Ovido
Język
  • angielski
  • hiszpański
  • francuski
  • portugalski
  • niemiecki
  • włoski
  • niderlandzki
  • polski
  • szwedzki
Tekst
  • Wielkie litery

Użytkownik

  • Zaloguj się
  • Utwórz konto
  • Przejdź na Premium
Ovido
  • Start
  • Zaloguj się
  • Utwórz konto

Evolution Exam (Final)

Paralogs

Two genes that continue to be expressed after duplication

Pseudogenization

Loss of function after duplication (duplication fate)

Neofunctionalization

After duplication, one gene mutates (increases diversity)

Subfunctionalization

After duplication, both genes partition original functions of parent gene (split, reduces pleiotropy, increases specialization)

Speciation

When new species arise from already existing ones (lineage split)

Species

Group of organisms w/ common evolutionary history

Background extinction

Gradual loss of species due to predation, competition, disease

Mass extinction

Events that lead to large scale loss (asteroid, volcanic eruption)

Give an example of background extinction predation

Inoceramid clam slowly showing more signs of predation before going extinct.

Background extinction - Competition

When a new taxon arrives, it increases in frequency, causing other taxa to decline.

Background extinction disease example

amphibian population declining in 12 months in Eastern Australia

Describe the "Dead Clades Walking" idea

After a mass extinction, species don't usually fully recover (shown in graphs)

Law of Constant Extinction/Van Valens Law

The probability of species going extinct is constant over time.

Geographic Range and Extinction Rates

Species with larger geographical ranges are associated with lower rates of extinction.

Phyletic gradualism vs Punctuated equilibrium

Phyletic gradualism = gradual change
Punctuated equilibrium = rapid divergence (accounted for by natural selection)

What is Cope's Rule

Mammalian species tend to increase in body size over time (active trend). Example: horses

Fossil Trends (3)

No trend: no body size direction

Passive: no directional change, but minimum size precursor beyond which evolution can't take subsequent lineages (once it gets small enough, it can't get smaller)


Active: Each lineage increases in body size

Active trend, how it arises

Active trend: Each lineage increases in size

Appears as a general directional shift in trait values within a clade.

Under species selection: sublclades with smaller sizes = go extinct

Species selection

Result from different rates of extinction or speciation

How body size and speciation are connected

Larger body size = more speciation.

This also results in larger branches (less extinctions!)

Body size and fitness

Positive correlation; larger body = more fitness

Brachiopod vs crayfish

Brachiopod is less compless than the modern crayfish, example of an ACTIVE TREND

3 Elements of Sex

1. Syngamy: fusion of 2 gametes
2. Genetic Recombination: crossing over b/w homologous chromosomes during meiosis

3. Gamete Production: Haploid gametes produced by meiotic division

Explain meiosis briefly

Diploid individuals producing haploid gametes thru 2 rounds of meiosis

Meiosis I: Chromosomes separate and cross over

Meiosis II: Sister chromatids separate and independently assort

Isogamy vs Anisogamy

Isogamy is ONE kind of gamete; fusion of morphologically similar cells, only compatible with right mating types.
Anisogamy is TWO kinds of gametes; large and small gametes (aka oogamy)

Hermaphrodite

Produces egg AND sperm (potential to be mom or dad). Ancestral to male + female species.

Protandrous (Nemo)

First sexual maturity = male, produces sperm. As they get older, they lose the ability to make sperm and instead produce eggs.

Hermaphroditism, Dioecy, Gynodiecy, Androdiecy

In order to evolve from a hermaphrodite to a dioecy, more than one step is required. Most common method is male sterility -> gynodiecy, and then female sterility -> dioecy.

Costs of sexual reproduction (2 main points)

1. Rate of gene transmission to the next gen (fitness)
2. 'Twofold': asexual parents produce more, with more gene transmission.

Cons of asexual organisms

Asexual lineages die out fast, deleterious mutations can be fatal.

Benefits of Sex

Muller's Ratchet: purges deleterious mutations through recombination.

