Lesson 8: Evolution Flashcards

1
Q

What was Charles Darwin’s theory?

A

explains how new species come into existence, how organisms become adapted to their environments, and why specific groups of organisms share specific traits

it also correctly postulated that all life on Earth is related and shares a single common origin

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2
Q

What are heritable traits?

A

heritable means that the trait is part of an organism’s genetic code and, therefore, either will be, or (depending on the type of reproduction) has a chance to be, copied to the organism’s offspring

heritability is the reason that sons and daughters tend to resemble their parents

a trait must be heritable in order for that trait to evolve

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3
Q

What is variation?

A

sometimes organisms have heritable traits that are new, not copied from the organism’s parents

one source for new heritable traits is random genetic mutation

in order for selection to occur on any given trait in a population

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4
Q

What is an advantage?

A

an organism’s traits affect how successfully that organism is able to reproduce

often, a trait’s effect is indirect, that is, it improves or hinders an organism’s ability to survive, which, in turn, affect how many reproductive opportunities the organism has

one variation of the trait must provide an advantage (or, differential success) over the other variations in order for evolution to occur

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5
Q

What is competition?

A

natural environments have limited resources, and competition for these resources permits only some organisms to successfully reproduce before they die

some of the versions of a given trait must be “selected out” of a population in order for evolution to occur, and this must occur because of competition for limited resources

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6
Q

What is the theory of evolution?

A

the differential success of certain variations of a heritable trait, because of competition for limited resources, leads to the change over time (evolution) of the trait in a population

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7
Q

How does the evolution of a species not require the extinction of its ancestor?

A

for instance, a new species might simply branch off from an ancestral species if only a single population of the ancestral species was exposed to new environmental conditions that favored new traits

while the population in the new environment would acquire new traits better adapted to that environment and evolve into a different species, the ancestral species might continue to exist in its ancestral environment

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8
Q

Why is evolution not random?

A

while new traits may be introduced by random mutations, the determination of which traits are successfully passed on to later generations is not random

instead, it is based on a specific criterion: how well each trait improves an organism’s reproductive success

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9
Q

What is natural selection?

A

the competitive selective process by which detrimental traits are competitively discarded and advantageous traits are retained

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10
Q

What are shared common ancestors?

A

organisms are grouped together based on their most recent shared common ancestors

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11
Q

What is the shared common ancestor of all dinosaurs?

A

all dinosaurs are classified together in a group because as dinosaurs evolved from a single species of amniote tetrapod

within the dinosaurs, all ornithischians are classified together because they evolved from a single particular species of dinosaur, while saurischians are classified together in a different group because they evolved from another particular species of dinosaur

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12
Q

What is a character?

A

is any heritable trait that can be described and labeled

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13
Q

What is a shared derived character?

A

a character that is present in two or more groups and their common ancestor, but is not present in any more distantly related groups

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14
Q

What is a synapomorphy?

A

a shared derived character

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15
Q

What is an example of a synapomorphy in dinosaurs?

A

all species of ornithischians have a special bone in the lower jaw that forms a beak, called the predentary, and no other dinosaurs have this special beak bone

thus, the character of the predentary was passed on to all ornithischians from their ancient shared ancestor and is a synapomorphy that testifies to this shared ancestry and can be used to define the group

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16
Q

What is convergent evolution?

A

the evolution of similar traits in two different lineages

17
Q

What is parsimony?

A

the idea that “all other things being equal, the simplest answer is usually the right one”

also referred to as Occam’s razor

18
Q

What are phylogenetic trees?

A

to determine the evolutionary relationships between large numbers of species, many of which may be closely related, and to take into consideration a large number of characters, paleontologists use computer programs

these programs analyze a list of characters that is first compiled by the researcher

this list is called a character matrix

based on the character matrix, the computer program applies the principle of parsimony to arrange the organisms in a sequence of relationships that requires the fewest instances of convergent evolution

the resulting arrangements look like diagrams of a “family tree” and are called “phylogenetic trees”

19
Q

What is a node on a phylogenetic tree?

A

a node is where two branches diverge, and shows the point at which two linages shared a common ancestor

after a node, the pattern of subsequent branches and nodes shows how the descendants of that common ancestor continued to diverge from each other

20
Q

What is a clade?

A

a group of species that share a common node

clades can be very small, or very large, there are no size limits

a clade must contain the ancestor of a group and all of its descendants

a group that does not include all of the descendants of a common ancestor is therefore not a clade

21
Q

Who was Thomas Henry Huxley?

A

a close colleague of Charles Darwin and one of the earliest advocates for the theory of evolution

Huxley was also the first scientist to recognize that birds evolved from dinosaurs, and he cited the newly discovered specimens of Archaeopteryx as fossils of a “missing link” between dinosaurs and birds

showed that transitional forms do exist in the fossil record, just as the theory of evolution predicted, and also showed that birds are a branch of the dinosaur family tree

22
Q

What were the characteristics of the dinosaur Sinosauropteryx?

A

was the first non-avian (non-bird) dinosaur to be discovered with feathers

the feathers had a simple structure compared to the feathers of modern birds and were used for insulation, not for flight, but they were feathers just the same

many other small theropod specimens have since been found with feathers, some with complex flight feathers

23
Q

How are birds related to dinosaurs?

A

birds are the only clade of dinosaurs alive today

birds can be classified as theropod dinosaurs, because they evolved from theropod dinosaurs

24
Q

How are birds classified?

A

many paleontologists use Aves to refer to the crown group of birds, which includes all living birds as well as extinct taxa like the dodo and moa

another clade name, Avialae, is generally equivalent to “flying dinosaurs”, which includes extinct species that looked very similar to modern birds, including Archaeopteryx