Evolutionary Biology Terms Lectures 2-5 (Poulin), Evolutionary Biology Terms Lectures 11-14, Evolutionary Biology Terms Lectures 6-10, Evolutionary Biology Lectures 15-18, Evolutionary Biology Lectures 19-22, Evolutionary Biology Lectures 25-28, Evol...
what makes angiosperms successful
-vessel cells- improves their nutrient transportation and makes their growth more efficient -rapid maturation- can reproduce and fertilize a zygote in days if they want to, while it can take up to 15 months for some gymnosperms to reproduce -pollinators -fruits- attract fruit eating pollinators who will then disperse their seeds once the fruit is discarded of
arguments for viruses being alive
-viruses are highly organized -viruses can and do evolve independently of other organisms
arguments for viruses not being alive
-viruses cannot replicate their genetic material on their own; they need a host in order to replicate -viruses are not cells; they have no structures that living cells have
how tetrapods solved challenges of land living
1. (moving heavy bodies)- developed 4 limbs 2. (gills won't function in air)- improved lungs 3. (larger muscles need more oxygen)- improved hearts/ circulatory systems 4. (body dries out)- return to water periodically 5. (eggs dry out)- rely on water to lay eggs
Four steps to form life
1. Abiotic synthesis of organic materials 2. formation of polymers 3. Formation of protobionts 4. Origin of hereditary material
steps of allopatric speciation
1. An event must happen to a species that separates one part of a population from another 2. This event must keep the two populations completely separate so that they develop and breed separately 3. If they are separated for long enough, these once connected groups of the population will not be able to meet due to the reproductive isolation mechanisms, and they will evolve independently of each other into new species
Darwin's observations on the Beagle voyage
1. Found a Glyptodon fossil among modern sea shells- indicated an extinction had occurred without catastrophe 2. Found that finches and tortoises on each island of the Galapagos looked different- proved transmutation of species and natural selection through adaption to environment
Five factors for natural selection
1. Individuals vary 2. Populations tend to overbreed relative to available resources, leading to a survival struggle 3. Better variations cause better survival (survival of the fittest) 4. Survivors will reproduce and non-survivors will not 5. Traits leading to survival and reproduction must be heritable (able to be passed on)
What proof of his hypothesis did Darwin live to witness?
1. Proof that Earth was old 2. Proof that species change 3. Proof that older fossils are more abundant in older rock strata
Four reasons we think there was originally an RNA world
1. RNA easily forms abiotically 2. RNA can replace itself 3. RNA has hereditary info 4. RNA has catalystic properties
Features of a Divinely Inspired Creation
1. Supreme Being placed organisms on Earth 2. Organisms look and function according to design of Supreme Being 3. Species do not change
ways in which the traditional 5/6 kingdom tree of life view is misleading
1. The Protists are extremely paraphyletic, yet they look monophyletic on the diagram 2. The represents all of the kingdoms as having equal weight instead of explaining the true complexity of all the kingdoms (ex. 4 of the kingdoms are all eukaryotic) 3. The tree makes it look like the Eukaryotes are separate from the Archea, when this is not the case in terms of their actual evolution
Three factors for natural selection
1. There must be variation in the population 2. Variation must lead to differences among individuals in lifetime reproductive success 3. Variation must be transmitted to the next generation
Modern examples of transitional forms
1. Whale- evolved from the ambulocetus natans, moved like a sea lion and had 4 limbs 2. Tiktaalik- animal with gills and fins of a fish but arms and shoulders of an amphibian Both of these animals prove that species evolve from earlier transitional forms of themselves
basics of mitosis
1. chromosomes condense and the mitotic spindle develops 2. the nuclear envelope breaks and the spindle further develops 3. the chromosomes align in the middle of the cell attached to the nuclear spindle 4. the chromosomes are pulled apart to opposite sides of the cell 5. the cell cleaves in half; once separation is complete, the two daughter cells have the same # of chromosomes as their parent cell with the exact same genetic info
basics of meiosis
1. chromosomes condense and the nuclear skeleton dissolves 2. the meiotic spindle forms and attaches itself to the chromosomes 3. the pairs join and "crossing over"- swapping of chunks of genetic material between the chromosomes- occurs 4. the pairs align in the middle 5. chromosomes are pulled whole to either side (not split in half) 6. the cells split in two 7. in the two new cells, the DNA recondenses again, the chromosomes pair and align, and the cells split again, creating 4 daughter cells each with 23 chromosomes
Traits of bryophytes
1. embryophytic 2. gametophyte dominant cycle 3. their sporophyte grows out of the gametophyte and is dependent on it for growth- sporophyte cannot survive without gametophyte 4. they require water for sexual reproduction- often live in moist areas b/c of this
traits of tracheophytes
1. embryophytic 2. sporophyte dominant life cycle 3. their gametophyte is free living- does not grow from sporophyte (it is not vascular like the sporophyte, so it grows very small- even 1mm in length- while the sporophyte grows very large) 4. Can get VERY large (ex. Sequoia trees)
three beneficial adaptations of seeds
1. embryophytic- seeds are a form of embryo that ensures greater protection of the zygote 2. dispersal- seeds make dispersal more effective due to their hard coating and durability 3. dormancy- seeds have the ability to delay the time between their development and their dispersal, or the time between their dispersal and their sprouting, based on the conditions in the outside environment, which greatly increases the likelihood of survival
the development of multicellularity
1. eukaryotic cells of similar variety began living close to each other in associations 2. these associations then became connected into colonies 3. the individuals in the colonies began to take on different roles 4. the colony begins to function as an individual, with different cells in different parts that play certain roles in keeping the individual alive
five mammalian traits
1. hair 2. mammary glands (milk) 3. endothermy 4. sweat glands 5. four-chambered heart
how does DNA replicate?
1. helix unzips and breaks hydrogen bonds between nucleotides 2. enzymes bring new nucleotides to the parental strand of DNA and pair them to form a daughter strand
unifying animal traits
1. heterotrophic 2. multicellular, no cell walls 3. mobile (at some stage, every animal is mobile) 4. sexual reproduction 5. embryonic development 6. shared Hox genes that drive development 7. specialized tissues (except sponges)
unifying fungal traits
1. most fungi have a number of cell types or they are unicellular 2. fungi have cell walls with chitin 3. some fungi have dikaryon stages 4. all fungi are heterotrophs that absorb nutrients 5. many fungi have both sexual and asexual reproduction 6. fungi have 3 styles of nutrient acquisition
challenges of land invasion
1. moving heavy bodies 2. gills won't function in air 3. larger muscles need more oxygen 4. the body dries out (dessication) 5. eggs dry out
5 events that lead to coexsistence
1. resource partitioning 2. character displacement 3. intraspecific competition 4. predatiom 5. disturbance
predator responses to prey
1. search images- can find prey even when hidden effectively by using mental images 2. avoid/use toxins- some predators are good at avoiding the poisonous parts of prey, or they use the poison (ex. nudibranch) 3. get past armor- some predators can creatively bypass prey armor or are resistant to its effects (ex. goats can easily chew through cacti despite tough covering/spikes)
important facts about seed plants
1. they allow for dispersal 2. they allow for dormancy 3. they are all heterosporous 4. they dramatically reduce the gametophyte phase by reducing the size of the gametophyte and the time it takes for it to be fertilized, leading to quicker dispersal and development 5. the sporophyte is the dominant form
three factors that influence climate
1. variation in light intensity 2. the angle of the Earth 3. variation in local conditions
basics of viral replication
1. viruses enters host cell 2. substances strip the outer coating of the virus, releasing nucleic acids 3. nucleic acids enter deeper into the cell and cause the cell to ignore its own needs and switch to replicating the virus
Cichlid fish
11 species of this fish exist in a lake in Cameroon that are all very closely related; believed to be an example of sympatric speciation
thermotoga maritima
20% of genes are archaean in origin, even though they are a bacteria; shows that prokaryotes pass genes through lateral transfer between species
human chromosome count
46 chromosomes, 23 pairs
Geological Clock
5 billion years ago to the present. Humans appeared at 11:59 or 1 minute before the present
angiosperm female gametophyte structure
8 cells make up the angiosperm female gametophyte: -egg cell -2 synergid cells- provide structural support to the egg cell -two polar nuclei- fuse with one of the sperm cells to form a nutritive tissue around the zygote called the endosperm -three antipodal cells- provide some nutrients for the egg cell, not the zygote
mutation
A change in a gene or chromosome doesn't necessarily affect alleles as much, but mutation is so important because it allows all the other forces of genetic variation to act, therefore making mutation the premier source of genetic variability
Bottleneck Effect
A change in allele frequency following a dramatic reduction in the size of a population; these surviving organisms then form their own new population of their species where their alleles are then overrepresented, changing the resemblance of the new population
trait
A characteristic that an organism can pass on to its offspring through its genes
tapeworm
A common parasite and member of the flatworm group characterized by an incomplete digestive tract with one opening, and a long body of repeated units
monohybrid cross
A cross between individuals that involves one pair of contrasting traits
ovary
A flower structure that encloses and protects ovules and seeds as they develop
sexual selection
A form of natural selection in which individuals with certain inherited characteristics are more likely than other individuals to obtain mates and reproduce
Hadley circulation
A general circulation pattern in which air rises near the equator, flows north and south away from the equator at high altitudes, sinks near the poles, and flows back along the surface from both poles to the equator; causes variation in global climates
population
A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area
theropods
A group of relatively small, two-legged carnivorous dinosaurs; most common examples are the velociraptor and the well known transitional species archaepteryx; dinosaurs in this group evolved into modern birds over millions of years
placoderms
A member of an extinct group of fishlike vertebrates that had jaws and were enclosed in a tough outer armor; evolved into agnathans and gnathostomes, and agnathans diverged from the gnathostomes with the loss of jaws
nonsense mutation
A mutation that changes an amino acid codon to one of the three stop codons, resulting in a shorter and usually nonfunctional protein
karyotype
A picture of all the chromosomes in a cell arranged in pairs
missense mutation
A point mutation in which a codon that specifies an amino acid is mutated so that a new amino acid is produced; often has a minimal effect on the function of the protein
true predators
A predator that typically kills its prey and consumes most of what it kills; the well known example of a predator (ex. lions eating wildebeast, orca eating penguins)
natural selection
A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits
binary fission
A rapid form of asexual reproduction for prokaryotes in single-celled organisms by which one cell divides into two cells of the same size; no gene recombination occurs and two identical cells are produced
predator prey cycling definition
A reciprocal fluctuation in the population sizes of predators and their prey- predator numbers follow the changes in prey numbers; these cycles are evidence of coevolution between predators and prey
gene
A segment of DNA on a chromosome that codes for a specific trait
deletion (chromosomal mutation)
A segment of a chromosome breaks off and is lost; similar to nucleotide deletion, but on a much larger scale and is normally fatal
Pleiotropy
A single gene having multiple effects on an individuals phenotype (ex. sickle cell anemia gene, which causes sickle cell anemia when dominant, also helps us to be more resistant to malaria)
megaspore
A spore from a heterosporous plant species that develops into a haploid female gametophyte
endosymbiosis
A theorized process in which early eukaryotic cells were formed from simpler prokaryotes
codons (and the amino acid table)
A three-nucleotide sequence of DNA or mRNA that specifies a particular amino acid or stop signal; the basic unit of the genetic code; (these are what make up the amino acid table)
adaptation
A trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce
colonial bentgrass
Agrostis tenuis; the grass population that grew near a mine was found to have very high fitness for survival in contaminated soil and low fitness for normal soil, while the population that lived further from the mine in regular soil had a high fitness for regular soil and a low fitness or no fitness at all for contaminated soil; example of disruptive selection
Tarweeds and silverswords
All of the many species of silverswords are thought to have descended from a single tarweed plant in Hawaii; example of adaptive radiation occurring in island chains
Cenozoic Era (65 MYA- present)
Also known as the "Age of Mammals;" flowering plants dominate and grasslands spread; first "humans" appear about 2MYA
Mesozoic Era (250-65 MYA)
Also known as the "Age of Reptiles;" dinosaurs and first mammals introduced; ends with K-T Extinction
amphibian decline
Amphibian populations have been declining in recent decades, and it is believed to be caused by a chytrid parasite that grows on amphibian skin and produces spores that become parasitic and kill the amphibian once the temperature drops
dominant trait/allele
An allele that is always expressed; the visible trait in an organism
recessive trait/allele
An allele that is masked when a dominant allele is present
allele
An alternative form of a gene
Chestnut Blight
An ascomycete fungal infection that has nearly eliminated the American chestnut
paramecium
An extremely common ciliated (it propels itself via cilia) protist that lives in fresh water and eats other tiny organisms for food; classic example of a ciliate
Dinosaurs
An extremely diverse group of ancient reptiles varying in body shape, size, and habitat; died in K-T Extinction
Archaeopteryx
An intermediate fossil that shows both reptile and bird characteristics
swim bladder
An internal gas-filled organ that helps the ray-finned fish stabilize their buoyancy and stay afloat despite their heavy skeleton; can add/remove air from it without any effort
Evidence that organisms overbreed given available resources
An oak tree will drop 10,000 acorns, yet only 1-10 of these will ever grow into full oak trees
radula
An organ covered with hundreds of rowed teeth that mollusks use to scrape food into their mouths; most mollusk groups have them
model organism
An organism selected for intensive scientific study based on features that make it easy to work with (e.g., body size, life span), in the hope that findings will apply to other species
homozygous
An organism that has two identical alleles for a trait (ex. AA or aa)
1st land plant
Appeared on land for first time after the Cambrian Explosion; first one was carpet moss
Glyptodon
Armadillo fossil Darwin found amongst modern seashells on the Galapagos islands that indicated extinction could occur naturally/ without a catastrophe
Issues people had with Darwin's theory
In order for it to be completely correct: 1. The Earth would have to be extremely old as opposed to 6,000 years old 2. There needs to be evidence of fossils changing through time 3. Older rock strata need to have less new species than newer rock strata 4. Intermediate forms of species need to exit
Cyanobacteria
Bacteria that can carry out photosynthesis; first known organism that could do this
Importance of using DNA-based classification to classify prokaryotes
Because most prokaryotes defy our attempts to grow and observe them individually, the best way we find and classify new prokaryotes is by DNA sampling- for example, taking a portion of soil and testing for the genes in that soil and mapping what we find; it is estimated that we can see a 100x increase in the amount of known prokaryote species using DNA classification
The BIG IDEA
Because there are more animals born in each species than can survive due to limited resources, those organisms born with advantages and favorable traits will be "naturally selected" to survive and pass their favorable traits on to their offspring
Reciprocal translocation
Interchange of parts between non-homologous chromosomes.
