Chapter 1 - Whales and the Virus Flashcards

1
Q

What is homology?

A

Structural characteristics shared because they were descended from a common ancestor.

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2
Q

What is the significance of Dorudon atrox?

A

Dorudon helped linked cetaceans to land mammals due to the unique cusps and patters on it’s teeth that bore resemblance to some old land mammal fossils. The thick, lipped plate of bone in its involucrum was also indicative of mammals.

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3
Q

What is natural selection?

A

A process of evolution where individuals can cause certain genes to outcompete others.

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4
Q

What is a synapomorphy?

A

A derived form of a trait shared by all ancestors of said trait (like Dorudon’s ancestors having complex teeth and cusps). Synapomorphies were used to connect Dorudon to it’s land walking, mammalian ancestors.

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5
Q

What evidence linked cetaceans to artiodactyla?

A

The discovery of an astralgus, a pulley-like ankle bone found in artiodactyla, in the hind legs of a cetacean fossil that had actually hindlimbs (i.e was landwalking).

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6
Q

What is a phylogeny?

A

A visual representation of the evolutionary history of a population, genes, or species.

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7
Q

How are hippopotamus and the land walking ancestor of the whale, Indohyus, similar?

A

They both have a very dense bone that is used to be able to walk on the bottom of lakes, rivers, etc.

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8
Q

What did scientists discover about the drinking habits of cetaceans?

A

The older cetaceans, the land-walking onces, drank only freshwater. As they started spending more time towards the shore (over the course of 40m years), they starting drinking more and more seawater. Whales now drink seawater alone.

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9
Q

What is a way scientists linked dolphins to an ancestor that had legs?

A

They saw in dolphin embryos, a specific set of genes became active that started producing “buds” of legs, but they later died back, showing that dolphins had an ancestor that grew legs but then evolved to lose them.

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10
Q

How did baleen whales lose their teeth?

A

They still have genes to produce teeth because these genes were passed down to them by ancestors, but they have all been disabled by mutations. Thus, they grow baleen instead.

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11
Q

When and why did whale diversity increase 20 million years ago?

A

The presence of large, shelled algae called diatoms. These diatoms were a large food supply for whales.

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12
Q

What is the significance of Ambulocetus?

A

A fossil whale with legs, with traits that were intermediate between it’s land walking and water loving ancestors.

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13
Q

How do viruses replicate?

A

Viruses use special proteins to enter cells, where they use our own DNA to make copies of themselves. These copies then use a protein called neuraminidase to cut themselves out of the cell and wreck havoc.

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14
Q

Why do viruses mutate so readily?

A

The way they reproduce produces a ton of copies of themselves, but these copies are sloppily made and rife with mutations. When so many mutations are happening so quickly, there is bound to be beneficial genes that help the virus population.

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15
Q

What is viral reassortment?

A

When genetic material from different strains get mixed into new combinations with a single individual. Reassortment gave birth to the mutations that allowed the bird flu to infect humans.

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16
Q

Why are reassorted strains more deadly?

A

They are so uniquely different from other strains of the flu. Immunity from the common seasonal variant doesn’t protect from reassortment strains.

17
Q

What did the H1N1 outbreak cause scientists to monitor?

A

The h1n1 outbreak revealed many flaws in the worlds health systems, so now people are monitoring bird and other animal populations for strains of disease that could potentially hop over to humans.

18
Q

What was the significance of h7n9?

A

It was a reassorted virus, that came from 4 chinese bird strains, that caused a panic in China in 2013. However, this flu was incapable of spreading from human to human.

19
Q

What is genetic drift?

A

Evolution arising from random changes in the genetic composition of a population from one generation to the next.

20
Q

What are phenotypes?

A

measurable parts of an organism, like structure, physiology, or behaviour. Genes interact with other genes and the environment as the phenotype develops.

21
Q

How does hemagglutin contribute to the evolution of viruses?

A

It allows the virus to bind to the cells of its host, allowing it to reproduce and thus evolve.

22
Q

How do evolutionary biologists test hypotheses about different species being related?

A

They use things such as studying the fossil record, comparing dna, and studying species that are actually alive. Depending on how close certain ancestors are, scientists can develop hypotheses on how certain traits developed over time.

23
Q

How do mutations become more or less common in populations over the course of generations?

A

Detrimental mutations become less populous because individuals that have them survive less. Beneficial ones can become ore populous because those with the mutation survive more often to pass on offspring.