Chapter 24-Natural Selection Flashcards

0
Q

Population Thinking

A

The idea that variation among individuals in a population is the key to understanding the nature of species.

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1
Q

Population

A

Individuals of the same species that are living in the same place at the same time.

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2
Q

Descent with Modification

A

Species and their descendant species change through time.

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3
Q

Fossil Record

A

Consists of all the fossils that have been found and described in scientific literature.

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4
Q

Fossil

A

Any trace of an organism that lived in the past.

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5
Q

Geologic Time Scale

A

A sequence of named intervals called eons, eras, and periods that represented the major events in Earth history.

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6
Q

Sedimentary Rocks

A

Rocks that form from sand, mud, or other materials deposited at locations such as beaches or river mouths. Form in layers.

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7
Q

Extinct

A

A species that no longer exists.

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8
Q

Transitional Feature

A

A trait in a fossil species that is intermediate between those of older and younger species.

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9
Q

Vestigial Trait

A

A reduced or incompletely developed structure that has reduced or no function, but is similar to functioning organs or structures in closely related species.

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10
Q

Phylogeny

A

A family tree of populations or species.

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11
Q

Homology

A

A similiarity that exists in species because they both inherited the trait from a common ancestor.

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12
Q

Genetic Homology

A

Homology that occurs in DNA sequences.

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13
Q

Developmental Homology

A

Homology that is recognized in embryos.

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14
Q

Structural Homology

A

Similiarity in adult morphology, or form.

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15
Q

Morphology

A

Form or appearance.

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16
Q

Natural Selection

A

A process of evolution where only the fittest, or most likely to survive, organisms survive long enough to produce offspring.

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17
Q

Biological Fitness

A

The ability of an individual to produce surviving offspring, relative to that ability in other individuals in the population.

18
Q

Tuberculosis

A

An infection that was once a scourge of humanity and a great public health issue.

19
Q

Natural Experiment

A

An experiment that allows researchers to compare treatment groups created by an unplanned change in conditions.

20
Q

Acclimation

A

Changes in an individual’s phenotype that occur in response to changes in environmental conditions.

21
Q

Genetic Correlation

A

Causes by pleiotropy. Selection of alleles for one trait cause a correlated increase in another trait.

22
Q

Fitness Trade-Off

A

A compromise between traits, in terms of how those traits perform in the environment.

23
Q

Evolution

A

Change in allele frequency over time.

24
Q

Special Creation

A

The previous leading explanation for the diversity of organisms. Held that all species are independant in the sense of unrelated to each other, life on Earth is young (6000 years old), and species is immutable or incapable of change.

25
Q

Great Chain of Being

A

A linear scheme proposed by Aristotle, where species were organized into a sequence based on increased size and complexity, and humans were at the top.

26
Q

Inheritance of Acquired Characters

A

The idea that an individual’s phenotype changes as they develop in response to challenges posed by the environment, and they pass on these phenotypic changes to offspring.

27
Q

Typological Thinking

A

Based on the idea that species are unchanging types and that variations within species are unimportant or even misleading.

28
Q

Extant

A

Living today.

29
Q

Phylogenetic Tree

A

A branching diagram that describes the ancestor-descendant relationships among species.

30
Q

Cetaceans

A

A group of organisms including whales and dolphins.

31
Q

Relative Dating

A

Dating based on the position of sedimentary rocks where fossils are found.

32
Q

Absolute Dating

A

Uses the analysis of radioactive atoms in rocks in or near the layers where fossils were found.

33
Q

Radiometric Dating

A

Analysis of the proportion of radioactive “parent” atoms to their more stable “daughter” atoms in a material to determine age.

34
Q

Allele Frequency

A

The frequency of selected traits from one generation to the next.

35
Q

Heritable Variation

A

The trait differences in individuals are heritable and can be passed on to offspring genetically.

36
Q

Heritable Traits

A

Traits in an individual that can be inherited by descendants.

37
Q

Adaptation

A

A heritable trait that increases the fitness of an individual in a particular environment, relative to individuals lacking the trait.

38
Q

Antibiotic Resistance

A

The resistance in bacteria to antibiotics caused by bacteria with resistance surviving previous rounds of antibiotics and reproducing, eventually causing completely resistant bacteria.

39
Q

Selfish Allele

A

An allele that prevents self-sacrificing behaviors and allows an individual to survive and produce offspring.

40
Q

Genetic Constraint

A

The constraint of evolution where certain negative traits evolve due to an inability to produce positive traits due to a lack of genetic variation, or correlation of genes.

41
Q

Historical Constraints

A

The constraint that all traits evolved from previously existing traits.

42
Q

Vertebrates

A

Organisms with a backbone.

43
Q

Internal Consistency

A

The observation that data from independent sources agree in supporting predictions made by a theory.