aposematic coloration
Bright warning colors in animals who are poisonous or who have a chemical defense; predators recognize these colors and avoid these animals (ex. nudibranch is brightly colored and gains its poison by feeding on poisonous jellyfish and secreting their venom onto its skin); this form of coloring produces two forms of mimicry where animals try to mimic the poisonous color patterns of other animals: Batesian mimicry and Mullerian mimicry
sex chromosomes
Chromosomes that determine the sex of an individual; X for women and Y for men
Atolls
Circular shaped islands made of coral; Darwin studied these islands on his voyage
Binomial Nomenclature
Classification system in which each species is assigned a two-part scientific name (created by Carolus Linnaeus)
Precambrian Supereon (4.6 BYA- 543MYA)
Consists of the Hadean, Archean, and Proterozoic eons; in this time, Earth forms, life originates, the first photosynthesis occurs, microscopic single-celled and multi-cellular organisms appear, and oceans form
Fossil evidence of adaptation (how it supported Darwin's theory)
Cuvier's discovery of extinct species in fossils, along with dozens of other fossil discoveries in this time period of extinct species, helped to prove that species change over time and die out, a central part of Darwin's theory
Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
DNA -> RNA -> Protein
metagenomics
DNA from a group of species is collected from an environmental sample and sequenced; the main way that we find out new prokaryotes exist
virus structure
DNA or RNA molecule (never both) within a capsid (protein coat) for protection; the shape is created by its protein coat, and it can be circular or linear
Galapagos Tortoises
Darwin realized these hard-shelled animals looked different on each island after conversing with the locals
sexual dimorphism
Differences in physical characteristics between males and females of the same species
sporophyte
Diploid, or spore-producing, phase of a plant; Makes haploid spores by meiosis (D to H)
SB and C barnacles
Joseph Connell studied semibalanus and chthalamus barnacles living in the same intertidal zone for evidence of niches and competition; the C barnacles always lived higher than the SB barnacles, but they hatched larvae in the same area; if the SB barnacles were removed, the C barnacles took over the whole living area, but if the C barnacles were removed, the SB stayed put because they were susceptible to dry out and could not live higher due to the changing tides; this study provided evidence of fundamental and realized niches, and that the SB barnacles prevent the C barnacles from their fundamental niche
1st land animal
Early amphibian tetrapod that came to land after evolving from a fish
prototherians (monotremes)
Egg laying mammals- also called monotremes; only living ones are the platypus and echidna, both found in Australia; ooze milk through their skin for their young- have no nipples to give milk through
DNA polymerase
Enzyme involved in DNA replication that joins individual nucleotides to produce a DNA molecule
Paleozoic Era (543-250 MYA)
Era that follows Precambrian Supereon; begins with the Cambrian Explosion; diversification brings more multi-cellular organisms; plants and animals make it to land for first time; ends with Permian Extinction
The problem with missing links
Every time a new missing link is filled between two species, two more come about, which is why all the missing links could never possibly be discovered
Microevolution
Evolutionary change below the species level; change in the allele frequencies in a population over generations; examples include gene flow, genetic drift, non-random mating, mutation, and selection
Archaeocyathids
Extinct group of sponge-like organisms
selective forces
Factors that derive from the environment that ultimately pose threats to health and well-being, survival, and reproduction. Examples include, but are not limited to, predation, climate changes, parasitism/disease, mate attraction, and resource acquisition
Cyanobacterial mats/stromatolites
Layers of cyanobacteria on top of stromatolite rocks with living bacteria on top and fossilized bacteria layered underneath
sepals
Leaflike parts that cover and protect the flower bud
Earliest multicellular life
Life first found in the late Precambrian; mostly unknown animal types and some were capable of movement
what is life
Life is organized and can replicate itself
Ambulocetus natans
"walking whale;" transitional form of modern whale
three ways in which species interact
- competition - predation - symbioses
differences between prions and viruses
-prions contain no genetic material, while viruses do -prions are much smaller than viruses -prions infect by folding proteins, while viruses infect by taking control of cells
challenges of land living for plants
1. avoiding dry out 2. finding structural support to stand without a water column 3. Finding ways to reproduce without water spreading their gametes
two main ways to study competition
1. experiments 2. comparing sympatric and allopatric populations
two factors that define a biome
1. temperature 2. rainfall
How do sessile organisms avoid predation?
1. toxicity- many plants have toxic compounds that taste bad or that are highly poisonous; plants also use aposematic coloring to indicate they are highly toxic; other sessile organisms, like anemones, also exhibit this toxicity 2. armor- many non-mobile organisms develop thick outer coverings (tree bark) and trunks, spikes, or spines as protection 3. satiation- plants also produce most of their offspring within a short time period, which ensures the entire plant species is easily able to survive herbivore predation
dihybrid ratios
9:3:3:1
Protoplanet
A body of matter rotating around a star that has the potential to become a planet
"invisible hand"
Adam Smith's economic concept that natural forces like competition and self-interest control the economy; influenced Darwin's view of competition in nature
Building blocks of life
Amino acids, nucleotides, sugars, lipids, ATP
Heterozygous
An organism that has two different alleles for a trait (ex. Aa)
phenotype
An organism's physical appearance, or visible traits, based off of it's genetic makeup
blending inheritance
An outdated, disputed theory that the phenotype of an offspring was a blend of the parent's phenotypes
cup fungus
Ascomycota are fungus that come in this shape
Directional selection
Form of natural selection in which the entire curve moves; occurs when individuals at one end of a distribution curve have higher fitness than individuals in the middle or at the other end of the curve, thus moving the curve (selection that moves the average)
behavioral isolation
Form of reproductive isolation in which two populations have or develop differences in courtship rituals or other types of behavior that prevent them from interbreeding (ex. blue-footed booby and red-footed booby never mate because their different mating rituals don't attract each other)
Megatherium
Giant ground sloth discovered to be extinct by Georges Cuvier that further proved extinction occurred
gametophyte
Haploid, or gamete-producing, phase of an plant; gametes produce diploid zygote through fertilization (H to D)
Trilobites
Hard-shelled, easily fossilized organisms common in the Precambrian Eon until their extinction
Archean Eon
First appearance of life in this Eon; prokaryotic bacteria called cyanobacteria is the first organism
monohybrid ratios
Genotypic ratio: 1:2:1 Phenotypic ratio: 3:1
Horse lineages
Horses are all part of the Equidae family, which once had 34 genera, but now only has one genus; this change shows how the modern horses developed from hundreds of different transitional forms in dozens of different genera
Transmutation of Species
Idea that species can change and give rise to new species
Nested Hierarchy of Organisms
Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species (Phylum and Class were added later on; created by Linnaeus)
Protobionts
Lipid-based matter with hydrophilic heads (move towards water) and hydrophobic tails (move away from water) that form lipid bilayers and liposomes cavities in the middle due to the hydrophilic tails
Evidence that individuals within a species vary
Organisms in any species clearly vary in size, shape, color, etc.
reading frame
Reading mRNA nucleotides in the correct groupings
centromere
Region of a chromosome where the two sister chromatids attach
where are the gametes on a punnett square?
The father's gametes are placed on the top two boxes of the square, and the mother's gametes are placed along the left side boxes of the square
gene linkage
Traits that tend to be inherited together as a consequence of an association between their genes
flukes
a group of parasitic flatworms that exhibit eye spots
fitness
a rating of how well an organism can survive and reproduce in its environment;
head (vertebrate traits)
a vertebrate head is an anterior skull that contains a large brain with eyes, ears, and nose/mouth for the sensory organs; a head is what makes vertebrates look similar
five traits of all fish
all fish have: -jaws -paired appendages -internal gills -single loop blood circulation -nutritional deficiencies
general mollusk body plan
all mollusks generally have a 3 part body plan consisting of varieties of the three main parts: visceral mass, foot, and mantle
vertebrate traits (compared to non-vertebral chordates)
all vertebrates have: -heads -endoskeletons supported by vertebrae -internal organs suspended in coelem -circulatory system with muscular heart
three types of hunting
ambush, stalking, pursuit
dry skin (amniote traits)
amniotes all have dry skin with no moisture, and do all of their gas exchange through their lungs; reptiles specifically have scaly skin that prevents water loss
improved kidneys (amniote traits)
amniotes have incredibly efficient kidneys that allow them to get rid of nitrogenous waste in their urine while still conserving a healthy amount of water
water lily
an aquatic plant of the family Nymphaeaceae
Obligative anaerobe
anaerobes that tolerate no oxygen
chytrids
ancient acquatic, coenocytic fungi with unicellular life stages and flagella; mostly parasites or saprophytes; no dikaryon stage
cycads
ancient, globally dispersed gymnosperms that can become very large, have motile sperm, and bear huge cones ; very slow growing and resemble palm trees
Boreal forest (Tiaga)
biome with long, cold winters and short summers with very long days; more large plants with evergreen tree dominance; low precipitation levels
pentaradial symmetry
body can be divided into 5 axes of symmetry
labradors (genetics)
breed of dog that is a prime example of epistasis
nudibranch
commonly known as the sea slug; marine gastropod which can ingest jellyfish poisons and secrete them on its own skin
Anueploidy
condition of a cell having an extra chromosome or missing a chromosome
polyp
cylindrical shaped cnidarian with tentacles that are normally attached to something like a rock
why is dispersal important
dispersal is important because: -it limits competition between parent and daughter plants -it allows plants to "move" -it allows plants to spread to new and possibly better environments
the basic structure of DNA
double helix - two single chains that spiral around an imaginary axis
three groups of deuterostomes
echinoderms, hemichordates, and chordates
koala, yapok, wombat
examples of marsupials
slugs
gastropods which look like snails without shells
two primate traits
grasping hands/ opposable thumbs, binocular vision
stramenopiles
group of three protist types identifiable by fine hairs on their flagella
therians
group that includes all other mammals besides monotremes; divided into marsupials and eutherians
types of postzygotic isolating mechanisms
hybrid inviability, hybrid infertility, hybrid breakdown
Hydrobia snails
hydrobia ulvae and ventrosa are two very similar snails in the same genus; when they live allopatricly (separate), they have similar body sizes and feed on the same prey; when they live sympatricly (together), the ventrosa is smaller and feeds on smaller prey than the ulvae so they can coexist; example of character displacement
non-random mating
mating between individuals of the same phenotype or by those in close proximity to each other
Amborella trichopoda
most primitive living angiosperm, member of the amborella clad
gene flow
movement of alleles from one population to another; also known as migration
aerobes
organisms that require oxygen to grow
common descent
principle that all living things have a common ancestor
amniotes
reptiles, birds, mammals
horsetails
seedless, vascular plant species with megaphyllic leaves and photosynthetic stems; very rare, non-dominant monilophyte species; (ex. bamboo)
pollen tube
slender tube that grows from a pollen grain that penetrates the ovule and releases male gametes into the seed
Polyplacophora/ Chitons (Mollusks)
small, oval-shaped mollusk group with 8 dorsal plates; herbivorous- use radula to scrape algae off rocks; most use external fertilization, but some use internal fertilization or internal digestion; typically live in shallow water in intertidal zones
vine snake
snake that makes itself look like a vine when threatened; example of object mimicry/ masquerading
armor (prey defenses)
some prey develop shells, plates of armor, or quills/spikes to defend against predators and make it harder to be eaten
common ancestor to mollusks
some sort of unsegmented worm
predator
species dependent on another for food; predator/prey relationships are intricate and complex
armadillos, clams
species who show the prey defense of armor
Last universal common ancestor (LUCA)
the ancestor that is common to all organisms that live, and have lived, on Earth since life began
Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA)
the common ancestral cell/organism from which all cells/organisms descended
eutely
the condition of an organism having a fixed number of cells
fish diversity
the fish are the most diverse vertebrate group- house over half of vertebrates; only fully aquatic vertebrate group
speciation
the formation of new and distinct species in the course of evolution
stamen
the male reproductive part of a flower
derived traits vs ancestral traits
the new form of an ancestral trait is called a derived trait
bats
the only flying mammal species
echinozoans (echinoderms)
this echinoderm group contains echinoderms with no arms; examples include sand dollars, sea urchins, and sea cucumbers
glomeromycetes
this group of fungi is mycorrhizal, coenocytic, and do not form mycelia; have separate hyphal structures; the fungi group that made land plant invasion possible; form mutualistic relationships with plants by growing inside their roots and exchanging nutrients
tunicates (non-vertebral chordates)
this group of non-vertebral chordates is also called sea squirts; vary in size; many species of these form colonies through asexual budding; only the larvae show the chordate traits clearly
