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Evolution

How do you study evolutionary process?

you focus on changes that occjt within populationa

what is microevolution?

the change in percentages or frequencies of alleles within populations

what are the five processes of microevolution

mutation, gene flow, non-random mating, genetic drift, natural selection

what are mutations

the more generic variation, the greater the chance of a selective advantage, and the greager genetic diversity

what is the source for generic variation?

mutations

what is gene flow?

the net movement of alleles from one population to another as a reault of the migration of individuals

what is non-random mating?

mating among individals on the basis of a particular phenotype or due to inbreeding

what is inbreeding?

closely related individuals breed. pure-breeding results in health problems.

what is genertic drift?

the change in frequencies of alleles due to random events in a small breddinf population. (the failure of a few individuals to reproduce intesifies the effects of generic drift)

what is the founder effect?

formed by a few individuals that carrh some alleles. The gene pool is reduced.

What is the bottleneck effect?

A populatkon ia reduced by disease, starvation, or natural catastrophe. gene pool loses lts diversity because of the loss of alleles.

what are the three types of natural selection?

stabilizing
directional

disruptive

what is natural selection?

gene traits that are selected for by the environment will end up surviving

what is stabilizing selection?

favours an intermediate phenotype and not extreme phenotypes.

what is directional selection?

favours the phenotypes at one extreme. (ie: girrafes with long necks)

what is disruptive selection?

favojrs two extremes.

what is sexual selection?

competiton between males through combag or vishal displags.

define sexual dismorphism

where males and females look verh different

define gene pool

all the alleles of all genes in a population

what is lactose tolerant?

thwu havw rhe switched tirned on and have the lactase gene

What are the 5 sources of evidence for evolution?

Fossil, Biogeography, Anatomy, Embryology, DNA

What is fossil evidence?

fossils that are younger are more similiar to present species (closer to surface)

what is biogeography evidence?

the study of the past and present geographical distribution of organisms. That species evolved in one location and spread

What is anatomy evidence?

homologous structures are thosr whi have similiar structure but has different functions or those who have similar functions bjt not a commkn structure

what is evidence from embryology?

study of pre-birth stages of development. related species share common embryological stages.

evidence from DNA?

soecies whi have similiar DNA share a common ancestor

what is selective pressure?

how certain traits can be favored and the enviornment exerts a pressure on those whodont have a favoured trait

what is natural selection?

organisms better adapted to their environment tend to survive and produce more offspring

what is artifical selection?

humans affect the pooulstion and alter to their liking

what is genetic diversity?

the range of different genetic traits within a species

how does genetic variation help?

genetic variation helps species survive due to the various traits they have

what is speciation?

formation of new species from existing species.

what is pre-sygotic barriers?

impede mating between species or prevenr fertilization if different species mate

what are the 5 pre-zygotic barriers?

behavioural, temporal, habitat, mechanical, gametic

what is post-zygotic?

two different species prodjce a zygote and prevent hybrids from being fertile

what are the three barriers of post-zygotic mechanisms?

hybrid inviability, hybrid breakdown, hybrid sterlitity

whatis divergent evolution?

a pattern of evolution in which species that were once similar become less and less alike

what is convergent evolution?

a pattern of evolution in which similar traits arise in diff species due to adaptikns to enviornment

what is sympatric speciation?

populations that live in the same habitat diverge and become reproductively isolated

what is allopatric speciation?

populations are seperated by a geographical barrier and diverge genetically

what are the two types of speciation?

sympatric, allopatric

adaptive radiation

the process in which species are rwpudly diversifyint from the ancestor species

what is gradualism?

evolutionary change as slow and steady

what famous islands did darwin study?

galapos

what is darwins famous evolution book?

On the origin of species

what is fitness?

the ability to survive and reproduce

whatjs survival of the fittest

being able to survive in yojr enviornment. the most fit will survive

what is descent with modification and how do fossils show it?

that species change and give life to new species. fossils show the evolution of soecies overtime. older fossils are less similar to modern day

what are fossils

the remains of plangs and animals in ehicj is buried

what are adaptations

the ability for a soecies ti adapt ti their surroundings

what is homologous structures and example?

similar features that have a common ancestor. Ex: wings of bat and flipper of whale

what are vestigial organs

organs that no lomger have any function ex: appendix

what are two examples of adaptstions?

mimicry (looks like a predator) and the english peppered moth

how does isolation relate to speciation

isolation allows for seperstion in the species group leading to the creation of new species

what are analogous structure

a strucure that has similar function but not from the same ancestor

what is gradualism?

the model for the slow changes of evolution overtime

what is extinction?

the dissaoearance of a species

what is micro snd mscro evolution

micro evolution is small changes over short periods while macro is large changes iver long periods

what is antibiotic resistance

when a bacteria is able to mutate and overcome the medication lesding to antibiotic resistance. happens if too overuse the drug

what is lactose intolerant

when your bodh doesnt produce lactase and cant break fown the protein in lactose

what is george cuviers theory

that species were extinct by catastroohic events like flooding

what is charles darwin theory?

believed in natural selection. biological evolution by natural selection. believed in gradualism as well. apecies adapt and change to their environment and some are favored ti survive

what is jean-baptiste theory?

that aquired traits are inheritable. its called lamarkism

what is thomas nalthus theory?

malthiusm. a theory that populations are greatee than accesible recourses

what is charles kyell theory?

the formation of Earth's crust took place through countless small changes occurring over vast periods of time, all according to known natural laws. His "uniformitarian"

whag are rhe three patterns of selection?

disruptive, directionsl, stabilizing

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