Chapter 15 Flashcards

1
Q

Macroevolution

A

Dramatic biological change: origin of new species, extinction, evolution of major structure

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2
Q

Speciation

A

Evolution of a new species, may increase biological diversity

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3
Q

Reproductive barriers

A

Barriers to interbreeding

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4
Q

Adapted radiation

A

Small group arrives in new habitat, new groups evolve from common ancestors via genetic drift and adaption. Diverse species will adapt to new diverse environments, speciation relies on geographic isolation. Follows founder effect.

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5
Q

Punctuated Equilibrium

A

Long periods of equilibrium (no change) in fossil record; short spurts of adaptation/speciation (change)

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6
Q

Embryology

A

Study of organisms development from fertilized eggs to fully formed adults

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7
Q

Geological time scale

A

Record of earths history. Divided into periods and epochs, divisions

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8
Q

Biological Species Concept

A

Species = a population/group whose members can interbreed and produce fertile offspring. Distinguish new species, microevolution vs macroevolution

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9
Q

Radiometric dating

A

Can tell absolute age, presence of radioactive isotope used to date organisms from up to 50,000 years ago. Allows for construction of history of life on earth

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10
Q

Continental Drift

A

Movement of major land masses due to tectonic plate movement. Organisms separated for a long time are more distinct, and organisms from areas that were recently connected are more similar.

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11
Q

Mass Extinction

A

When many species are wiped out

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12
Q

Taxonomy

A

Identification, naming, classifying species

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13
Q

Binomial Nomenclature

A

2 part scientific naming system

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14
Q

Phylogenetic Tree

A

Reflects branching evolutionary relationships. Closely related organisms have more homologous structures in common.

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15
Q

Cladistics

A

Method of grouping organisms based on shared derived traits

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16
Q

Derived Traits

A

Shared traits inherited from a common ancestor

17
Q

Analogous structure

A

Different structures, same functions

18
Q

Convergent evolution

A

Species in similar environments evolve similar adaptations

19
Q

What is the effect of geographic isolation on population of organisms?

A

They may undergo extensive genetic drift and adaptation, populations may adapt, yet not become a new species

20
Q

What conditions lead to adaptive radiation?

A

Small group arrives in a new habitat, new groups evolve from common ancestors via genetic drift and adaptation. Speciation relies on geographic isolation

21
Q

Why/when would adaptations occur relatively quickly in a population, and what does this have to do with natural selection?

A

Punctuated equilibrium. Genetic drift, natural selection act quickly (hundreds or thousands of years) on populations adapting to new environment.

22
Q

Compare gradual adaptation to punctuated equilibrium

A

Gradual is slowly over time, while punctuated equilibrium has long periods of no change in fossil records, which results in short spurts of adaptation/speciation

23
Q

What clues can we use to construct a history of life on earth?

A

The geological time scale and fossils

24
Q

How might continental drift have contributed to evolution of species?

A

Organisms separated for a long time are more distinct (independent evolution), and organisms from areas that were recently connected are more similar

25
Q

What event usually follows a mass extinction?

A

adaptive radiation

26
Q

Why do we organize species?

A

To what species are closely related ( more categories more related)

27
Q

How have classification systems changed over time?

A

It went from a 2 or 3 kingdom scheme (plants, animals, fungi), to a 5 kingdom scheme (animallia, plante, fungi, protisa, monera) and a 3 domain system (bacteria, archaea, eukaryotes)

28
Q

Compare 5 kingdom and 3 domain systems

A

3 domains used to show differences in bacteria, and 5 kingdom clumps both bacteria together (monera)

29
Q

What is a species?

A

A form of life, all members of population are the same species

30
Q

How can you distinguish different species from one another?

A

Biological species concept equals a population/group whose members can interbreed and produce fertile offspring

31
Q

What factors keep species separated or distinct?

A

Geographic or reproductive isolation. Examples: Reading behavioral differences, habitat isolation, incompatible reproductive systems, or infertile hybrid offspring/unsuccessful development of hybrid offspring

32
Q

Explain how evolution can act as a gradual remodeling process leading to complex structures

A

Evolution ask is the refining process, large changes may result from accumulated small adaptations (Think of it as fine-tuning)

33
Q

Give examples of existing structures adapted for new functions

A

Titan protein in arthropods exoskeleton and penguins used to five but now swim with their wings

34
Q

How can changes in gene expression during early development lead to structural changes into fully formed organisms?

A

Developmental biology can explain some evolved adaptations. Embryology small changes to developmental genes that can cause species to develop differently. Examples, salamanders, some have web feet and some don’t

35
Q

How is massive extinction example of evolution?

A

Loss of biodiversity usually followed by adaptive radiation by survivors

36
Q

If two or more organisms have similar characteristics this is always indicate a common ancestor?

A

No convergent evolution, results in analogous structures. Examples, wings for flight in birds and insects, both are used for the same thing but structured differently