chromosomes
threadlike structures made of DNA molecules that contain the genes
adaptive traits
traits favored by natural selection
Fungal nuclei and dikaryons
two haploid mating types of fungi fuse to form dikaryons, which are strands of fungi with two nuclei per septa
whales and dolphins
two therian mammals with short hair who use blubber to supplement insulation
transcription
when a copy of a DNA strand is transcribed into RNA
gametangia
when two mating types of a zygomycete meet, they form this structure
halophiles
"salt-loving" archaea that live in environments that have very high salt concentrations
benefits of amniotic egg
- greater resistance to drying out - improved respiratory capacity - increased structural support
defining traits of angiosperms
- have flowers - bear fruit
interspecific vs intraspecific competition
- interspecific competition—competition among different species - intraspecific competition—competition within same species
Non-DNA traits used for making phylogenies
- shared morphology (similar structure) - developmental patterns - behavioral patterns - paleontological patterns
Difference between epistasis and polygenic inheritance
-Epistasis: alleles mask the effect of a phenotype, causing it to either be represented or not represented at all -Polygenic inheritance: multiple alleles affect the phenotype of a gene, and the alleles are usually additive, which results in a variety of possible phenotypic outcomes that can be normally distributed on a bell curve -the key difference to look for here is that polygenic inheritance can result in an infinite number of phenotypic expressions that can be normally distributed, while epistasis results in a very limited/small amount of expressions
noticeable traits of gymnosperms
-Have a vascular system -Have seeds protected inside cones -some still have motile sperm
Outcomes of mutation
-May be neutral -May be harmful -May be beneficial (RARE!); it is these beneficial mutations that fuel natural selection
common TSE diseases
-Scrapie (sheep) -Bovine spongiform encephalopathy/ "Mad Cow Disease" (cows) -Chronic wasting disease (deer and elk) -Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (humans)
Common examples of trisomy
-Trisomy 21= Down Syndrome (most common example) -Klinefelter's= condition in which males have two X chromosomes and one Y chromosome
unique bird traits (from other reptiles)
-feathers -skeletons evolved for flight -no teeth -tiny tails -unique lung design -endothermy
differences between angiosperm and gymnosperm life cycle
-gymnosperm female gametophytes are hundreds of cells, while angiosperms are only 8 -angiosperms grow their pollen tube much quicker -angiosperms use double fertilization and have triploid endosperm -angiosperms use fruit as a form of protecting their seeds and increasing dispersal
Deuterostome traits
-mouth develops after anus -triploblastic development -all are coelomates -internal skeletons common -some are segmented, but segments are most often internal or less obvious than in protostomes -there are very few compared to amount of protostomes
differences between plants and protists
-plants are almost all multicellular, while only some protists ate -plants have mastered the ability to conquer their size and some become some of the largest organisms on the planet, while protists are generally very small -plants generally live longer than protists
Percent of living fossils decreases the older the rock strata (how this supported Darwin)
Lyell's studies of rock strata showed that 97% of fossils in younger rock strata were existing species, while only 3% of fossils found in older rock strata were still in existence. This proved Darwin's point that new species develop over time and replace former species
Differences between mitosis and meiosis
Meiosis has two rounds of genetic separation and cellular division while mitosis only has one of each. In meiosis homologous chromosomes separate leading to daughter cells that are not genetically identical. In mitosis the daughter cells are identical to the parent as well as to each other
Why did Mendel use pea plants?
Mendel used pea plants because of their: -short generation time -large # of offspring -controlled mating (cross-pollination)
What Era was the Age of Reptiles
Mesozoic Era
Monomers and polymers
Monomers are the smaller units that join together to form polymers.
clitellates
Monophyletic group of Annelids that includes the earth worms and the leeches; grouped together because of their hairlessness
1st mammal
Morganucodon watsami
stoneworts
Multicellular green algae most related to land plants- they are the sister taxa of land plants; they are a paraphyletic group; they show similar mitotic style, cell structures, and branching growth to plants, but they differ in that they exhibit filamentous cell growth; they commonly form green mats around ponds
Unicellular vs. Multicellular
Multicellular organisms need specialized organ systems, whereas all the life processes in a unicellular organism take place in that one cell
The importance of clay
Negatively charged monomers would attract to the positively charged clay at the ocean floor to form polymers, which are essential to life
platyrrhini/flat-nose primates (haplorrhini)
New World Monkeys; live in South America and Central Asia; have flat noses and are arboreal; prehensile tails are common; their ancestors were the group of haplorrhines that migrated to South America instead of staying in Africa
Can an individual organism evolve?
No. Evolution requires changes to accumulate during descent through many generations of populations; individuals need to interact and exchange traits with those in populations in order for the species to evolve
hybrids
Offspring of parents with different traits who were crossed
F2 generation
Offspring resulting from interbreeding of the hybrid F1 generation
Impact of extinction on theories of creation
Once it was discovered that certain species had gone extinct, the theory of creation was impacted because it stated that no animal could ever go extinct, as it would imply a mistake made by God
Daphne Major
One of the Galapagos Islands, which has finches showing several different beak types. The Grants did their research here
where do new genes come from
One way in which new genes evolve is through the duplication, and then modification, of existing genes (deletion or addition)
detritivores
Organisms that eat dead organic matter; don't control the abundance of their prey
What is life (two things)
Organized and can replicate itself
Other pre-DNA forms of classification you should know
Other pre-DNA tests done to classify between Archaea and Bacteria are: gram tests (pos/neg), mobility tests (mobile/not mobile), photosynthesis test (photosynthetic/not), and cellularity test (unicellular, colony-forming, or filament-forming)
capsid
Outer protein coat of a virus
nectar guide
Patterns, lines, or markings on a flower that "guide" insects toward the nectar in a flower
monophyletic
Pertaining to a taxon derived from a single ancestral species that gave rise to no species in any other taxa
Phenotype vs genotype (ratios)
Phenotype ratios describe the expected visual traits for the offspring of the organisms being crossed, while genotype ratios predict the ratios at which the genes of the parents will combine
true breeding
Plants that produce offspring of the same variety when they self-pollinate (ex. a purple pea plant producing only purple offspring)
translation
Process by which mRNA is decoded and a protein is produced
crossing over/recombination
Process in which homologous chromosomes exchange portions of their chromatids during meiosis leading the genetic material of the daughter gametes to be different than the genetic material of the parent gametes
development of protist photosynthesis
Protists became photosynthetic in two ways: -primary endosymbiosis- protists who engulfed a cyanobacteria, and their offspring were either red algae or green algae -secondary endosymbiosis- protists who engulfed the red or green algae, and their offspring were then different variations of photosynthetic protists
"we find no vestige of a beginning, no prospect of an end"
Quote by James Hutton that indicates the same geological processes operating millions of years ago still operate today
"the present is the key to the past"
Quote that defines uniformitarianism
sister chromatids
Replicated forms of a chromosome joined together by the centromere and eventually separated during mitosis or meiosis II
Great Geological Cycle
Rocks being converted and altered constantly through the processes of sedimentation and erosion (discovered by James Hutton)
The age of the Earth supporting Darwin's theory
Scientists like Hutton and Lyell published work that argued the Earth was in fact very old due to the concepts of gradualism and uniformitarianism, which lended support to part of Darwin's theory
naked seeds
Seeds not enclosed in layers of tissue from an ovary, usually lying naked on a scale (as in a pine cone); common in gymnosperms
reproductive isolation
Separation of species or populations which results in them no longer being able to interbreed and produce fertile offspring; different mechanisms cause this isolation to occur
Galium competition experiment
Sir Arthur George Tansley ran one of the earliest competition experiments between two plants of the same genus- Galium Saxatile, which grew in acidic soil, and pumilum, which grew in alkaline soil; he found that each of them grew moderately well alone in the opposing soil, but each species outgrew the other on their home soil; this experiment proved the occurrence of competition
incomplete dominance
Situation in which one allele is not completely dominant over another allele, resulting in blending of the parents' phenotypes
Viroids
Small bits of RNA without viral protein coating; possibly what the world was full of just before life; can replicate themselves and carry diseases to plants
Archaeopteryx (how did it support Darwin)
The Archaeopteryx fossil was the first intermediate form fossil to be discovered, and it directly supported Darwin's theory of the existence of transitional forms within species
How the Grant's data shows evidence of adaptation to environmental conditions
The Grant's data shows that finches who survived La Nina had larger, deeper beaks. These finches with larger beaks then reproduced and had more offspring with larger beaks, therefore showing that adaptation occurred in the Daphne Major finch population due to La Nina
The role of disasters in keeping the food supply in line with the population
The belief that disasters periodically collapse populations in order to avoid overpopulation and food scarcity; periodic in the sense that there is only enough food available until the next disaster (theorized by Malthus)
Uniformitarianism
The belief that the processes that shaped ancient geology are the same processes shaping it today (theorized by Charles Lyell)
hyphae
The branching, threadlike tubes that make up the bodies of multicellular fungi; the cells that make than up can either have their nuclei divided or not divided, which further classifies fungi
giant kelp
The common name for Macrocystis pyrifera, a brown kelp which is the largest seaweed in earth's oceans; form of brown algae
relative fitness
The contribution of one phenotype/genotype to the next generation compared to that of other phenotypes/genotypes for the same species; can be calculated by creating a ratio of total number of offspring that survived to total number of offspring produced for each phenotype/genotype (ex. black mice produce 3 offspring and 3 survived-> 3/3= rel. fitness of 1; white mice produce 3 offspring and one survives -> 1/3= rel. fitness of 1/3)
resource partitioning
The division of environmental resources by coexisting species
phylogeny
The evolutionary history of a species or group of related species in diagram form
allopatric speciation/allopatry
The formation of new species in populations that are geographically isolated from one another and cannot reconnect
sympatric speciation/sympatry
The formation of new species in populations that live in the same geographic area; the early stages of this phenomena have been observed, but it has not been observed all the way through yet
Difference between founder and bottleneck affect
The founder effect occurs when a chunk of a population separates from their old population somehow, while the bottleneck effect occurs when a new population forms because the old population experienced a large decrease in size due to some kind of lethal event
The Grant's work on the medium ground finch
The grants recorded the finches' beak length after La Nina and found that variations in beak size and depth had occurred; the average length of the beaks of the surviving finches was longer and deeper than the length of the dead finches
Analyzation of the graphs from Grant's work
The graphs showed the surviving finches of La Nina had larger and deeper beaks than the finches who did not survive La Nina, and vice versa for El Nino
continental drift
The hypothesis that states that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations
Competition and self interest
The idea that economic competition and the self interest of both producers and consumers will drive bad sellers out of business and allow good sellers to thrive; Darwin applied these two concepts to the natural world
Permian Extinction
The largest mass extinction in history; wiped out 96% of all life forms at the end of the Paleozoic Era
peptidoglycan
The main compound found in the cell walls of bacteria that makes the wall thick and strong; found in the cell walls of BACTERIA
Archean Fossils
The only fossils from this time period are single-celled bacterial organisms
Importance of WHERE the organisms came from on the Galapagos
The organisms who moved to the Galapagos Islands were originally one species; it was important to record where each organism came from on each individual island to record how they adapted to their own environment and formed their own species over time
Pea plants
The plant Gregor mendel studied
niche partitioning
The process by which natural selection drives competing species into different patterns of resource use or different niches; coexistence is obtained through this partitioning, or dividing, of realized ecological niches between species; niches are often partitioned in more low-resource areas so organisms of both species can survive instead of competing; if niche partitioning is not chosen, then the species will compete until one dies off
Absolute fitness
The ratio of frequencies of a single phenotype from one generation to the next; can be quantified in terms of how many offspring with a certain trait survive into the next generation (ex. 1 white mouse survives while 3 black mice survive into the next gen., making black mice fitness 3 and white mice fitness 1)
Why does sickle cell anemia still exist?
