Classification and Courtship As Flashcards

1
Q

what are the principles of classification

A

large groups divided into smaller ones
members of groups have features in common
based on DNA/fossils/anatomy/embryology
reflects evolutionary history

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2
Q

problems with classification techniques

A

species aren’t fixed/can evolve
may be a large variation between members of a species
many species are extinct and have no fossils
some species don’t reproduce sexually
isolated groups may be classed as separate species, but may actually be able to interbreed

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3
Q

taxonomic rank

A
Domain
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Genus
Species
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4
Q

how to write genus

A

with a capital letter at the start

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5
Q

how to write species

A

underline or italics

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6
Q

what links organisms in the same genus

A

same evolutionary origin/ common ancestor

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7
Q

what defines something as being in the same species

A

if they can reproduce to have fertile offspring

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8
Q

how to test if to organisms are the same species

A

breed two individuals together and if they have fertile offspring they are the same species

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9
Q

what does phylogenetic relationships/hierarchy show

A

evolutionary relationships. groups within groups - no overlap

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10
Q

what do phylogenetic trees show

A

evolutionary relationships

the more closely related animals have more recently diverging common ancestors

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11
Q

how to use protein structure to determine evolutionary relationships

A

look at amino acid sequences/primary structure
closer the amino acid sequence the closer the relationship
protein structure related to DNA base/triplet sequence

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12
Q

how to use base sequence to determine evolutionary relationship

A

more similar base sequences = closer relationship

also likely to have amino acid sequences in common

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13
Q

why is comparing base sequence from a gene better than comparing amino acid sequences

A

triplet code - more bases than amino acids
introns are non-coding
DNA code is degenerate

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14
Q

define species diversity

A

the number of different species and the number of individuals of each within any community

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15
Q

define genetic diversity

A

number of different alleles of each gene. may be low if there’s inbreeding or the population was started from only a small number of individuals

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16
Q

define ecosystem diversity

A

range of different habitats within a particular diversity

17
Q

define species richness

A

the number of different species in a community

18
Q

how does courting behaviour increase the chance of mating

A

allows members of the same species to recognise each other
stimulates the release of gametes
allows individuals to recognise opposite gender
often an indication of sexual maturity/fertility
help form a pair bond

19
Q

define biodiversity

A

the range and variety of genes, species and habitats within a particular environment

20
Q

how does farming reduce biodiversity

A

less hedgerow, monoculture, overgrazing of land, pesticides

21
Q

how to increase biodiversity

A

conservation techniques e.g. crop rotation

22
Q

what do you need to know to calculate a diversity index

A

total number of individuals of all species

number of individuals of each species

23
Q

what factors make biodiversity indexes higher

A

more plant species
more food sources/variety of food
more habitats/niches