Biology final
define natural selection
A process in which individuals with certain (beneficial) inherited traits are more likely to survive and reproduce than are individuals that do not have those traits.
If a population IS EVOLVING, what are the agents
-Genetic Drift, Small population. -Nonrandom mating. -mutation. -Gene Flow/ Migration. -Natural Selection.
who are the people that influenced Darwin
-Lamarck: he thought that Organisms pass traits acquired during their lifetimes to their offspring and that organisms endowed with a vital force that drove them to change toward greater complexity and perfection. -Malthus: he thought that conflict between population size and food supply generates famine, disease, and war which alters population growth, which is known as a struggle for existence. -Lyell: o Earth did not originate in present form, it was a slow pace of geologic processes that are still occurring today which meant that the Earth is very old. This theory helped Darwin believe that his ideas could be possible because there was more time for spices to develop and change over a longer period of time.
what are the 5 Hardy-Weinberg conditions
1)Population size is large
What does Differential Reproductive Success include as a condition for natural selection to occur
1. Better adapted individuals will more likely to survive, reproduce and pass their traits on to the next generation.
List the 5 conditions that must be present for a population to be in genetic equilibrium.
1. Population is large. 2. Mating is random. 3. There are no mutations. 4. There is no gene flow. 5. There is no natural selection.
The Conditions for Genetic Equilibrium:
1. Population size is large 2. Random mating 3. No mutations 4. No migration or gene flow 5. No selection When all of these conditions are met, the population would be in Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium because the frequencies would not change over time.
what are the 4 conditions of Darwin's theory of natural selection as mechanism for evolution
1. variation
the two genes related to eye development share more than _____% of their nucleotides, indicating the gene for eye development is very highly conserved within animals.
75
Darwin's theory of Natural selection as a mechanism for evolution is described as ...
A process in which individuals with certain (beneficial) inherited traits are more likely to survive and reproduce than are individuals that do not have those traits.
what did Thomas Malthus state
Conflict between population size and food supply generates famine, disease, and war which alters population growth. A struggle for existence.
All living species use_____ to store information
DNA
What does limits on population growth include as a condition for natural selection to occur
Due to limited resources and other constraints, not all offspring survive to reproduce.
what does fitness measure
Fitness is a measure of reproductive success, the relative likelihood of an individual contributing fertile offspring to the future generations.
what are evidence of evolutionary change
Fossil records, biogeography and observation of artificial selection in plants and animals.
_________ happens in island populations.
Founder effect
define homologies
Fundamental similarity due to descent from a recent common ancestor
What term do we use to describe a population that is NOT undergoing evolutionary change?
Genetic Equilibrium. This is when the population is stable and unchanging, allele and genotype frequencies do not change from generation to generation. This means that the population is not undergoing evolution.
__________ can be used to test whether evolution is occurring in a population. It describes mathematically that in the absence of outside forces, allele and genotype frequencies do not change from generation to generation, the population is NOT undergoing evolution. This results in a stable unchanging population called genetic equilibrium.
Hardy-Weinberg Principle/equation
what happened on Darwins voyage across the south american coast
He observed the organisms of the Galapagos, while different, resembled those of S.A. more then the rest of the world. Spatial similarities and differences.
who was Jean Baptiste de Lamarck and how did he influence darwin
He was a French scientist that believed that "Organisms pass traits acquired during their lifetimes to their offspring and that organisms endowed with a vital force that drove them to change toward greater complexity and perfection.
who was Thomas Malthus and how did he influence Darwin
He was an English Clergyman and economists thought that thought "conflict between population size and food supply generates famine, disease, and war which alters population growth, which is known as a struggle for existence
define homplasy
Homoplastic features demonstrate that organisms with separate distant ancestries may adapt in similar ways to similar environments; convergent evolution
What does variation include as a condition for natural selection to occur
The individuals of a population exhibit variation. Some of this variation is heritable. Genetic variation is the raw material for evolution.
True or False: Evolution can occur over just a few generations.