The same gene that causes it also causes resistance to malaria, and in some part of the world, this malaria gene is still very commonly passed on
style
The stalk of a flower, with the ovary at the base and the stigma at the top; the pollen tube grows through here to reach the ovule
niche packing
The tendency for coexisting species between them to fill the available 'space' along important niche dimensions; determined by the resource level of the habitat
Wallace's Line
The zoogeographical boundary proposed by Alfred Russel Wallace that separates the animals of Australia and New Guinea from the animals of Indonesia and the surrounding archipelago
Miller and Urey's Experiment
They designed an experiment in which they recreated the conditions of early Earth in their laboratory. They place water and a mixture of the gases thought to compose Earth's early atmosphere into a flask. Then, they sent an electric current through the mixture to simulate lightning. Within a week, the mixture darkened, indicating gasses were produced abioticaly and proving that they could have been created like this on early Earth
Mockingbird
This Galapagos bird stood out to Darwin because it looked different on each island, despite being the same species
Welwitschia
This gymnosperm is a gnetophyte that grows in desert areas and lives for a long time; It has two leaves that divide and subdivide and can grow extremely long; it is known for being an extremely odd-looking plant
Hadean Eon
Time on Earth before life evolved; no oceans, oxygen, or ozone layer; constant bombardment of asteroids and volcanic eruptions; no atmosphere; cooling brings oceans at the conclusion of this Eon
Mendel's 1st Law of Segregation
Traits are determined by a pair of alleles, which segregate during gamete formation, and are reunited at fertilization
Populations grow geometrically while food supplies grow linearly
Trend noticed by Thomas Malthus that explains great competition in nature and natural population control
temporal partitioning
Two species reduce competition by utilizing a resource at different times from each other (ex. bufo woodhousii and hyla crucifier- two similar species of frogs who separate their tadpole birthings by 4-6 weeks to avoid larvae competition- form of temporal partitioning)
La Nina years
Very dry, withering vegetation, many large seeds because small seeds ran out quickly, finches with larger beaks survived these years
Bacterial fossils
Very important fossils that help us to study Earth's formation, early atmosphere, and related evolutionary processes; provide a basis for creation or genesis of a species
El Nino years
Very wet, lots of vegetation, many small seeds and few large seeds, finches with smaller beaks survived these years
Determining the color of a lab (example of epistasis)
We don't need all of the traits to determine what color a lab will be. We only need to know which traits are present, as the presence of certain traits will either mask a coat color or reveal a coat color even more: - eebb= yellow lab -E_bb= brown lab -E_B_= black lab As long as there are no dominant E's present, the lab will be yellow. Once there is a dominant E present, the lab will either be brown or black. Once a dominant B appears, the lab is determined to have a darker coat and will be black.
parental investment
What each sex invests—in terms of time, energy, survival risk, and forgone opportunities—to produce and nurture offspring; females usually invest more than males in most species
Could you make predictions about what the finches on Daphne Major would look like physically based on the weather conditions?
Yes. In a dry climate, more small-beaked finches would survive, and in a wet climate, more large-beaked finches would survive
Dutch Elm Disease
a ascomycete fungal disease of elm trees
biomes
a broad, regional type of ecosystem characterized by distinctive climate and soil conditions and a distinctive kind of biological community adapted to those conditions
Lophotrochozoa
a clade of invertebrate protostome animal groups that is a sister group to the Ecdysozoa; do not have ability to develop exoskeleton
orchid
a colorful, fragrant, pink monocot flower
penicilin
a common ascomycete mold fungus that is used to cure diseases
magnolias
a flowering plant famous in the South and member of the magnolid clad
toxicity (prey defenses)
a form of chemical prey defense where animals synthesize poison to make themselves toxic when eaten (ex. poisonous snakes, spiders); many poisonous animals warn predators of their toxicity through specific coloration
Mullerian mimicry
a form of mimicry in which two or more poisonous animals develop similar appearances and coloring as a shared protective device; if a predator learns to avoid one of the poisonous species, it will avoid the mimic with similar coloration as well (ex. Monarch and Viceroy butterflies, who are both poisonous, have almost indistinguishable coloration from each other)
Escherichia coli (E. Coli)
a form of proteobacteria commonly found in the stomach of many warm-blooded organisms; most strains are harmless, but some can be very harmful to humans
male-male competition
a form of sexual selection in which males compete with one another directly or indirectly for access to females
Monosomy
a gamete with a missing chromosome; usually fatal
Trisomy
a gamete with an extra chromosome; there are cases where this gamete can survive and make it to birth when fertilized
ribbon worms (Lophotrochozoan)
a group of acoelomates that are similar to the flatworms, but they have a complete gut; they are characterized by their probiscus which they use to catch prey; vary greaty in length- most are under 10 inches, but some can be almost 65 feet long!
annelids (Lophotrochozoan)
a group of coelomate, segmented worms with segments divided by septa; each ring of these worms has parts for excretion and digestion so that, if a segment is lost, the worm can survive; the front segment is where all the sensory organs are concentrated and it has a brain like structure; two classes include Clitellates (earthworms and leeches) and polychaetes (tubeworms)
how did birds evolve from archosaurs
a group of dinosaurs called the theropods had many traits that birds would one day have- some had primitive feathers, others had asymmetrical feathers, and some even showed minimal flying ability; these developments all indicate that birds evolved directly from these archosaurs
excavates
a highly diverse group of protist types that includes non-mitochondria species
diplontic life cycle
a life cycle in which only the diploid phase is multicellular and the haploid stage is made up of unicellular gametes; most of the cycle is spent as a diploid (e.g. human life cycle)
sympatric speciation through polyploidy
a meiotic mistake that causes the chromosome pairs to not be divided evenly between the daughter cells can give new chromosomes and genetic info to certain offspring in a population, which, if inherited enough, can turn that sympatrically separated population into a whole new species
star anise
a member of the astrobaileyale clad that is widely used in cooking for its spice
chlorophytes
a monophyletic plant group of unicellular green algae that is very large and diverse, including freshwater, marine, and terrestrial forms
Description of the more accurate version of the tree of life
a more accurate tree would show a split between the two major life groups- bacteria and archaea. Within the archaea, the eukarya group would be housed; all three of these groups should be represented as monophyletic to ensure evolutionary accuracy; a non-kingdom based tree is much more accurate than a kingdom-based one
Inversion (chromosomal mutation)
a mutation that reverses the direction of parts of a chromosome by switching their places; usually has no large effect unless it occurs in the middle of a gene sequence
homologous pair
a pair of chromosomes, one from each parent, that have relatively similar structures and gene values
ghost of selection past
a phrase that describes runaway selection
megasporangium
a plant structure that produces the megaspores; also serves as a fleshy food source for the functional megaspore
parsimony
a preference for the least complicated explanation for a particular phenomenon; this is seen in a phylogeny that has the fewest independent evolutionary events possible
latent trait
a present but not visible trait
Salmonella
a proteobacteria that occurs mainly in the intestine, especially a serotype causing food poisoning from eating raw or undercooked variations of eggs
pollination syndrome
a set of flower characteristics associated with a particular type of pollinator
syphillis
a spirochete bacteria that causes this deadly STD
lyme disease
a spirochete found in ticks also causes this harmful disease
Great Chain of Being
a system in which species were positioned in a system of hierarchy of complexity or "perfection;" organisms were on different levels from each other and were unequal; diagram also included spiritual beings
yeast
a type of fungus within the ascomycetes with over 1,000 species that breaks down CO2; commonly found in bread and other baked goods in the form of bakers yeast; they will always be UNICELLULAR!!!
Bacteriaphage
a virus that infects bacteria
actinomyces
actinobacteria that breaks down organic soil compounds; also an instrumental bacteria in the creation of pennicilin
predator satiation
adaptation where members of a prey species in an area time their reproductions so that their births occur within a short period, overcrowding the area with their offspring; this ensures the highest amount of them will survive because predators will get full, and by the time they feed again, the offspring are better able to defend against predators
internal fertilization (amniote traits)
all amniotes fertilize their egg inside of their bodies; some, like birds and reptiles, lay their eggs externally, but mammals tend to carry their eggs internally before giving birth (internal gestation)
Amniote traits
all amniotes have: -amniotic eggs -dry skin -thoracic breathing -improved kidneys - internal fertilization
traits of modern amphibians
all amphibians have: 1. legs (1st tetrapods to have legs) 2. lungs 3. cutaneous respiration 4. pulmonary veins 5. partially divided hearts
chordate segmentation
all chordates are segmented; most of them have their segmentation internally
pharyngeal gill slits
all chordates have these at some point in their development; for marine chordates, they connect the pharynx to the external environment and act as gills, and for non-marine chordates, they should be viewed more as 'pouches' because they don't open to the outside
fungal body
all fungi have hyphae, which either have septa or no septa; some fungi grow to develop a visible mycelium
traits shared by all life forms
all life forms share: plasma membrane-bound cells, ribosomes, semi-conservative DNA replication, similar genetic codes for proteins as well as similar processes of transcription and translation, similar pathways for metabolizing nutrients
prokaryotes
all living things that are not eukaryotes; they are paraphyletic
sweat glands (mammalian traits)
all mammals have these glands to keep themselves from overheating and dying; humans have sweat glands across their body, but most mammals don't, so other mammals use methods like panting or flapping their ears to cool off further
defining reptile traits
all reptiles: -have dry skin with scales -have amniotic eggs produced through internal fertilization -lay eggs (external gestation) -have thoracic breathing and improved kidneys -ectothermic
nymphaealaes
also known as water lilies; fully aquatic with extremely showy flowers and no vessel cells (don't need them bc they have water); their stomata are only on the top above water, they have long roots that reach down to the bottom of the water to hold the lily in place, and they can support lots of weight on them
loboseans (ameobozoans)
amoebozoan protist that is a classic example of an amoeba; move using pseudopodia and live/feed on lake and stream bottoms
frogs and toads (amphibians)
amphibian group with frogs and toads- the amphibians without tails; frogs have smooth, moist skin, long legs (they are good jumpers), and they typically live near water, but some species live in trees; toads have dry, bumpy skin, short legs, and live in more dry environments; both frogs and toads are dependent on water for reproduction- they release eggs that become tadpoles, who undergo metamorphosis to become frogs
pulmonary veins (amphibian traits)
amphibians have these specific vessels that allow blood to be pumped twice by the heart; blood goes from the heart, to the lungs, out to the body, back to the heart, and back to the lungs to be reoxygenated
partially divided hearts (amphibian traits)
amphibians have this issue with their circulatory system that causes oxygenated and deoxygenated blood to mix in the heart, further decreasing their oxygen retention abilities
thoracic breathing (amniotes) vs. glottal breathing (amphibians)
amphibians used glottal breathing, a less efficient system which would require them to take in air using mouth, open their glottis (part that closes off throat), then push air down using their mouth; amniotes have thoracic breathing, which allows their larger lungs to do the work in terms of sucking air down the throat instead of the mouth as with glottal breathing- thoracic breathing is the better system b/c it brings in more air and more oxygen with less effort
salamanders (amphibians)
amphibians with long bodies and long tails; they vary in size and can become up to 1.5m long; tend to live in moist places (tropical places, under rocks/ logs), and some are even entirely aquatic; hatch their larvae in water, but their larvae do not undergo metamorphosis
niche (formal definition)
an N-dimensional hypervolume that conscribes the activity of an organism; each factor is a niche dimension (ex. food size, temperature, etc.)
tuberculosis
an actinobacteria that causes an infectious lung disease;
paramecium aurelia, caudatum, bursaria
an experiment by ecologist GA. Gause found that, when paramecium aurelia and caudatum were put in the same culture, aurelia would dominate the culture until caudatum was killed off completely; in a separate culture, Gause found that caudatum and bursaria, another paramecium species, coexisted; these experiments proved the occurrence of competitive exclusion
falcultative anaerobes
anaerobes that can grow with or without oxygen because they switch between different forms of metabolism (ex. switching between fermentation and cellular respiration)
aerotolerant anaerobes
anaerobes that tolerate oxygen but do not use oxygen for their growth and metabolism
homalozoans
ancestral deuterostomes that have similar traits of both echinoderms and chordates, suggesting they are in fact an ancestral group
Cycads
ancient-seed bearing trees that have worldwide distribution and have gone through speciation due to the drifting of the continents splitting up populations of their species; example of vicariance isolation and allopatric speciation
ctenophores (comb jellies)
animal group also known as comb jellies that branches off just before the rest of the animals; they have many homoplasius traits (traits developed independently) that they share with more evolved animals, like radial symmetry, diploblastic tissue, a complete gut (mouth and anus), and a nervous system; to eat, they have feeding tentacles lined with cilia and sticky substances that catch prey- their tentacles also happen to be bioluminescent
acoelemates
animals that lack a coelem/ body cavity; move instead by beating their cilia
Pseudocoelomates
animals that posses a pseudocoelom that is fluid filled- gives them some rigidity/firmness to be able to move; they move by pushing their muscles into this fluid which can direct their body and also act as a circulatory system for the animal; their organs float freely in their coelom and are not surrounded by muscle, which hinders their movement and their firmness
coelomates
animals that posses a true coelom with organs that are lined with muscle- this gives them more rigid structure which allows them to have more control and precision in terms of movement
triploblastic development
animals with three layers of tissue- ectoderm, endoderm, and a middle layer called the mesoderm which houses the muscles/ skeletal system
diploblastic development
animals with two layers of tissue- the ectoderm (outer body covering/ nervous system) and the endoderm (digestive organs and intestines)
Psuedomurein
another compound that makes up cell walls found only in ARCHAEA that have cell walls
resource
anything an individual needs consumes to support population survival and whose availability is lowered when it is used (food, space, places to live, etc.)
