Lecture 6: Evolution and Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

creationism

A

•part of biblical worldview assuming that God created the universe and all living things

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2
Q

catastrophism

A

•developed as an alternative attempt to make sense of the fossil record; sought to explain today’s species

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3
Q

evolutionism

A

•assumes that existing animal species evolved gradually out of common ancestors

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4
Q

uniformitarianism

A

•states that the present is the key to the past
(natural occurrences)
the theory that changes in the earth’s crust during geological history have resulted from the action of continuous and uniform processes.

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5
Q

Darwin / Wallace and Natural Selection

A

Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace
1.There is variation within a population
2.There is competition for strategic resources
3.Because of particular variations, some organisms are more likely to survive and reproduce than others
4.Over time, the less fit organisms are replaced
by more adaptive forms

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6
Q

Lamarckianism vs Darwinism

A

•Darwin and Lamarck were both scientists who tried to understand evolution. Lamarck’s theory of evolution was based around how organisms (e.g. animals, plants) change during their lifetime, and then pass these changes onto their offspring. … Darwin’s theory became accepted because it had more evidence that supported it.

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7
Q

Mendelian Genetics

A

•studies the way in which chromosomes transmit gene across the generations
The father of genetics
Austrian monk-did experiments with pea plants to find out that heredity is determined by discrete, individual
units (genes)
Looked at the inheritance of contrasting traits in pea plants (Tall and short; smooth and wrinkled green and yellow).
Some traits are dominant, while others are recessive

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8
Q

Population Genetics

A

•investigates natural selection and other causes of genetic variation, stability, and change in breeding populations

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9
Q

Gene

A

•a unit of heredity which is transferred from a parent to offspring and is held to determine some characteristic of the offspring

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10
Q

Allele

A

•Biochemically different forms of a given gene

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11
Q

Recessive/Dominant Genes

A

For a recessive allele to produce a recessive phenotype, the individual must have two copies, one from each parent. An individual with one dominant and one recessive allele for a gene will have the dominant phenotype.

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12
Q

Heterozygous vs Homozygous

A

•Possessing two different alleles of the same gene (e.g. Tt or tT)

Possessing two identical alleles of the same gene (e.g. TT or tt)

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13
Q

Genotype/Phenotype

A

•set of genes that it carries

all of its observable characteristics — which are influenced both by its genotype and by the environment

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14
Q

Independent Assortment

A

•chromosomes are inherited independently of one another

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15
Q

Gene Pool

A

•Exchange of genetic material between populations of the same species

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16
Q

Mechanisms of Genetic Evolution

A

•Natural Selection, Genetic Drift, Mutations and Gene Flow

17
Q

Melanin

A

•a dark brown to black pigment occurring in the hair, skin, and iris of the eye in people and animals. It is responsible for tanning of skin exposed to sunlight

18
Q

Haplogroup

A

•haplotype is a group of alleles in an organism that are inherited together from a single parent, and a haplogroup is a group of similar haplotypes that share a common ancestor with a single-nucleotide polymorphism mutation.

19
Q

Skin Color and Environment

A

•Since strong sun exposure damages the body, the solution was to evolve skin that was permanently dark so as to protect against the sun’s more damaging rays. Melanin, the skin’s brown pigment, is a natural sunscreen that protects tropical peoples from the many harmful effects of ultraviolet (UV) rays

20
Q

Rickets and Vitamin D

A

•Vitamin D is needed for the metabolism of calcium and phosphorus in the body, which, in turn affects how calcium is deposited in the bones; thus it is considered essential for proper bone development and growth. Major symptoms of vitamin D deficiency rickets include bone disease, restlessness, and slow growth.

21
Q

Phenotypical Adaptation

A

•When adaptive changes occur during an individual’s lifetime
Made possible by our biological plasticity, mostly our ability to change in response to the environments we
encounter as we grow (lactose tolerance/intolerance)

22
Q

Allen’s Rule

A

•Relative size of protruding body parts increases with average temperature

23
Q

Bergmann’s Rule

A

•The smaller of two bodies similar in shape sheds heat more effectively

24
Q

Thompson’s Rule

A

•Nose length increases in colder and drier climates.

25
Q

Sickle-Cell Anemia and Malaria

A
  • Sickle cell anemia is an inherited form of anemia — a condition in which there aren’t enough healthy red blood cells to carry adequate oxygen throughout your body
  • individuals who are carriers for the sickle cell disease (with one sickle gene and one normal hemoglobin gene, also known as sickle cell trait) have some protective advantage against malaria. As a result, the frequencies of sickle cell carriers are high in malaria-endemic areas.
26
Q

Blood type and Disease

A

•Type A Blood - Smallpox

Type O Blood- Bubonic plague and syphilis

27
Q

Smallpox

A

•Smallpox was an infectious disease caused by one of two virus variants, variola major and variola minor. The last naturally occurring case was diagnosed in October 1977 and the World Health Organization (WHO) certified the global eradication of the disease in 1980

28
Q

Race: The Power of Illusion

A
  • racial markers(skin color, hair) mean nothing without social implementation
  • USA was racialized from the beginning, so newcomers had to fit in
  • immigrants often work the hardest, poorest paying jobs
  • in 1910, 58 percent of mine and factory workers were immigrants
  • explained as “natural consequences of their race”
  • Davenport wrote about the fears of immigrants (racist)
  • lynching in Alabama; even Jews were lynched for killing white women
  • Zangwill wrote that god would “melt together all the desirable races to make white Americans”
  • 1790 law stated only free white immigrants could become natural citizen
  • who is defined as black? different among states 1/8,1/16,…. could walk across lines and change race
  • US court ruled that Armenians were legally white
  • Ozawa fought for citizenship. 1) his skin was white 2) it shouldn’t matter. US court ruled he was not white bc he was not caucasian.
  • Indians were classified as caucasian, US court flipped on itself and ruled that white does not consider science
  • South asians who were naturalized before verdict were stripped of rights.
  • Japanese land was seized and sold to white farmers
  • end of WW2, veterans needed homes, govt created Federal Housing Administration to put ~20 percent down and banks financed the rest
  • allowed average person to own a home.
  • Levittown was a potato farm turned suburban area 65 bucks/month
  • soldiers fought in segregated ranks and returned home searching for equality: Levittown was not ready to sell to AA yet
  • FHA said the presence of AA families would diminish value
  • race was as much a factor in real estate assessment as the actual property (hazardous/unstable were red lined)
  • therefore, most mortgages went to white neighborhoods
  • less than 2 percent of housing funding went to AA communities
  • being white now meant living in the suburbs (weird utopia of people ignorant of living in a multicolored world)
  • public housing projects centered AA in the city
  • Johnson signed fair housing act removing racial terms from FHA. whites moved to largely white neighborhoods
  • Roosevelt newspapers played on the fears of white homeowners to move asap and then the house was resold at higher price to AA
  • whites leaving caused housing value to decrease overall
  • banks made it easy for white neighborhood value to increase, and oppositely for AA
  • Roosevelt now seen as dumping ground
  • why are things still separated? consequence of structure
29
Q

DNA

A

(Deoxyribonucleic Acid)

30
Q

random genetic drift

A

Change in allele frequency that occurs by chance