Evolution Test

Beschreibung

Karteikarten am Evolution Test, erstellt von Amar Malik am 04/05/2018.
Amar Malik
Karteikarten von Amar Malik, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Amar Malik
Erstellt von Amar Malik vor mehr als 6 Jahre
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Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Frage Antworten
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck He believed evolution would happen by acquired traits Creatures develop their traits and then give them to their offspring This was not accepted as valid
Charles Darwin He believed that giraffes that already have long necks will survive better This would leave more offspring who inherit their long necks. Concluded based on variation, selection and survival, and reproduction and inheritance of more fit traits Accepted as valid
Natural Selection Organisms with traits well suited to an environment are more likely to survive and produce more offspring than organisms without those favorable traits
What factors drive evolution? Overproduction Variation Selection Competition
Because of natural selection, what organisms can adapt to their environment? Populations of organisms
Survival of the Fittest Organisms with traits that make them well adapted, or suited to the environment, survive and reproduce
What are Darwin's two theories? Descent with Modification Modification by Natural Selection
Descent with Modification The newer forms appearing in the fossil record are actually the modified descendants of older species Organisms similar to each other come from a common ancestor, while organisms more dissimilar come from a more remote ancestor
Modification by Natural Selection States how evolution occurs Organisms having traits that make them better suited for survival tend to leave more offspring than organisms with fewer traits
What are the different types of evidence that support evolution? Fossils Biogeography Anatomical Structures Comparative Embryology Similarities in Macromolecules
Fossils Found in sedimentary rocks Rocks with imprints of dead matter or hard body parts of an organism
Mold Imprint in rock in the shape of an organism
Cast Forms when mold are filled with hard minerals
Biogeography The study of the geographical distribution of fossils and of living organisms New organisms arise in areas when similar forms already lived
What are the three types of anatomical structures? Homologous Structures Analogous Structures Vestigial Structures
Homologous Structures Structures that are similar but have different functions
Analogous Structures Similar functions but differ in structure
Vestigial Structures Features that were useful to an ancestor, but they are not useful to the modern organism that hast them
Comparative Embryology Closely related organisms often have similar stages in their embryonic development All vertebrate embryos are similar
Similarities in Macromolecules The more similar homologous proteins are in different species, the more closely related the species are thought to be
What are the patterns of evolution? Convergent Evolution Coevolution Divergent Evolution
Convergent Evolution Acquiring the same biological trait independently Example: Flight The hummingbird and moth's last common ancestor did not have wins, they acquired them independently
Coevolution Changes of two or more species in close association with each other
Divergent Evolution Two or more related populations or species become more and more dissimilar Divergence is nearly always a response to differing habitats and can result in new species
What are two divergent patterns? Adaption Radiation Canis familiaris
Adaption Radiation Many related species evolve from a single ancestral species
Species A group of individuals that look similar and whose members are capable of producing fertile offspring in the natural environment
Canis familiaris Artifical Selection (divergent pattern) All domestic dogs are the same species
Classification The arrangement of organisms into orderly groups based on their similarities Also known as taxonomy
Taxonomists Scientists that identify and name organisms
What are the benefits of classifying? Accurately and uniformly names organisms Prevents misnomers such as starfish and jellyfish that aren't really fish Uses same language for all names
Aristotle The First Taxonomist Divided organisms into plants and animals Subdivided them by their habitat
John Ray A botanist First to use Latin for naming The names were very long and told us everything about the plant
Carolous Linnaeus 18th century taxonomist Classified organisms by their structure Developed naming system still used today Called the Father of Taxonomy Developed the modern system of naming known as binomial nomenclature Two-word name
What were the rules for naming an organism? All must be approved by International Naming Congress Prevents duplicated names The International Code for Binomial Nomenclature contains all the rules
Taxon Category into which related organisms are placed Hierarchy of group from broadest to most specific. Classification based on evolutionary relationships
Domains Broadest, most inclusive taxon Three domains Archaea and Eubacteria are unicellular prokaryotes Eukarya are more complex and have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles
Archarea First cells to evolve Live in harsh environments Found in sewage treatment plants, thermal or volcanic vents, hot springs or geysers that ae acid, and very salty water
Eubacteria Some may cause disease Found in all habitats expect harsh ones Important decomposers for environment Commercially important in making cheese, yogurt, buttermilk, etc.
What is the domain eukarya divded into? Protista Fungi Plante Animalia *all of these are kingdoms
Protista Most are unicellular Some are multicelluar Some are autotrophic while others are heterotrophic Aquatic
Fungi Multicellular Absorptive heterotrophs Cell walls made of chitin
Plantae Multicellular Autotrophic Absorb sunlight to make glucose (photosynthesis) Cell walls made of cellulose
Animalia Multicellular Ingestive heterotrophs Feed on plants or animals
Cladogram Diagram showing how organisms are related based on shared, derived characteristics such as feathers, hair, or scales
Dichotomous Key Used to identify organisms Characteristics given in pairs
Speciation When one species evolves into another
Adaptation Helps organism survive better in its enviorment
Evolution The process by which populations change over time
Selective breeding Humans select traits that will be passed from generation to another. Also known as artificial selection
Mutation A change in a gene at the DNA level
What principles did the theroy of evolution combine? Natural selection and genetic inheritance
When it comes to crickets, what does fitness mean? Overall survival so crickets could reproduce and pass on their traits to their offspring
Is calling good or bad for a cricket's fitness? Calling is good and bad. It is good because it attracts female crickets to them, and it's bad cause you give away your location for predators.
What were some examples of selection in the cricket story? When the bat choose to eat the singing cricket When the man stepped on the cricket The female choose to mate with the male cricket
Generation Time The average time between two consecutive generations in the lineages of a population
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