methanogens
archaea that release methane and contribute heavily to the greenhouse gas effect
euryarcheota
archaean group that contains methanogens (bacteria that produce methane), halophiles (salt-loving bacteria), and extreme thermophiles
Crenarchaeota
archaeans that love extreme environments- full of thermophiles (heat lovers), cryophiles (cold lovers), and acidophiles (acid lovers); most of them are common marine Archaeans, and they are carbon fixing, which means they produce solid Carbon and contribute to the greenhouse gas effect
visceral mass
area beneath the mantle of a mollusk that contains the internal organs
crustaceons (arthropods)
arthropod group most associated with the marine species; contains organisms with mandibles and two pairs of antennae; have five pairs of legs, with some modifying their front pair into claws; many species in this group have eggs that develop attached to the female underside; examples include lobsters, shrimp, and pill bugs
Insects (arthropods)
arthropods that are also called hexapods; have mandibles and one pair of antennae; they have bodies with three regions (head, thorax, abdomen) and three pairs of legs; most of them have wings; they also have a unique form of gas exchange using a system of air sacs and tubes; common examples include flies, grasshoppers, and dragonflies
myriapods (arthropods)
arthropods that have heads and mandibles, as well as bodies consisting of repeating segments; they have a single antennae pair and no wings; they either have one pair of legs per segment (centipedes) or two pairs of legs per segment (millipedes)
arachnids (arthropods)
arthropods with four pairs of legs; have their own specialized mouthparts called chelicerae (instead of mandibles); have no antennae or wings; contains spiders, scorpions and mites
brittle stars (asterozoans)
asterozoan species that is very similar to sea stars; have flexible arms that allow them to swim freely, but they do not adhere; arms are much more thin than sea star arms; they are a diverse and very nocturnal species; they also are the largest group of echinoderms
autotrophic vs heterotrophic
autotrophs make their own food to gain energy, while heterotrophs eat other organisms to gain energy
key traits of bacteria and archaea
bacteria and archaea are unicellular, use binary fission, have unenclosed DNA, circular chromosomes, no organelles, and are asexual
bacterial shapes
bacteria can either be coccus (spherical), bacillus (rod-shaped), or spirillous (spiral-shaped)
Hadobacteria and Hyperthermic bacteria
bacteria that are resistant to radiation and can live in extremely hot areas; "heat lovers"
mycoplasmas
bacteria that naturally lack a cell wall; example of a firmicute that lacks a cell wall (most firmicutes have cell walls)
colonial growth
bacterial growth in which cells aggregate (come together loosely) and perform a common function
filamentous growth
bacterial growth in which cells grow into a threadlike, filamentous shape
cutaneous respiration (amphibian traits)
because amphibian lungs are inefficient, they use a form of breathing that takes in oxygen directly through the skin to supplement the terrible job their lungs do at bringing in oxygen
object mimicry/ masquerade (crypsis)
being clearly visible, but mistaken for something that is not edible (ex. caterpillar mimicking lichen on a tree branch to appear unedible)
deuterostomes
bilatarians whose blastopores develop anuses before mouths
protostomes
bilatarians whose blastopores develop mouths before anuses; divided into either Lophrotrochozoa or Ecdysozoa
temperate deciduous forest
biome only found in Northern Hemisphere; warm/wet summers and cold winters; fluctuating temperatures between summer and winter; precipitation bump occurs in this biome- over 50cm more annual precip. than in tundra and boreal; relatively constant rainfall throughout year; trees are deciduous- lose leaves in winter, only photosynthetic in spring/summer
temperate grasslands
biome with vegetation dominated by grasses- no woody plants; about same rainfall as boreal forest; typically very dry during one season of the year; grass plants adapt to grazing and fires by keeping most of their biomass underground- allows them to regrow quickly after being eaten/damaged
abiotic vs. biotic
biotic is living and abiotic is non-living; in regards to pollination, abiotic is pollination involving non-living forces and biotic is pollination involving living things
Finches
bird collected on the Galapagos Islands by Darwin. Very similar, but differences can be seen in the size and shape of the bill and/or beak. He originally thought he was seeing many different bird species before he realized he was seeing different species of this same bird
neognaths (birds)
bird group containing all other living birds- group is also called the "perching birds"; by far the most diverse bird group- almost 10,000 species; includes everything from owls to waterfowl to penguins to flamingoes, as well as parrots, woodpeckers, and countless others
palaeognaths/ flightless rattites (birds)
bird group containing large, flightless/poorly flying birds- ostriches, emus, kiwis, cassowrays, rheas; their group name means "old jaw" because they have jaws more similar to reptiles rather than birds
bird lungs
bird lungs are different from other vertebrate lungs- they maximize oxygen intake to fuel the tiring process of flight
bird skeletons
bird skeleton bones are fused to reduce weight and increase rigidity/ form a sturdy frame for the muscles to attach to; bird bones are also hollow, decreasing skeleton weight further; birds have an important and specialized bone called a keel connected to their breast bone- it is a very large, flat bone, and the muscles used for flight connect to it
bird feather facts
bird tail feathers are flexible and provide great strength- they hook together to form a continuous, connected surface, and they fan out and help to stabilize the bird; bird body feathers don't hook together as strongly, but they are smaller and more easily replaceable than tail feathers- they are more used for insulation and warmth
why are birds dinosaurs, and are they still considered birds
birds are now considered dinosaurs because it makes more sense in terms of evolution to classify them as dinosaurs; in addition, they did survive the K-T Extinction and carry on the dinosaur lineages through lots of speciation so that they now look how they do today
bird beak and foot diversity
birds have developed all kinds of beak shapes for specific kinds of food gathering, and have developed different feet types specialized for a variety of different environments
endothermy in birds
birds keep a higher endothermic temperature range than other endotherms, which allows them to supply more energy to their flight muscles
bison and dominant grass species
bison graze on the dominant grass species in the plains, limiting their dominance, and therefore limiting competition and allowing flora diversity; if the bison stop grazing, the grass species dominates the landscape and leaves no room for other flora; this is an example of how predation limits competition
cryptic coloration (crypsis)
blending in using camouflage so you are not seen (ex. butterfly blending into tree bark using colors)
radial symmetry
body parts symmetrical around a central axis with multiple plains of symmetry; animals with this symmetry are usually spherical or circular in shape (ex.'s anemones, jellyfish)
bilateral symmetry
body parts symmetrical on one plane- each side of the body is a mirror image of the other; leads to cephalization and formation of four sections of the body: dorsal (back), ventral (belly), anterior (front/head), and posterior (tail)
ectothermy
body temperature determined by external conditions; also known as being cold-blooded; reptiles exhibit this; can still control their temperature by going in and out of the sun
endothermy
body temperature regulated by internal metabolism- temp stays relatively constant as long as animal is healthy; seen in birds and mammals
Liger/Tigon
both of these crosses between lions and tigers lead to infertile offspring by the 2nd generation the latest; example of the effects of postzygotic reproductive isolation, specifically hybrid breakdown
does the founder effect or the bottleneck effect increase genetic variation
both the founder effect and bottleneck effect decrease genetic variation because they allow the alleles of a small sample of a population to become overrepresented, and they result in the loss of some rare alleles from the previous population that cannot be passed on in the new population
Cactus & Euphorbia
both these plants show convergence of traits despite not being in the same evolutionary lineage because they live in similar habitats that caused the convergence
petals
brightly colored flower parts that attract pollinators
How are blood types determined?
by marker molecules on red blood cells
cartilage vs bone skeleton
cartilage skeletons are lighter and more flexible, and bone skeletons are heavier but more sturdy and allow for better muscle attachment
botulism
causes food poisoning
cell wall differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
cell walls are ubiquitous in prokaryotes (all of them have one), and they are either made up of peptidoglycan or psuedomurein; not all eukaryotes have cell walls, and if they do, their cell walls do not contain peptidoglycan
arthropod molting
cells underneath the arthropod exoskeleton secrete enzymes that digest the old exoskeleton; a new exoskeleton is then secreted underneath what is left of the old exoskeleton
genetic drift
changes in allele frequency due to small population size
acquired traits
characteristics or behavior not genetic or inherited; skills learned throughout an organism's life
chemical defenses (prey defenses)
chemical compounds released by prey to defend themselves from predators (ex. bombardier beetle spraying a noxious liquid that is the temperature of boiling water to deter predators)
chloroplast formation
chloroplasts formed as a result of primary endosymbiosis- a eukaryote engulfing a cyanobacteria and eventually producing red and green algae daughter cells both with chloroplasts; brown algae gained chloroplast by secondary endosymbiosis- engulfing a red or green alga
The implications of paired chromosomes
chromosomes are paired because both the mother and father contribute genetic material to them.
Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis
chytrid fungus associated with the decline in amhpibians
rotifer corona
circle of cilia that sweeps food into mouth of rotifers
mushrooms
classic example of a basidiomycete and a well-known example of fungi overall
rose
classic, popular red flower that is a member of the eudicots
sori
clusters of sporangia on ferns that burst open during meiosis and release all of the daughter spores
cnidarian digestion
cnidarians digest by catching prey with their tentacles and excreting digestive enzymes into their gastrovascular cavity which break down the food into smaller particles that their cells can digest- this allows them to eat organisms that are larger than their cells can handle
lake effect snow
cold winds move across long expanses of warm water and pick up moisture, freeze it, and drop massive amounts of snow (water takes longer to change temp than air, and is usually warmer than air in the winter and cooler than air in the summer); the effect dies down when the lakes eventually freeze as moisture cannot be collected at the same high level
Cytochrome C
common amino acid in many living organisms, used for genetic relation
white rust
common name usually used for diseases caused by oomycetes
cnidarians (Lophotrochozoan)
commonly called "the jellyfish" but not all are jellyfish; very diverse group that are typically marine predators that are mobile, radially symmetric, diploblastic with no organs and a nervous system; have an incomplete gut that is on the outside called a gastrovascular cavity; come in the shape of either a polyp or a medusa, and they can be both of these shapes within their life cycle; examples of organisms in this group include jellyfish, anemones, and coral
tropical evergreen forest
commonly called tropical rain forest; most precipitation of all biomes; warmth and abundance of water creates lots of flora; most productive biome in terms of nutrients and species; majority of nutrients are tied up in the large trees, creating nutrient-poor soil; epiphytes are common- plants with no true roots that grow on top of other plants
how does compartmentalization lead to internal structure
compartmentalization means cells have organelles that carry out independent functions, and the organelles that form lead to the internal structure of eukaryotic cells
why is competition hard to see
competition is hard to "see" because: 1. animals don't organize it into events like we do 2. many competitions in nature have already been resolved as the organisms now coexist, forcing ecologists to look into the past to analyze competition more accurately
cephalization
concentration of sense organs and nerve cells at the front of an animal's body that leads to the formation of a head
arthropod body plan
consists of a segmented body (head, thorax, abdomen), hard exoskeletons made of chitin, and jointed appendages; arthropods also generally have variation in leg amounts, antennae, mouth parts, and wings
nonvascular
containing not tracheid cells or plant tissue through which water and nutrients can move more efficiently; other transport cells are not as efficient as tracheid cells
hollow nerve cord
cord that runs along the back of chordates and is full of fluid; eventually develops into the spinal cord
sinking air streams
create deserts
rising air streams
create rain forests
cyanobacteria
critical photoautotrophs that carry out photosynthesis; they are all gram - and can live as single strands or mass into giant colonies
Crocodilian Parental Behavior
crocodilian parents show high levels of parental care to their young: -they pick up eggs gently to sense if each egg is ready to hatch, and gently crack it with their teeth to hatch it -they let their young rest on their snout or in their mouth for protection -babies stay with mom for a long time to learn how to hunt and to develop fully
septa
cross sections that divide fungi hyphae cells
dihybrid crosses
crosses that examine the inheritance of two different traits
4 groups of gymnosperms
cycads, ginkgo, conifers, gnetophytes
predator prey cycle variation
cycle length can vary depending on the predator and prey involved: - larger herbivores and their predators experience longer cycles (10 to 12 years) - smaller herbivores/ insects and their predators experience shorter cycles (3-5 years)
arrow worm placement on the Bilaterian tree
despite being deuterostomic, arrow worms are placed with the rest of the protostomes in the Bilaterian section of the animal tree because they are very similar genetically to the protosomes
echinoderms
deuterostome group characterized by their internal skeletons covered by a thin skin, pentaradial symmetry, unique water vasculature system, and oral/aboral surfaces; larvae are bilateral, but adults are pentaradial; skeleton made of plates and acts almost like a shell covered by skin; most use sexual reproduction, but many can regenerate their own limbs through asexual reproduction- some can even shoot limbs off and the limbs grow into their own separate organism
gymnopodium
dinoflagellate that causes red tide, a deadly form of bacteria that forms in oceans and kills marine life
