Evolution Flashcards

1
Q

Both Darwin and Wallace observed:

A

Pattern: organisms only live in environments to which they are well-adapted
Hypothesized process: environmental factors prevent any organism that is NOT well-adapted from successfully reproducing (natural selection)

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2
Q

Darwin’s Theory of Evolution

A
  • Variation exists among individuals within a pop
  • Variation is heritable
  • Variation affords different traits to individuals in a pop and competition exists among individuals
  • Organisms whose variation best fits them to the environment are the ones most likely to survive, reproduce, and pass those desirable traits on the next gen
  • Variation provides the raw material for natural selection to act on
  • Natural selection: observable way for life to change
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3
Q

Genetic Basis of Evolution

A

Traits are coded for by DNA which join together to form genes, which are linked to form chromosomes

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4
Q

Sexual reproduction

A
  • Offspring inherit genetic material from their parents
  • Results in constant recombination of genetic material within a pop
  • New combos in every gen
  • Mutations
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5
Q

Asexual Reproduction

A

Mutations

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6
Q

Mutations

A
  • Random and occur within DNA
  • Mutations arise and if favoured by natural selection, can spread through the pop
  • Can help provide genetic variation within a pop, resulting in evolution over time
  • Small changes are key cuz big ones = death
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7
Q

Natural Selection

A

Struggle to survive and the natural variability that exists among individuals results in some individuals being more likely to produce offspring. Therefore, those traits get passed on.

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8
Q

Survival of the Fittest

A
  • Fitness = probability of successful reproduction
  • Ability to survive
  • Find a mate
  • Produce viable offspring
  • Heritable traits that increase an organism’s fitness are more likely to be passed on to subsequent gens
  • Traits that aid survival and reproduction become more frequent in the population than disadvantageous traits
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9
Q

Traits selected for are dependent on:

A

the environment the organism is living in. IF the environment changes, then the traits that are beneficial also change

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10
Q

Natural selection cannot supply what an organism needs, it just acts on:

A

the individual; it survives to reproduce or it doesn’t

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11
Q

Natural selection is the engine

A

of evolution

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12
Q

Evolution is neither:

A

progressive nor ‘goal-orientated’

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13
Q

Evolution is

A

a change in gene frequency within a pop from gen to gen

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14
Q

Does the process of evolution ever stop?

A

No.

  • The environment applies constant selective pressure to pops.
  • Even during intervals of apparent stasis, pops still changes genetic composition via recombination (sexual reproduction, mutation, and natural selection)
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15
Q

Importance of large pop size to evolution

A
  • Larger pops have more ‘genetic inertia’
  • New traits take longer to express themselves
  • More variability (genetic potential) with which to respond to selective pressure.
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16
Q

Small pop size and evolution

A
  • Small pops can evolve rapidly
  • Traits the increase fitness can be spread throughout the pop more readily
  • Less variability
  • Vulnerable to rapid extinction
17
Q

Convergent Evolution

A
  • The wings of a bird and a bat are bit homologous because they cannot be traced back to a common ancestor. These are analogous structures.
  • The limbs of a bird, a bat, and even a pterosaur are homologous, the use of those limbs as wings is not. Wings evolved independently (and differently) in each of these groups from a non-flying ancestor.
18
Q

Biological Evolution: descent with modifications

A
  • Small scale: changes in gene frequency in a pop from one gen to the next
  • Large scale: descent of different species from a common ancestor over many generations
  • Common ancestor on Earth gave rise to diversity in fossil record and today
19
Q

How do we define species?

A

Biological species concept: members of a pop who can breed and produce viable offspring, can be observed in nature

20
Q

How do we differentiate species in the fossil record?

A

Morphological species concept: species distinguished on basis of physical (morphological) differences, for example differences in shapes of bones

21
Q

Observing Evolution in the fossil record

A
  1. Gradual lineage evolution (see every step)
  2. Quick lineage evolution (rapid don’t see all the steps just “result”)
    - The observed fossil record seems to show rapid evolution but this pattern can also be explained by irregular preservation of transitional forms
22
Q

How do we track biodiversity in the fossil record?

A

Sum total of different taxa: affected by rates of origination and extinction

23
Q

Origination rate

A
  • Rate at which new taxa evolve/are found in the fossil record
  • Can increase rapidly when new niches are invaded
24
Q

Extinction rate

A
  • The rate at which taxa go extinct through geologic time
  • The end of a genetic lineage
  • 99% of all species are now extinct
  • Most species disappear in “background extinctions”
25
Q

Mass extinctions

A
  • When the extinction rate increases and overwhelms the origination rate, mass extinctions occur
  • Significant decrease in global biodiversity
  • Five generally recognized mass extinctions: End Ordovician, End Devonian, Permo-Triassic (~95% extinction of all species on Earth), End Triassic, Cretaceous-Paleogene