embryos share key physical traits like curved bodies, gill slits, and similar head/limb bud structures, making them nearly indistinguishable.
  2. For late stages: Each embryo develops species-specific features (fish: fins, gills; tortoise: shell, reptilian limbs; chicken: beak, wings; pig: snout, hooved limbs; human: rounded skull, grasping hands) that make them easily distinguishable.
  3. Observe developmental progression: Pig and human embryos retain similar structures (e.g., limb shape, body form) through more stages than other pairs before diverging into species-specific traits.
  4. Relatedness is tied to shared development: Pig and human are most related (closest evolutionary lineage, shared mammalian traits longest); fish is least related to all others (diverges earliest into aquatic-specific traits).
  5. Evolution evidence: Shared early embryonic structures indicate all these organisms inherit a common developmental blueprint from a distant common ancestor, with divergence in later stages reflecting adaptive evolutionary changes over time.

Answer:

  1. All early-stage embryos are highly similar, with shared features like gill slits, curved bodies, and undifferentiated limb buds.
  2. Late-stage embryos are distinct, each having unique species-specific traits (e.g., fish fins, human hands, chicken beaks) that match their adult forms.
  3. Pig and human embryos are most similar the longest.
  4. Most related: Pig and human; Least related: Fish and all other organisms (fish and human, fish and pig, fish and chicken, fish and tortoise).
  5. Shared early embryonic development shows that these organisms descend from a common ancestor, as they inherit a common genetic/developmental framework. As development proceeds, species-specific adaptations emerge, reflecting evolutionary divergence from that shared ancestor.