dinosaurs and feathers
dinosaurs likely only used feathers for warmth and for mating signals, while birds use them for more specialized purposes
disturbance limiting competition
disturbance occurs when natural events, like flooding and forest fires, lower population sizes, which reduces resource needs due to smaller population sizes and therefore limits competition; worse competitors in a competition who are also resilient to disasters can have an edge in the competition once disturbance occurs
haplorrhini/ dry-nosed primates
dry-nosed primates; contains two subgroups- platyrrhini and catarrhini; they are diurnal and have color vision- made this adaptation to adapt to daytime living; known for their complex social structures and intense parental care, which allows their offspring to further develop brain; includes monkeys, apes, tarsiers, humans
blastopore
early embryo of bilatarians with an indent that either develops into the mouth or the anus depending on what type the bilatarian is
Pelycosaurs (synapsids)
early group of synapsids; gradually replaced amphibians; exhibited partial endothermy; not like modern reptiles at all
lampreys (Cyclostomes)
early, very basic vertebrate fish with complete skull, rudimentary vertebrae, and a single heart
Asterozoans (echinoderms)
echinoderm group that contains sea stars and brittle stars
crinoids (echinoderms)
echinoderm group with two subgroups divided based on movement ability- sea lillies and feather stars
echinoderm oral surface/ aboral surface
echinoderms have their mouth/oral surface underneath their body on the ventral/ belly side, and their aboral surface is on their dorsal/ back side
sand dollars (echinozoans)
echinozoan species with a flattened body form and clear, pentaradial symmetry; somewhat similar to a "slice" of the inside of a sea urchin; very common at beaches in shallow waters, although most people only ever encounter their shell and not the living organism
sea urchins (echinozoans)
echinozoan species with hemispherical structure and very sharp spines; it has a ball and socket joint system that allows it to move and sting other organisms
sea cucumbers (echinozoans)
echinozoan with elongated/ stretched body form that look bilateral at first, but are actually pentaradial when viewed from mouth down; their mouth and anus are on opposite ends of their body, and all of their tube feet are on one side of their body for better movement
what is not a resource
ecological factors like temperature are not resources; in addition, certain things considered a resource in one habitat may not be in another; for example, water is a resource on land because it is scarce and competed for, but it is not a resource in the ocean
how do animals in very cold climates stay warm
endothermy (warm-bloodedness) and fur
El Nino
equatorial winds weaken, sending warm water from Australia to South America (reversal of currents); causes warmer and wetter weather
defining traits of eukaryotes
eukaryotes are multicellular, compartmentalized, and sexual
How is ecology related to evolution
evolutionary forces don't happen in a vacuum- they are affected by ecological factors; where organisms are located and how abundant they are directly causes evolution and allows evolutionary forces to act and have an effect; "the ecology of the now shapes the evolution of the future"
Eryops megacephalus
example of a large, dominant amphibian from the age of amphibians; had body armor and was very large and intimidating
porcupine
example of a therian mammal with specialized sharp hairs called quills
ticks, spiders, scorpions
examples of arachnids
clams, mussels, oysters
examples of bivalves
scallop, octopus, squid, nautilus
examples of cephalopods
shrimp, lobsters, crabs, pill bugs
examples of crustaceans
grasshoppers, dragonflies, flies
examples of insects
coelancanths, lungfish
examples of lobe finned fish
centipedes, millipedes
examples of myriapods
seahorses, leafy sea dragons, tuna, eels,
examples of ray-finned fish
euglenids (excavates)
excavate protist that can be heterotrophic or autotrophic depending on if they are cut off from the Sun or not (cut off= become heterotrophs, return to Sun= revert back to autotroph); arose via secondary endosymbiosis when a green alga was absorbed by their ancestor; only reproduce asexually
archaefructus
extinct angiosperm species- oldest known angiosperm; best window into modern angiosperms and could be the first ever flower, but this is not certain; most likely an aquatic shrub that relied on water to reproduce and was herbaceous (no woody parts); fossils indicate it had no petals or sepals, but had fruit-like things hanging off of it and both male and female reproductive parts
trilobites
extinct marine arthropods that had jointed appendages and were clearly segmented; over time, they evolved specialized segments
conifers
extremely common, cone-bearing gymnosperm with non-motile sperm; ex, pine trees
water bears/ Tartigrades (Ecydysozoan)
extremely small organisms that are found almost everywhere; can withstand extreme environments and are considered virtually indestructible; remain dormant for up to a decade
homologous traits
features that are inherited from a common ancestor
archegonium
female plant gamete structure that produces eggs
carpal
female reproductive part of the flower
Female choice
females expend a lot of resources and time in the process of reproduction so their 'choice' of mate becomes a more serious consideration
self-fertilization
fertilization in which both egg and pollen come from the same plant
self-crossing
fertilizing a flower by using its own sperm and eggs to produce offspring
nutritional deficencies (fish traits)
fish are unable to synthesize certain amino acids, and must eat other organisms to gain them; they passed these deficiencies onto all other vertebrates
single loop blood circulation (fish traits)
fish blood circulation- goes from heart to gills to rest of the body to heart
sharks (Gnathostomes)
fish group with very efficient jaws and lightweight skeletons made of cartilage; they were the first fish to develop teeth- their teeth are a "conveyer belt" with rows of teeth that easily fall out and are replaced by tooth in next row up; remaining members of the group are now very diverse after being hurt by Permian Extinction with many different types and variations existing today
paired appendages (fish traits)
fish have a pectoral pair and a pelvic pair of fins that they use for stabilization and propulsion
hagfish (Cyclostomes)
fish that are close to being vertebrates but aren't quite- have a weak circulatory system instead of strong, 3 hearts instead of 1, partial skull with brain that lacks a cerebrum/cerebellum, and no gut; DNA evidence linked them as close relatives to the lampreys, who are actual vertebrates, leading scientist to believe they were once vertebrates
jaws (fish traits)
fish use these to catch and eat larger prey
internal gills (fish traits)
fish use this body part to extract oxygen from the water around them
vertebrate groups
fish, amphibians, reptiles, mammals
nutmeg
flower that produces this spice is a member of the magnolids
UV spectrum and pollination
flowers have adapted their flowers to have nectar guides that are colored based on the UV spectrum of colors that insects see, not based on the visible spectrum of colors that we see; this can make it harder for us to spot some nectar guides
goal of pollination for flowers
flowers want to get pollen from the pollinator for reproduction as well as give pollen to the pollinator so it can be brought to other flowers; they have developed assurances through evolution to make sure this happens
abiotic water pollination
flowers who require this syndrome must be/have: -aquatic -have floating pollen that won't dissolve in water but that will dissolve to germinate -be close together constraint: plants need to be close together for pollen to float between them
biotic bat pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -LARGE in size -white or light colored -bell shaped and/or dangling -nocturnally opening -enormous amounts of nectar (to fuel bats) -heavily scented (so bats can detect them)
biotic long-tongue bee pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -deep with wells for nectar (tongues can reach) -yellow purple or blue so the bees can see these colors -larger and more tube-shaped (so long tongues can stick down -have nectar guides that tell bees where to find the nectar
biotic bird pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -large, deep tubular flowers (have long beaks that can reach down) -nectar low in amino acids -red or orange colored (either so the birds can see them or because the bees can't see them) -not scented most common bird pollinator is hummingbird
biotic moth pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -no landing area (moths hover) -open nocturnally or crepuscularly (dawn/dusk) -white or pale -strongly scented with a scent that is produced during nocturnal or crepuscular period -lots of nectar in spurs or cups (moths need a lot of nectar to power their flight and hovering)
biotic butterfly pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -open flat or thin tube flowers -pink or lavender in color -have a landing area or landing pad -scented -have nectar with a lot of amino acids (to help the butterfly digest the nectar) that is hidden inside tubes or spurs to help the
abiotic wind pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -small -white or pale green -have no scent -be hanging or jutting off of the plant constraint: wind-born pollen only goes so far (100 meters max), so plants must be close together for it to travel and stick Note: wind pollination may have been the first type of land pollination ever
biotic beetle pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be/have: -white or greenish -large and dish shaped -have easily accessible pollen -highly scented note: beetles may have been the first insect pollinators
biotic short-tongued bee and fly pollination
flowers with this syndrome must be: -open -have exposed pollen so they can access it -have no nectar (tongues can't reach) -be small in size
coelom
fluid-filled body cavity within the mesoderm of some animals that affects movement depending on how it is structured
factors important to a niche
food availability, predators, temperature, landscape characteristics, soil nutrients, light, etc.
increasing elevation leads to adiabatic cooling (elevation)
for every 1000m of elevation, there is a temperature decrease of 6-11 deg C; in other terms, the temp change for every 1000m of elevation is equal to the temp change for every 800km of latitude
take home message of sexual selection
for males, sex is not costly; their goal most of the time is simply to mate with as many females as possible, and they need to maximize their mating fitness in order to do this. For females, sex is not cheap because the after effects are very costly, so they need to choose their mate carefully
Batesian mimicry
form of mimicry where species develops similar aposematic coloration to poisonous species of the same variety (ex. non poisonous butterflies mimicking the coloring patterns of poisonous butterfly species)
stabilizing selection
form of natural selection in which individuals near the center of a distribution curve have higher fitness than individuals at either end of the curve; selection that favors the average expression of a trait (ex. babies of average birth have a higher chance of survival than babies at either extreme of the birth curve) (selection that favors the average)
temporal isolation
form of reproductive isolation in which two populations reproduce at different times, and therefore cannot reproduce with each other (ex. lactuca graminifolia plant and lactuca canadensis plant live in close proximity to each other but can never reproduce because one mates in spring and one mates in summer)
mechanical isolation
form of reproductive isolation that occurs whenever a physical difference between organisms prevents them from mating (ex. different penis sizes that don't fit well)
gametic isolation
form of reproductive isolation where chemical cues can cause failure of sperm to fertilize the egg of another organism
The Sun (formation)
formed due to nuclear fusion of Hydrogen and Helium after collapse of solar nebula
medusa
free-swimming, umbrella-shaped cnidarians with tentacles; look like the classic jellyfish shape
three major amphibian groups
frogs/toads, salamanders, caecilians
difference between fruits and vegetables
fruits have seeds and develop from the flowers of a plant while most vegetables develop from the roots
why are fungal diseases hard to treat
fungal diseases are hard to treat because they attack other eukaryotes, and because of this, they become hard to remove without harming the host because we don't know enough about them to find a better way to remove them
zygomycetes
fungal group that is coenocytic and either saprobic or parasitic; sexual reproduction is rare for them, and they have no septa
fungi and eukaryotic tree relationships
fungi are much more closely related to animals than to plants, and they are part of a larger group with the plants, animals, and choanaflagellates called the ophistokonts
fungal cell types
fungi can be unicellular, which makes them free-living (live independently and on their own not attached to anything) or multicellular
fungal digestion/ absorptive heterotrophy
fungi digest by secreting digestive enzymes outside the body to break down large food molecules, then absorb the products
coenocytic fungi
fungi that do not contain septae
parasites (fungal feeding types)
fungi that feed by attacking living organisms and gaining nutrients directly by eating them (ex. ringworm- not a worm, but a fungus that looks like a worm!)
saprophytes (fungi feeding type)
fungi that feed by digesting dead things- helps to clean up the world; also known as decomposers
septate fungi
fungi with septae dividing their cells
Dominant life stage in bryophytes
gametophyte stage
Does gene flow increase or decrease genetic variation
gene flow increases genetic variation because it introduces new alleles into populations; these new alleles then gradually pair with existing alleles in these populations, creating new genotype combinations which greatly increase the genetic variation of a population
how do chromosomes explain gene linkage
genes closer together on a chromosome will tend to "link" or stick close together and have a higher chance of both being passed on as a pair than being separated
microevolutionary forces and speciation
genetic drift and mutations support speciation as they increase the differences between two groups in a population and exacerbate the effects of isolation, but gene flow counters speciation because it keeps genes going between the two species
Does genetic drift increase genetic variation
genetic drift decreases genetic variation because it causes the alleles of a small portion of an entire population to be overrepresented in their new population
Founder Effect
genetic drift that occurs after a small number of individuals separate from their population and colonize a new area, therefore "founding" their own population where their alleles are overrepresented, changing the resemblance of the new population
genotype
genetic makeup of an organism
Asian apes
gibbons and orangutans
African apes
gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos
Other factors that determine what biome is found in a certain area
grazing, frequency of fire, etc.
