Unit 2 - Evolution Flashcards

1
Q

What is evolution?

A

The change over time in the proportion of individuals in a population differing in 1 or more inherited traits.

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2
Q

What are the non-random processes that changes in allele frequency occur through?

A

Natural and sexual selection.

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3
Q

What is a random process that changes in allele frequency occurs through?

A

Genetic drift.

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4
Q

What does natural selection act on?

A

Genetic variation in populations.

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5
Q

What does variation in traits arise as a result of?

A

Mutations.

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6
Q

What is sexual selection?

A

The non-random process involving the selection of alleles that increase the individual’s chances of mating and producing offspring.

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7
Q

What might sexual selection lead to?

A

Sexual dimorphism.

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8
Q

What is sexual dimorphism?

A

The difference in appearance between males and females of the same species.

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9
Q

What can sexual selection be due to?

A

Male-male rivalry and female choice.

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10
Q

How is reproductive success increased in male-male rivalry?

A

Large size or weaponry increases access to females through conflict.

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11
Q

What does female choice involve?

A

Females assessing the fitness of males.

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12
Q

What are 4 signals that indicate fitness and are therefore beneficial in sexual selection?

A

Physical appearance or display
Chemical signs
Presence or absence of parasites
Earlier life history events

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13
Q

When does genetic drift occur?

A

When chance events cause unpredictable fluctuations in allele frequencies from one generation to the next.

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14
Q

Is genetic drift more important in small or large populations and why?

A

Small as more alleles are likely to be lost from the gene pool.

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15
Q

What are the two major types of genetic drift?

A

Population bottlenecks and founder effects.

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16
Q

When do population bottlenecks occur?

A

When a population size is reduced for at least one generation.

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17
Q

How do founder effects occur?

A

Through the isolation of a few members of a population from a larger population. The gene pool is not representative of that in the original gene pool.

18
Q

Why is a gene pool altered by genetic drift?

A

Certain alleles may be under-represented or over-represented and allele frequencies change.

19
Q

What happens to the rate of evolution when selection pressures are strong?

A

Rate of evolution is rapid.

20
Q

What are selection pressures?

A

Environmental factors that influence which individuals in a population pass on their alleles.

21
Q

What are the two types of selection pressure?

A

Biotic and abiotic.

22
Q

Give 4 examples of biotic selection pressures.

A

Competition, predation, disease, parasitism.

23
Q

Give 5 examples of abiotic selection pressures.

A

Changes in temperature, light, pH, humidity, salinity.

24
Q

What does the Hardy-Weinberg principle state?

A

In the absence of evolutionary influences, allele and genotype frequencies in a population will remain constant over the generations.

25
What are the conditions for maintaining the HW equilibrium?
No natural selection, random mutation, no mating, large population size and no gene flow.
26
What can the HW principle be used to determine?
Whether a change in allele frequency is occurring in a population over time.
27
What is fitness?
Fitness is an indication of an individual's ability to be successful at surviving and reproducing.
28
What is fitness a measure of?
The tendency of some organisms to produce more surviving offspring than competing members of the same species.
29
What two terms can fitness be measured in?
Absolute and relative fitness.
30
What is the calculation formula for absolute fitness?
Frequency of a particular genotype after selection —————————————————— Frequency of a particular genotype before selection
31
What does an absolute frequency of 1 indicate about the frequency of that genotype?
Frequency of the genotype is stable.
32
What is the formula for relative fitness?
Number of surviving offspring per individual of a particular genotype ——————————————————— Number of surviving offspring per individual of the most successful genotype
33
What is co-evolution?
The process by which two or more species evolve in response to selection pressures imposed by each other.
34
What is the impact of a change in the traits of one species in a co-evolutionary relationship?
Acts as a selection pressure on the other species.
35
When is co-evolution frequently seen?
Co-evolution is frequently seen in pairs of species that have symbiotic interactions.
36
What is symbiosis?
Co-evolved intimate relationships between members of two different species.
37
What is the impact of symbiotic relationships?
Positive, negative or neutral for all individuals involved.
38
What are the 3 types of symbiotic interactions?
Mutualism, commensalism and parasitism.
39
What is mutualism?
Both organisms in the interaction are interdependent on each other for resources or other services. As both organisms gain from the relationship, the interaction is (+/+).
40
What is commensalism?
One species benefits from the relationship while the other species is unharmed and does not gain any benefit. The interaction is (+/0).
41
What is parasitism?
The parasite benefits in terms of energy or nutrients and the host is harmed as a result of the loss of those resources (+/-).
42
What does the Red Queen hypothesis state?
In a co-evolutionary relationship, changes in the traits of one species can act as a selection pressure on the other species so both species must adapt to avoid extinction.