week 7 Flashcards

1
Q

who was the dude who made binomial nomenclature?

A

Carl Linnaeus

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2
Q

what is taxonomy

A

the science of naming and allocating organisms into related groups.

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3
Q

The part scientific name of a species; composed of a genus name and a species epithet; written in italics.

A

binomial naming

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4
Q

in Tyrannosaurus rex, what is Tyrannosaurus? rex?

A

tyrannosaurus is genus, rex is species

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5
Q

what is the rule of priority? what is an example?

A

in taxonomic law, a rule that states whoever names something first gets the keep the name

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6
Q

define interspecific variation

A

when individuals differ in morphology because they belong to different species.

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7
Q

define intraspecific variation

A

morphological variations bw individuals of the same species

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8
Q

define sexual dimorphism

A

when individuals differ in morphology between males and females, aside from genitalia

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9
Q

define ontogenetic variation

A

when you can see between young individuals and old individuals of the same species.

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10
Q

define individual variation

A

when there are normal differences that exist among individuals of a given species. E.g. hair or eye colour.

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11
Q

define taphonomic variation

A

when fossil records appear to be different due to plastic deformations

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12
Q

define the biological species concept. explain a fault of it

A

a group of organisms that can interbreed

problem: dead things don’t breed, so we can only speculate.
also what about populations that are separate but theoretically could interbreed if they are brought together, like

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13
Q

define a population

A

a collection of organisms that live in the same area at the same time that can interbreed called

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14
Q

what the fuck is a lumper?

A

paleontologists that require more differences before they consider two species to be distinct

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15
Q

what the fuck is a splitter?

A

paleontologists that require less differences before they consider two species to be distinct

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16
Q

what is a holotype?

A

a physical example of a species that is representative of that species - does not need to be complete, just enough to distinguish it from other species

17
Q

what is the morphological species concept? what are some faults associated with it?

A

organisms that share a degree of physical similarity

problems are that if we go off physical differences, we might get stuck bc dinos can look similar –> we need really unique holotypes to distinguish them

18
Q

we find a small hesperonychus skeleton. how can we be sure it was a new species and not just a juvenile of another species?

A
  • unique features on the pelvis
  • pelvis was fully fused, suggesting it was an adult