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Spontaneous Generation PPT - Final

1) For much of history, people believed that living things could spontaneously generate from non-living matter, such as frogs from rain or mice from sweaty clothes. 2) Francesco Redi disproved spontaneous generation by showing that flies did not generate maggots in meat sealed away from them, only where the flies could access the meat. 3) Louis Pasteur further disproved spontaneous generation using flasks with swan necks that allowed air in but trapped microbes, showing no microbes grew without introduction from outside sources.

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Mary Grace Besin
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
693 views23 pages

Spontaneous Generation PPT - Final

1) For much of history, people believed that living things could spontaneously generate from non-living matter, such as frogs from rain or mice from sweaty clothes. 2) Francesco Redi disproved spontaneous generation by showing that flies did not generate maggots in meat sealed away from them, only where the flies could access the meat. 3) Louis Pasteur further disproved spontaneous generation using flasks with swan necks that allowed air in but trapped microbes, showing no microbes grew without introduction from outside sources.

Uploaded by

Mary Grace Besin
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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spontaneous generation

Redi, Needham, Spallanzani, and Pasteur


• Spontaneous Generation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNByRg
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Spontaneous Generation
• For much of history, people believed that animals could come
from non-living sources. They thought:
– Frogs developed from falling drops of rain
– mice arose from sweaty underwear
– and flies arose from decaying meat.
• This is called abiogenesis
• Also known as spontaneous generation
• These ideas
were followed
because people
simply
accepted what
they were told
The Power of Authority
• In the past, people
believed what they were
told by “authorities” such
as the Church, or the
ancient Greek philosopher
Aristotle
• Questioning Aristotle was
like questioning the
Church....
• One “scientist” put forward the belief that mice could
be generated spontaneously from wheat and a sweaty
shirt.
• The wheat provided the “nutritive power” and the
shirt provided the “active principle.”
• “active principle” = a mysterious “life-force” that
allowed spontaneous generation to occur.
1668 -- Francisco Redi (Italian physician & poet)--
attempted to disprove the theory of Spontaneous Generation.
“The flesh of dead animals cannot engender
worms unless the eggs of the living being
deposited therein”

• Put dead snakes, eels, and veal in large wide


mouthed vessels. Sealed one set with wax
and left the other set open to air.
• Decaying meat was teeming with maggots,
sealed meat had no maggots
• Wax sealed vessels failed to produce maggots
because flies were unable to reach the meat
Redi’s critics said:

• You have too many variables


• There is a lack of access and
a lack of air.
• We ALL know that everything
needs air
• Of course no flies grew!
• You haven’t proven
anything.
Redi part 2 – answer to critics

fine mesh allows in air,


but not flies

flies laid eggs on top of mesh


no maggots in meat
Redi’s Conclusions:

• “All living beings come from seeds of the


plants or animals themselves”
• However, if someone were to demonstrate
even one exception to this hypothesis, then
Redi’s hypothesis would be rejected.
John Needham (English Clergyman)
wondered if this would work with micro
organisms in1745
• Everyone knew that boiling killed organisms.
• Needham prepared various broths and showed
that they contained microbes.
• Then he boiled them, and showed that there
were no longer any microbes.
• He ensured the stoppers were loose, so that air
would not be excluded
• Then, after a few days, microbes had
reappeared!
• This was “proof” that the microbes had
spontaneously generated from the non-living
broth.
Needham’s error
• BUT: how was this evidence of
a faulty experiment?
– what ERROR in experimental
method is shown here?
• Hypothesis: microbes MUST
HAVE arisen spontaneously from
the broth.
• Assumption: there is no other
place the microbes could come
from (other than the broth).
• error: microbes could have come
from the air!
Spallanzani’s (Italian Naturalist) -- 1745
• Disagreed with Needham
• Claimed he didn’t seal jars well enough
• He said microbes could have come from the air
• He repeated Needham’s experiment, but changed two things:
– boiled flasks longer, and
– SEALED THEM after boiling by fusing the glass tops shut
– (hermetically sealed – absolutely airtight)
• Result: NO growth in ANY flask
Needham criticizes Spallanzani’s first experiment

• BUT Needham said: you boiled it


TOO LONG, and:
• You spoiled the vegetative power
by boiling.
• You killed the ability of the broth
to give life.
• Life can still come from broth --
but the broth must not be
“damaged” by boiling.
Spallanzani’s second experiment
tight seal loose seal
• he did TIMED
BOILINGS 30 mins
• then left them partially
sealed
• some partially sealed, 60 mins
some hermetically
sealed as in his
previous experiment
• hypothesized that
more boiling should
lead to less life 90 mins
• he left some jars as
Needham had (leaky
seals), to ensure
“active principle” was
not damaged 120 mins
Spallanzani’s second experiment -- results
tight seal loose seal

• this showed 30 mins


TWO main
things:
60 mins
• boiling did NOT
damage broth’s
ability to support
life 90 mins

• growth depended
on the SEAL
only 120 mins
(French chemist) entered a contest sponsored
Louis Pasteur 1859– by French Academy of Sciences to prove or
disprove Spontaneous generation.

• used swan-necked flask


• flask allowed in air, but
trapped dust (and
microbes)
• boiled infusion
• showed that NO growth
occurred, even after many
days
• BUT -- what about
damaging the “active
principle”?
• Pasteur showed
that the active
principle was NOT
damaged
• at any later time,
he could tip the
flask
area where
• this allowed dust had
nutrient broth to been trapped
contact the dust
• this carried
microbes into the
broth
• result: growth!
Pasteur squashes the idea of abiogenesis completely!

• Since then, no one has been able to refute Pasteur’s experiment


• scientists everywhere soon came to accept that abiogenesis did
NOT EXIST.
• but: then how did life on this planet start in the first place?

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