True
Darwin believed that there had to be the following four conditions for his theory to be accurate. What are those conditions
Variation - the individuals of a population exhibit variation. Some of this variation is heritable. Genetic variation is the raw material for evolution. overproduction- in every generation each species has the capacity to produce more offspring than can survive. limits on population growth- due to limited resources (and other constraints) not all offspring survive to reproduce. Differential reproductive success- better adapted individuals will more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass their traits on to the next generation.
what are the conditions for natural selection to occur
Variation, Overproduction, Limits on population Growth, Differential Reproductive success.
Struggle for existence, population changes, and inheritable traits over time and spatial similarities/differences...species appear to _____ to changes in the environment
adapt
Individuals moving into or out of a population take their _____ with them, changing the allele frequency of the population.
alleles
who was Charles Lyell and how did he influence Darwin
an English geologist that believed the Earth did not originate in present form, it was a slow pace of geologic processes that are still occurring today which meant that the Earth is very old. This theory helped Darwin believe that his ideas could be possible because there was more time for spices to develop and change over a longer period of time.
Phylogenies represent ________
an evolutionary tree of life
define mutation
any change in the DNA sequence
1. Why do we study evolution at the population level and not the individual level?
because individuals do not evolve, populations do. The evolutionary impact is only apparent in the genetic changes in a population over time.
define differential reproductive success
better adapted individuals will more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass their traits on to the next generation.
define adaptation
change in allele frequencies of genes over time
what is genetic drift
changes in allelic frequency due to random chance (unrelated to fitness or selection). Genetic drift only happens in small populations. It can result in either loss or fixation of an allele regardless if beneficial, harmful or neutral. Genetic Drift decreases genetic variation within a population.
genetic drift _____ genetic variation
decrease
define limits on population growth
due to limited resources (and other constraints) not all offspring survive to reproduce.
Similarities in cells at the molecular level indicate that living species _____ from a common ancestor or interrelated group of common ancestors
evolved
what does the eyeless gene control
eye developement in fruit flies
what does the pax6 gene control
eye developement in mice
define stabilizing selection
favors intermediate phenotypes.
define homplastic features
features with similar functions that evolved independently in distantly related organisms
evolution can occur over _____ generations and is most commonly expressed as an _____
few
Darwin suggested that organisms that survive and reproduce successfully have genetic traits aiding survival and reproduction. These traits enhance an organism's _____
fitness
what is a population
group of individuals of the same species that live in an area (environment) together and can interbreed with one another. Some species occupy a wide geographic range and are divided into populations.
what did Charles Darwin do
identified natural selection as a mechanism of evolution and wrote "the origin of species"
define overproduction
in every generation each species has the capacity to produce more offspring than can survive.
define gene pool
includes all the alleles for all the loci present in the population
what is gene pool
includes all the alleles for all the loci present in the population. Individuals don't evolve, populations do.
gene flow _____ genetic variability
increases
What are FALSE statements about evolution?
individuals evolve during their lifetime. natural selection is the sole mechanism of evolutionary change. evolution is limited to speciation.
define vestigial structure
remnants of more developed structures that were present and functional in presumed ancestors.
Darwin suggested that organisms who survive and reproduce successfully have traits that aid in this process. These traits are said to enhance the fitness of the organism. A popular saying in biology is, "Survival of the Fittest", but really fittest is referring to fitness. What does this term "fitness" measure?
reproductive success
what is NOT one of Darwins assumptions of Natural Selection as a mechanism for evolution?
resources are infinite
define directional selection
shifts the overall makeup of the population by acting against individuals at one of the phenotypic extremes.
define homologous features
similar features with different functions evolved from the same structure in a common ancestor.
define evolution
the accumulation of inherited (genetic) changes within populations over generations
define variation
the individuals of a population exhibit variation. Some of this variation is heritable. Genetic variation is the raw material for evolution
define gene flow
the movement of alleles between two populations.