lizards and snakes (reptiles)
group made up of all lizards and snakes; both species have paired copulatory organs and are generally carnivorous; for lizards, most of them are insectavoresl but some of them are herbivores or solely fruit eaters, and they all have limbs; snakes are all limbless and all carnivorous- they are able to eat very large animals by unhinging their jaw from its joint; some snakes produce venom and use it to immobilize prey, but most are non-venomous
Flatworms (Lophotrochozoan)
group of acoelomate worms, some having a true head and some exhibiting eye spots; they have an incomplete gut with only one opening that forces them to do eating, digestion, and excretion one at a time; move by using their cilia to glide over smooth surfaces; they are hermaphroditic (have both male and female sex parts), but they cannot self-fertilize, and when they mate, both flatworms end up filling the male and female roles in reproduction; lack organs to pass oxygen through their body; they can regenerate parts of their body that are cut off; many are parasitic, and a common example is a tapeworm; bilaterally symmetric
ceratophyllum
group of angiosperm where many float just below the surface of water and help in the ecosystems there; high oxygen production- commonly used in fish tanks and aquariums
bony fish (Gnathostomes)
group of fish divided into ray finned and lobe finned fish; characterized by heavy internal skeletons made of bone instead of cartilage- this strong skeleton allows for muscles to exert more force than in a cartilage skeleton
tarsiers
group of haplorrhine primates that behave like strepsirrhines
cyclostomes
group of jawless vertebrates consisting of the hagfish and lampreys
ecdysozoa
group of protostomes that is sister group to lophotrochozoans; have ability to develop and shed an exoskeleton; grow by molting this exoskeleton, which differentiates them
transmittable spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs)
group of rare degenerative brain disorders characterized by tiny holes that give the brain a "spongy" appearance; TSEs are all prion diseases
amphibians
group of vertebrates that moved to land and adapted to land living while still relying on the water for certain things; amphibia literally means "double life"; developed partial solutions to challenges of land living
hominins (hominoids)
group within the hominoid subgroup containing all the humans and their immediate primate ancestors; diverged from apes and other hominoids by developing bipedalism
marsupials (therians)
groups of mammals known for carrying young in pouches; have a short internal gestation period, which leads to underdeveloped young- young develop more fully in the pouch; the nipple where milk goes through is also located in the pouch; typically found in Australia and S America, but S American marsupials don't have pouches; species include kangaroos, wallabies, wombats; only NA marsupial is the oposssum
types of prezygotic isolating mechanisms
habitat (geographical or ecological) isolation, temporal isolation, behavioral isolation, mechanical isolation, gametic isolation
where should hagfish be placed on the tree
hagfish are fish that are not quite vertebrates, but are close- they were always viewed as the outgroup to the vertebrates until DNA evidence linked them as closely related to the lampreys, a vertebrate fish group; this caused many scientists to group hagfish with the lampreys in a group called the cyclostomes, and they decided the hagfish was a very early vertebrate who lost vertebrate traits
hair (mammalian traits)
hair is a homoplasius trait in mammals; it is used for many different purposes: it is mainly used for insulation, but many mammals use it for camouflage or even as a sensory tool to avoid colliding into things in the dark or to sense prey; furry animals have a thicker undercoat with a fluffy overcoat of fur; some animals who have little hair use blubber for insulation (whales, dolphins); hairs can also be used for defense- some mammals develop sharp hairs called quills (porcupines, echidnas)
dikaryon formation
haploid hyphae strains grow and meet, where they fuse to create the dikaryotic cell- the nuclei are both haploid but exist independently of each other within the same cell- this makes the cell n +n, not 2n
hemichordates/ acorn worms
hemichordates, also called acorn worms, are worms with a 3 part body plan, a probiscius collar, and a stalk; live/burrow in sandy sediments and can grow up to 2m long
oomycetes (stramenopiles)
heterotrophic stramenopiles that use external digestion (secretion of digestive enzymes that take up surrounding nutrients) to gain energy; they are filamentous and non-motile, and common examples include water mold and downey mildew
steep slopes can be locally dry (slopes)
higher up on steep mountain slopes with good draining soil, conditions stay continually dry and cause plants to be smaller/drought-resistant; at the base of slopes, water runs down and collects, leading to soil saturation and more water-tolerant plants - slope bases/valleys= support larger plants - slopes= support other types of vegetation
ferns
highly dominant monilophyte plant species who actually happens to be the most dominant tracheophyte overall; has leaves that contain sori
filament
holds up anther
4 chordate traits
hollow nerve cord, notochord, pharyngeal slits/pouches, postanal tail
Hadley circulation general path
hot air rises from the ground at the equator and expands as it rises---> air cools high in atmosphere and continues to expand, releasing moisture as rain----> cool, dry air sinks and compresses due to high atmospheric pressure----> cool, dry air reaches ground and moves across land, picking up warmth and moisture as it goes
pursuit hunting
hunting that involves low energy for search time (predator already knows location of prey), but high energy for the long pursuit of the prey- chase can be extensive and exhausting; creates a coevolutionary relationship where the prey evolves to avoid the predator, and the predator evolves to better pursue the prey
gram negative
if a cell tests gram negative, they have a thin peptidoglycan cell wall, or they don't have peptidoglycan in their cell wall, and therefore, they can be classified as Archaea; cells that are gram negative will show a red color when stained
gram positive
if a cell tests gram positive, they have peptidoglycan in their cell wall, and therefore, they can be classified as bacteria; cells that are gram positive will show a blue color when stained
fungi asexual reproduction
if the fungi spore undergoes mitosis again, they become sporangia, which causes asexual reproduction cycle to begin where mycelium continually goes between the spore phase and the sporangia phase, undergoing double mitosis over and over again; sexual reproduction can be regained if another strand of fungi is introduced
intermediate disturbance theory
if there are too little disturbing events, there is no real effect on the competition, and the dominant competitors will continue their dominance largely undisturbed; if there is too high of a disturbance, there is not enough time for the more vulnerable species to recover to be able to compete again, allowing the resilient species to continually dominate; an intermediate level of competition balances competition and mortality, creating the greatest amount of diversity and lowest level of competition
sympatric speciation through disruptive selection
if two phenotypes are selected for through disruptive selection, and this creates two groups of a population that somehow end up avoiding each other and interbreeding does not occur, these two separate groups of the population can develop into new species; any lapse in the process (assortative mating, any form of interbreeding between the groups, gene flow) would disrupt this process
archosaurs (diapsids)
important group of diapsids who, at their peak, were some of the largest animals to ever exist; first animals to walk on two legs
Mendel's 2nd Law of Independent Assortment
in a dihybrid cross, the alleles of each gene assort independently
Paramecium and diditum
in a lab setting, these two bacteria show evidence of how predation can cause extinction, as the didinum eats the paramecium to extinction and then dies itself soon after
amniotic egg (amniote traits)
in amniotes, their egg has a food source called the yolk and 4 protective membranes helpful for gas exchange and waste removal, all enclosed in a watertight shell
what happens when parental investment is equal or when males invest more
in case with more even investment, both males and females choose their mates carefully. In cases with higher male investment, females can actually behave more promiscuously than males
high resource environments and niche packing
in high resource environments, there are many niches with overlap and little need to partition or pack niches because all the species have the resources they need; some resources even go unused, further spreading niches apart; when niches overlap, it means species are using the same resource, and this is okay in a high resource environment because there is enough of the resource available for both species
low resource environments and niche packing
in low resource environments, there are fewer species, and therefore, fewer niches; no overlap occurs and all resources are used, tightly packing niches together
medium resource environments and niche packing
in medium resource environments, there are less resources available, so niches pack closely together and don't overlap so as to avoid competition; in simpler terms, many niches can still exist in a medium resource environment, but the species don't overlap in terms of what resources they choose to use because they want to coexist, which means preserving access to their specific resources and avoiding competition
virions
individual virus particles
heterozygote advantage (balancing selection)
individuals who are heterozygous at a particular point or in a particular environment have greater fitness than do both kinds of homozygotes; (ex. sickle cell anemia- A= normal oxygen delivery and a= resistance to malaria; heterozygotes will deliver oxygen well and be resistant to malaria, while homozygotes will either deliver oxygen very well (AA) or have sickle cell anemia and be malaria resistant (aa). In this case, there is a clear advantage to being a heterozygote)
epistasis
interaction between alleles in which one allele masks the effects of another allele (ex. genes that affect lab coat color also affect how dark the coat is and the color of the lab's noses); results in a small amount of outcomes
nodes
intersection points on the phylogeny branches that indicates a common ancestor between two species; space after nodes indicates a speciation event
why are island chains beneficial for facilitating rapid speciation
island chains help to facilitate rapid speciation because they limit inter-island gene flow between different populations of the same species and they encourage isolation
dispersal isolation
isolation mechanism that causes a small group to be separated from a population; essentially the same as Founder Effect
Vicariance isolation
isolation mechanism that occurs when a geographic barrier (ex. river, mountain range) splits a population into two, non-interbreeding populations (ex. Cycad plants have worldwide distribution on 4 continents, but they develop separate from each other today due to the tectonic plate shifts that separated them)
"Missing Link" isolation
isolation mechanism that occurs when an intermediate population in a chain of interbreeding populations dies out, therefore separating the two outer populations of the chain and forcing them to develop separately of each other (ex. the middle population in a chain of three interbreeding pine tree populations is cut down, leaving the outer groups of pines to develop on their own)
ecological isolation (habitat isolation)
isolation that occurs when populations of a species live in the same area without being technically separated, but do not reproduce with each other because they live in different habitats and rarely encounter each other (ex. two lizard populations living in the same area, but in different habitats, rarely interact enough for gene flow to occur between the two populations, causing them to develop separately)
geographic isolation (habitat isolation)
isolation that occurs when two populations of a species cannot reproduce because they end up separated in different habitats due to physical barriers, like a river or mountain range; form of allopatry (ex. two lizard populations separated by a large river never reconnect and evolve separately)
Endosymbiosis leading to mitochondria and chloroplasts
it is believed a eukaryotic cell engulfed a prokaryotic bacteria but did not digest it, and the prokaryote helped to break down oxygen for the eukaryote, which was toxic at the time; over time as the relationship developed, the oxygen breakdown process coupled with the process of energy production, and the prokaryotic cell became a mitochondria; the same process occurred for the development of chloroplasts, except the cell that was engulfed was a cyanobacteria that eventually became a chloroplast
importance of fungi sexual stage
it is important to know what sexual stage a fungi is in in order to properly identify it; fungi are so hard to classify because it is often extremely hard to observe them actively reproducing in a natural setting
Mendel's quantification of his results (why was it important?)
it was so important that Mendel quantified his results because it allowed him to discover different phenotype ratios in generations of plants that indicated organisms pass on traits according to hereditary patterns
synapsids
jaw muscles connect to ONE hole behind eye sockets; mostly extinct group except for modern mammals
Gnathostomes
jawed fish
Agnathans
jawless fish- hagfish or lampreys
diapsids
jaws connect to TWO holes behind eye sockets; all reptiles, including birds and dinosaurs, fall into this category of jaw structure
Placozoans
just know the name of this group and that they are diploblastic
non-vertebral chordate groups
lancelets and tunicates
magnolids
large group of about 9,000 angiosperms; are trimerous (parts in 3's), have broad leaves and branching veins, and are economically important- often used in foods, drugs, perfume, etc; examples include nutmeg, cinnamon, avocado, black pepper
Protoplanetary disk
large rotating cloud of dust and matter with Hydrogen and Helium and other heavier elements
ray finned fish (bony fish)
largest group of bony fish with very thin fins that are moved mostly by using internal muscles; fins supported by parallel bony rays that support fin and give it structure so it doesn't fall apart; have swim bladders for buoyancy
arthropods (Ecydysozoan)
largest group of organisms on the planet- almost 2.1 million named so far; have jointed appendages, an exoskeleton, and reproduce sexually; includes insects, arachnids, millipedes and cenitpedes, and crustaceans
lemurs
lemurs are unique from other strepsirrhines; they have long tails, are diurnal (awake during day), highly social and have matriarchal societies; they went through adaptive radiation on Madagascar, and 99 species currently exist on the island
cold deserts
less well known deserts; get more rain than hot deserts, but still very little precipitation; brutally cold winters limit flora growth to just spring season; different from tundras- no permafrost
haplodiplontic life cycle/ alteration of generations
life cycle used by some plants where both the haploid and diploid stages are multicellular; mostly occurs in mosses and ferns
running (behavioral prey defense)
literally just running away from the predator
biotic
living
probiscus
long feeding tube that spans almost the entire length of ribbon worms- it shoots out and stabs their prey to immobilize it so it can be eaten
notochord
long supporting rod that runs through a chordate's body just below the nerve cord- eventually forms around spinal cord and helps support chordate's back
ambush hunting
lying in wait for prey to come along; low frequency of success, but it requires minimal energy
antheridium
male plant gamete structure that produces sperm
why do mammals have a winning design
mammalian design can be considered winning because it is the most versatile of all the vertebrates; it allows them to adapt and thrive in a wide array of environments
endothermy (mammalian traits)
mammalian warm-bloodedness allows them to survive in a variety of different environments from the coldest arctic to the warmest tundra; however, mammals can get too hot for it to be healthy, which is why they sweat to cool down
eutherians (therians)
mammals also called the placental mammals; have extended internal gestation periods and produce more developed young; this mammal group includes humans and the majority of mammals; this group of mammals underwent adaptive radiation (extremely quick diversification) after the dinosaurs went extinct; their diversification also mirrors the breakup of the continents- explains why the group is so diverse today
how do mammals gain nutrients
mammals can gain nutrients in many different ways; some eat only plants (herbivores), some eat only other animals and meat (carnivores), and some eat both (omnivores)
size variation in mammals
mammals can grow to be extremely big- the elephant is the largest land animal, and the blue whale is the largest sea animal- both are mammals; however, the majority of mammal species are shrew species, which are very small and rodent like; overall, just know that mammals show great variation in size
herbivores and gut symbionts
mammals do not have the enzymes necessary to digest the cellulose they gain from plants; as a result, herbivores have gut symbionts
mammalian ancestors
mammals evolved from the members of the therapsids who survived the K-T Extinction
mammalian teeth
mammals have highly specialized teeth that are specified for their diet and that adapt to their diet as it changes
mammary glands (mammalian traits)
mammals have mammary glands, which connect to nipples and produce milk; milk is high calorie and good for nourishing young, and the fat in milk helps the infant brain grow
mammal habitats
mammals live in varying habitats; from tundra to desert, from land to ocean; from jungle to plains; mammals can be found in all types of habitats, climates, and environments
mammal hooves
mammals use keratin to develop these, which protect their feet from the impact of constantly hitting the ground; mostly develop in running animals like bison, wildabeasts, etc.