Accelerates adaptive evolution

Development is mainly regulated by ____ ________

Gene expression

Cellular function is determined by ________ __________

Developmental processes

Homeotic Genes

Encode proteins that act like switches and regulate development; HELP DETERMINE PHENOTYPE (size, shape, division, position)

They also create transcription proteins by binding to regulatory enhancer and triggers RNA to begin transcribing gene copies

Mutated homeotic genes (early/late)

Early: Lethal
Later: Species Divergence

Homeotic genes conserved over evolutionary time and _______ on _______, is called ______

ordered on chromosomes, collinearity

Biological Species Concept

Species are identified based on whether they exchange genes; uses gene flow from reproductively isolated locations to draw boundaries

Phenetic Species Concept

Species grouped on phenotypic characteristics; uses clustering of individuals in phenotypic space to draw boundaries

Allopatric Speciation + example

Species isolated due to geographical barrier, prevents gene flow. Example: snapping shrimp (Isthmus of Panama)

Sympatric Speciation with examples

When species have a common ancestor and inhibit the same geographical area

Example: Nicaraguan cichlids (sister species) + Apple Maggot Fly being separated reproductively because of their food source preference (also breeding ground). Apple and hawthorne races.

Prezygotic Isolating Mechanism

1. Mates don't meet (habitat barrier etc)
2. They encounter but don't mate (behavioural)

3. They mate but gametes are incompatible

Postzygotic isolating mechanism

Zygote dies early, or sterile hybrids are produced

Dobzhansky-Muller Incompatibilities

When hybrids have less fitness due to their genotype

Co-evolution interactions

Mutualistic: beneficial
Antagonist: negative

Mosaic: same species have positive in some communities, negative in others

Co-evolution

Most important driver of evolutionary change

Mutualism Exploitation and example

Each species is a consumer of a resource provided by the other species. Becomes exploitative when one species no longer provides a resource (evolution of cheating)

Ex. Soybean legumes and rhizobial bacteria

Cospeciation

When speciation occurs in tandem (speciation in one leads to speciation in another)

Gene-culture evolution

Only for organisms capable of learning, changes in frequency of behaviour = cultural evolution

Artificial Selection

When humans are the selection pressure

Microevolution

Change in allele frequency from one generation to the next

Germ line vs somatic mutations

germ line = in reproductive cells, heritable
somatic = often leads to cancer, not heritable

Nonsense, Synonymous, and Nonsynonymous mutations

Nonsense: Creates a new stop codon
Synonymous: Does not alter the encoded amino acid

Nonsynonymous: Leads to different encoded amino acid

Phenotypic plasticity

One genotype can develop into different phenotypes depending on the environment

Genetic drift

Random fluctuations in allele frequencies

Origins of life

1. Earth forms
2. Earth cools (oceans form)

3. Cell building blocks

4. RNA world

5. Cellular life

6. Diversification

Sexual Selection

non random variation in mating success (not reproductive success)

The handicap principle

Females choose males that signal(higher quality, higher chance of male being chosen)

7 Major Transistions

1. Replication -> compartmentalization
2. RNA -> DNA

3. Prokaryotes -> Eukaryotes

4. Asexual -> Sexual reproduction

5. Unicellular -> Multicellular

6. Individual -> group living

7. Primate -> human societes

Quiz
Motorische Fertigkeiten
Snittgrönt
so
glosor
Bewegingen spieren
Matens kemi - kemiska reaktioner åk 5
att kunna
kap 9 verb
Theatre: Exam 4
biologi
art constit
1.2
1.1
repetition
Responsabilité admin
cna skils exam
Progressive Era history
quiz del4
quiz del3
quiz del2
quiz
cooked
spanska
Huden.
Rotiferes
Englisch arbeit
Bilatérien
Verhalten
paniere
5 spanska glosor 4b
def axes anglais
4 spanska glosor 4b
3 spanska glosor 4b
2 spanska glosor 4b
1 spanska glosor 4b
spanska
Interview Scenario Based Questions
Gilded Age history
Forensics Modules 1-6 Terms
plants
vocabel test
Fecondation
vokabel test
meningar
Yelena Vocabulario - kopia
Oral
formal words glosor v 17
Yelena Vocabulario
engelska
no nationella