define genetic equilibrium
the population is not undergoing evolution; allele and genotype frequencies do not change from generation to generation.
what is genetic equilibrium
the population is not undergoing evolution; allele and genotype frequencies do not change from generation to generation. Genetic equilibrium is rare in nature.
define population genetics
the study of genetic variability within a population and the forces that act on it.
what is population genetics
the study of genetic variability within a population and the forces that act on it.
what did fossil records show
they link early extinct species with species that are living today. they are the imprints or remains of organisms that lived in the past. Document differences between past and present organisms and reveal that many species have become extinct. Multicellular (complex) organisms are in younger rocks, unicellular (simple) organisms are in older rocks. Fossil records reveals the historical sequence in which organisms have evolved.
how does Phylogenies represent an evolutionary tree of life
through characteristics (i.e. homologies) being traced through many lineages of life
what is inheritance
traits that are being passed down from one generation to the next.
define founder effect
type of genetic drift that is similar to a bottleneck and is caused when small subpopulations become isolated from the larger population
define disruptive selection
typically occurs when environmental conditions vary in a way that favors individuals at both ends of a phenotypic range over individuals with intermediate phenotypes.
The Hardy-Weinberg equation can be used to test what
whether evolution is occurring in a population.
For alleles to have equal chance of being passed down from one generation to the next, mating _____ the population must be random
within
what is modern synthesis
· Combines Darwin's ideas with the units of evolutionary change. · Integration between the units of evolution (genes) and the mechanism of evolution (natural selection) a synthesis. This explains Darwin's observation of variation in terms of mutation. Modern synthesis also represents a unification of several branches of biology that previously had little in common.
what does the hardy Weinberg equation describe
· a population that is in genetic equilibrium (i.e. not evolving).
What is the criteria for a population to be in "genetic equilibrium"
· large population · random mating · no mutations · no gene flow · no selection for any trait
what did Charles Lyell state
- the Earth did not originate in present form
define macroevolution
(big changes)
define microevolution
(small changes)
what did Charles Darwin state
- All species that exist today,
of animal husbandry
- Breeders and farmers could develop many varieties of domesticated animals in a few generations (artificial selection).
what is the evidence for evolution
- Fossil Record
who were the influencers for Darwin's origin of species
- Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck
define the The Voyage of the HMS Beagle
- Observation: The organisms of the Galapagos, while different, resembled those of S.A. more than the rest of the world. ...spatial similarities and differences.
what did Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck state
- Organisms pass traits acquired during their lifetimes to their offspring.
define selective breeding/artificial selection
- Programs and procedures designed to modify traits in domesticated species
what are the 5 mechanisms for evolution
- Small population; Genetic drift
what is the founder effect
- a type of genetic drift. -It has a similar affect as bottleneck. - It reduces genetic variability due to small population size. -It is caused when a small subpopulations become isolated from the larger population. - Alleles in the founders of subpopulation are disproportionately represented in subsequent generations.
populations can vary in what 3 things
- genotype
what is a scientific theory
- popularly, a mere conjecture, or guess
the evolution of organisms is constrained in what 4 ways
- selection can act only on existing variations
Natural selection can affect the distribution of phenotypes in a population in what 3 ways
- stabilizing selection
what are the types of selection
- stabilizing. - directional. - disruptive.
What does overproduction include as a condition for natural selection to occur
In every generation each species has the capacity to produce more offspring than can survive.
Inheritance work of Gregor Mendel, Darwin did not understand the process of__________________. once Darwin understood, Mendel's work began to answer his questions.
Inheritance
_________ is the only one that leads to adaptive evolution. Organisms become adapted to their environment.
Natural selection
Why does natural selection not lead to the "perfect" organism?
Natural selection cannot fashion perfect organisms. The evolution of organisms is constrained. 1. Selection can act only on existing variations. New advantageous alleles do not arise on demand. 2. Evolution is limited by historical constraints. Evolution co-opts existing structures and adapts them to new situations. 3. Adaptations are often compromises. The same structure often performs many functions. 4. Chance, natural selection, and the environment interact. Environments often change unpredictably.
define adaptive evolution
Natural selection is the only mechanism that leads to adaptive evolution - that results in a better fit between organisms and their environment
_____ mating can give an advantage to certain alleles over other alleles, increasing their relative frequency over time.
Non-random
what does the Hardy-Weinberg principle state
States that in the absence of evolution, the allele and genotype frequencies of a sexually reproducing population can be described mathematically
define biogeography
Study of the geographical distribution of extinct and modern species
what is biogeography
The study of the geographical distribution of extinct and modern species. Isolated continents and island groups have evolved their own distinct plant and animal communities.
define adaptation
a (an evolutionary) modification (a trait) that improves the chances of survival and reproductive success in a given environment.
define population
a group of individuals of the same species that occupy the same environment (time and space) and can interbreed with one another.
define fitness
a measure of reproductive success; the relative likelihood of an individual contributing fertile offspring to the future generations
For genetic equilibrium to occur, there would be no selection for what
a particular trait
define bottlenecks
a type of genetic drift that reduces population size
what are examples of homoplasy
aardvark/ giant anteater / pangolin
what are Darwins assumptions of natural selection as a mechanism for evolution
individuals within a population are genetically variable. overproduction of offspring. better adapted individuals are more likely to contribute their traits to the next generation.
define genetic drift
is changes in allelic frequency due to random chance (unrelated to fitness or selection)
evolution ______ _____ limited to speciation that may only occur over very long periods of time
is not
What is the Hardy-Weinberg principle? Specifically, what does the mathematical equation help scientists do?
it states that the population genetics is the study of genetic variability within a population and the forces that act on it. The mathematical equation helps scientists test whether evolution is occulting in a population.
Scientists have shown that when the mouse Pax6 gene was expressed in legs of fruit flies, eyes developed on their _____
legs
bottlenecks cause a _____ in genetic variation
loss
What kept darwin from publishing his book
many people only believe one way of how things could have happened. Darwin was scared to share his theory because he didn't think anyone would believe him.
What provides the ultimate source of variation among individuals within a population? Example: You look around the room and notice people in the room have different hair colors. We are the same 'species', but we are a very diverse group. What provides this observed variation.
mutation
what are the source of variation
mutation
Darwin's theory of _____ _____ as a mechanism for evolution
natural selection
Over generations, changes may accumulate in separate populations to produce what 3 things
new species, new adaptations, or allele frequencies.
What is homoplasy?
o Distantly related organisms evolve in similar ways due to exposure to similar environmental constraints (convergent evolution).
Macroevolution
o Significant evolutionary changes in populations that result in new species; speciation.
What is evolution
o The accumulation of inherited changes within populations over generations. o Evolution can occur over a few generations and is most commonly expressed as an adaptation to changing environment or the change in allele frequencies of genes over time. o Evolution does not refer to changes that occur in an individual within its own lifetime. Evolution Is not limited to speciation that may only occur over very long periods of time.
what is homology
o it is Similarity that result from shared ancestry. o Can be anatomical (vertebrate forelimb) § vestigial structures= remnants from ancestors o developmental (embryonic development) o molecular (similar DNA sequences i.e. genes)
what does adaptation mean
o it is a term used to describe a trait that improves the chances of survival and reproduction. o it is a modification that improves the changes of survival and reproductive success in a given environment. o it increases an organisms fitness. · Example: Cactus plants are well adapted to living in dry conditions (spines, thick waxy cuticle, shallow roots, grow quickly, store water, etc.)
what is microevolution
o small changes. o Changes in allele or genotype frequencies that occur in a population over a few generations. o Changes in allele frequencies from one generation to the next or adaptations may result.
Then what makes evolutionary changes and genetic equilibrium mechanisms different?
one increases genetic variability and one decreases it.
genetic equilibrium is _____ in nature
rare
founder effect _____ genetic variability
reduces