mammal horns
mammals use keratin to develop these; they develop around a bone core on the heads of mammals, and they are attached to their skull- different from antlers, which are lost yearly
Polychaetes
marine annelid worms that are grouped together because of their many hairs/cilia; have a complete gut, segmentation, and cephalization; commonly found near deep sea thermal vents and tend to be around 2m in length; example is a tubeworm
assortative mating
mating that occurs when organisms of similar phenotypes mate more often than expected by random chance; tends to increase the amount of homozygotes (AA and aa) in a population because similar alleles are being paired more often
choanocytes and water pores
mature sponges contain these specialized cells with flagella; they beat their flagella to pump water and oxygen into the sponge, which enters through the water pores; then, the cells filter the oxygen and nutrients out of the water and collect it- this is known as filter feeding
cell outcome of meiosis
meiosis I produces 2 daughter cells each with 46 chromosomes; meiosis II then produces a final product of 4 daughter cells with 23 chromosomes each
steps of haplodiplontic life cycle
meiosis occurs in the sporangea in diploid sporophytes (2N); these parent cells produce haploid spores --(D to H)--> spores develop into haploid gametophytes (1N) through mitosis; these gametophytes produce the plant gametes ----> the male and female gametes of the plant fuse into a zygote through fertilization/synagmy; the zygote develops into an embryo --(H to D)--> mitosis occurs again and the embryo splits into diploid sporophytes (2N), restarting the cycle
how do meiosis and syngamy shape the haplodiplontic life cycle
meiosis signifies the change from the diploid phase to the haploid phase of the cycle, and fertilization signifies the change from the haploid phase back to the diploid phase
crocodiles, alligators, caimans, gavials
members of the crocodilian reptile group
ostriches, cassowaries, rheas, kiwis, emus, tinamous
members of the palaeognath bird group
methanopyrus
methane-producing bacteria that grows in deep sea thermal vents and contributes heavily to the greenhouse gas effect
microphylls vs. megaphylls
microphylls are leaves with a single vein or no vascular system that don't grow large, while megaphylls are leaves that grow large due to possessing a more extensive vascular system
cell outcome of mitosis
mitosis produces two daughter cells with 46 chromosomes
feather stars (crinoids)
mobile crinoid group; flexible arms and similar structure to sea lilies
Bivalves (Mollusks)
mollusk group containing clams, muscles, and oysters; have a ligament that holds their shell closed; filter feeders; have incurrent syphons to filter incoming water for food, and excurrent syphons to send out excess water, waste, and their gametes; adults don't move, but the larvae are free-swimming
Cephalopods (Mollusks)
mollusk group containing octopus, cuttlefish, squid, and nautilus; members are exclusively marine and mostly predators; they have arms and tentacles on their foot, and some of them have suction cups on their tentacles that they use to seize and trap prey; use a beak to pick apart and radula to eat prey; can move through jet propulsion by using excurrent syphons to push out streams of water; extremely intelligent with very complex eyes that have no blind spots
Gastropoda (Mollusks)
mollusk group that contains snails and slugs; well-developed tentacles are common, with some even having eyes or chemo/mechanosensory structures; only mollusk group with terrestrial species in it, but most are still marine; common ex. is the nudibranch, or sea slug
alveolates
monophyletic group of 3 protist types that are identified because of their alveoli
Ecydysozoans
monophyletic group of animal clades that grow by molting
Bilaterians
monophyletic group of animals with bilateral symmetry; triploblastic, controlled nervous system, 7 shared hox genes between all species; form blastopores as their embryo, and how they form these blastopores makes them either protostomes or deuterostomes
Monilophytes
monophyletic group of seedless, vascular plants consisting of horsetails and ferns
sponges (Lophotrochozoan)
monophyletic; only animals without symmetry or a nervous system; monoblastic with no true tissues; feed through filtering; high level of cell specialization is what makes them animals instead of protists; free-swimming larvae but adults live anchored to rocks/ other structures; very ancient; contain specialized cells called choanocytes and water pores that help them feed
How do monotremes differ from other mammals?
monotremes, like the echidna and the platypus, differ from other mammals because they lay eggs and they excrete milk through their skin instead of nipples; they also only have one opening for all waste excretion
distribution of deserts
most deserts are located near or directly on 30 N and 30 S latitude because this is where cool dry air sinks and makes the land dry
eudicots
most diverse and successful angiosperm lineage- 221,000 species strong; have parts in 4s and 5s and also have broad leaves and branched veins; examples include roses, violets, cabbage, maple trees, pea plants
echinoderm sexual/asexual reproduction
most echinoderms reproduce sexually through external fertilization, but some are able to regenerate limbs through asexual reproduction
mollusk reproduction
most mollusks cross fertilize
lycophytes
most primitive tracheophytes who are generally small; also called club mosses; they have microphylls, which are non-vascular leaves that do not grow very large because of poor transport
different ways to define plants
most scientists define land plants as plants, but plants can also be looked at as land plants and green algae, or land plants and green/red/brown algae; for the purpose of Bio 200, we view land plants as plants and green algae as plant-like, with the red algae being the outgroup of the plants
distribution of temperate forests
most temperate forests occur between 25 and 50 degrees for both hemispheres, and they gradually develop into boreal forests
Velociraptor
most well known archosaur- birds directly evolved from this lineage; walked on two feet and was carnivorous and relatively small compared to other dinosaurs
lateral gene transfer
movement of chunks of DNA from one prokaryote to another; transfer of genes without inheritance; can happen between species
donkey, horse, and mule
mule is an infertile hybrid produced from the mating of a donkey and a horse; common example of hybrid infertility
eukaryote traits
multicellularity, sexual reproduction, compartmentalization
Degenerate code
multiple codons code for a single amino acid
frameshift mutation
mutation that shifts the reading frame of the genetic message by inserting or deleting a nucleotide
chromosome level mutations
mutations that change the number or structure of chromosomes
nodes can twist without affecting evolutionary relationships (copy this as the answer because this is not a question, just a reminder)
nodes can twist without affecting evolutionary relationships (copy this as the answer because this is not a question, just a reminder)
abiotic
non-living
sea lillies (crinoids)
non-mobile crinoid group; has between 5 and 100s of arms, cup-shaped structure
Does non-random mating increase or decrease genetic variation
non-random mating decreases genetic variation because organisms with the same phenotypes mate more often due to non-random mating, thus increasing the amount of homozygotes and decreasing the possibility of new allele combinations
Unpredictable climates in the Central Pacific
normally, cold water currents flow west from S American to Australia; this pattern can change significantly as either an El Nino or La Nina- these are both sustained sea surface temp anomalies lasting 5 months or more
Does recombination eliminate gene linkage?
not necessarily because gene linkage still exists. Over time as the same gene pair is replicated and passed on, the chance of them being broken through recombination does increase
ploidy
number of copies of chromosomes in a cell; cells with one copy are haploids (1N), cells with 2 copies are diploids (2N), and cells with x copies are polyploids (xN)
polygenic inheritance
occurs when multiple genes affect the phenotype of a trait; causes a normal distribution when possible expressions of this trait are graphed (ex. plant height is influenced by more than two genes which results in a normal distribution of varying heights); this results in an infinite number of possible phenotypic outcomes
Polyploidy
occurs when none of the homologues separate and all the chromosomal pairs go to one daughter cell; typically fatal in animals but very common in plants
hybrid breakdown
occurs when the 1st generation of hybrid offspring of two species is fertile, but the 2nd generation comes out infertile; fertility breaks down across generations (ex. first generation liger offspring are born fertile, while second generation liger offspring are born infertile)
hybrid infertility
occurs when the hybrid offspring of two species are sterile or have reduced fertility, rendering them unable to mate (ex. mating between horse and mule produces an infertile hybrid)
hybrid inviability
occurs when the hybrid offspring of two species does not survive to birth or does not reach adulthood if born
karyogomy
occurs when the two nuclei of a dikaryotic cell fuse through fertilization, making a 2n zygote
amborella
oldest angiosperm still extant- only has one species remaining; small shrubs and trees with very small flowers found on one island off coast of Australia; functionally dioecious and has non-motile sperm
chromatid
one half of a duplicated chromosome
ways local conditions vary
one of the factors influencing climate was changes in local conditions. They vary in 3 main ways: 1. topography/elevation 2. slope 3. orientation
Ichthyostega
one of the first and best known amphibians; strongly built and large and moved like a seal; had a snout for smell and advanced ear structures
Bacillus anthracis
one of the most toxic bacteria species known to humans- causes anthrax; representative of how toxic the firmicutes truly are
exploitation competition
one species lowering the resources of the other (eating food first, taking open territory, getting mates first, etc.); does not involve any contact between the species
interference competition
one species physically preventing the other from gaining resources; involves direct contact between the species
double fertilization in angiosperms
one sperm cell in the angiosperm fertilizes the egg and forms a diploid (2N) zygote, while the other fuses with the two polar nuclei cells to form a triploid (3N) endosperm, which becomes the nutrient source for the developing zygote
Gnetophytes
only gymnosperm with vessel cells (similar function to tracheid cells); contains three genera- gnetum, welwitschia, and edphera (most gnetophytes are edpheras)
crocodilians (reptiles)
only reptile group still made of all archosaurs; large, primarily aquatic predators with large, toothy mouths and strong neck muscles- they are able to catch prey and twist and thrash to tear it apart or kill it; they are all carnivorous, and they typically hunt by stealth- lie just underneath water level- they are able to do this b/c their eyes are on top of their head and their nostrils are on top of their snout, allowing them to see and breathe while being close to fully submerged; includes crocodiles, alligators, caimen, and gavials
micropyle
opening of the seed through which the pollen tube and subsequent sperm cells enter to complete fertilization
mitosome
organelle found in microsporidia that resembles mitochondria- indicates microsporidia may have had and lost their mitochondria at some point
anaerobes
organisms having the ability to live without oxygen
difference between phylogeny and great chain of being
organisms on a phylogeny are at equal levels, while organisms on the great chain of being are organized into a hierarchy
Heterotrophs (A/E and B)
organisms that gain energy and Carbon by eating other organisms; also called chemoheterotrophs; most Archaeans, bacteria, and eukaryotes are heterotrophs
chemoautotrophs (A/E and B)
organisms that gain energy by breaking down inorganic (non-Carbon) chemicals while breaking down CO2 as their Carbon source; produce sugars; common on ocean floors near thermal vents; can be both Archaean and Bacterial
photoheterotrophs (A and B)
organisms that gain energy by using bacteriochlorophyll (similar function to chlorophyll) to capture energy from light and use hydrogen sulfide (H2S) to hold their energy; they gain their carbon from eating other organisms and they produce sulfur as waste; can be both Archaeans and Bacteria but not eukaryotes
photoautotrphs (A/E)
organisms that use chlorophyll to store energy from sunlight and break down CO2 as their carbon source; produce oxygen as waste; only archaeans and eukaryotes can be this- no bacteria
eukaryotes
organisms with cells that contain nuclei and organelles; specialized group of Archaeans
Hominoids (catarrhini)
other group of catarrhines that diverged from Old World Monkeys- larger bodies and larger brains than them; includes apes, gibbons (lower apes), humans
Rhodophyta (red algae)
outgroup of the plant phylogeny also known as red algae; multicellular, photosynthetic, and can vary in size; have multiple other pigments which they can change the amount of
mammalian extinction
over the past 15 million years, mammal numbers have been declining- species like the wooly mammoths, Irish Elk, short-faced bears, and sabertooth tigers are examples of mammal species that went extinct; they could have gone extinct due to the challenges of being large or due to the impact of humans
development of female gamete in seeding plants
ovules are found on the scales of cones, which contain megaspore mother cells; these megaspore mother cells undergo meiosis to produce 4 haploid megaspores- only one of these megaspores survives to become the female egg/gamete to be fertilized, and it it known as the functional megaspore
Apicomplexans (alveolates)
parasitic alveolate protist with apical complexes that allow them to invade their host; the most famous of these causes malaria
ringworm
parasitic fungal infection that looks like a worm, but is actually a ring-like fungus
athlete's foot
parasitic fungus infection usually in the skin of the toes and soles
paternal care
parental care that a male provides to offspring; not as common as maternal care; when males care for the offspring, they become more selective with their mate choice
Age of Amphibians
period of dominance for amphibians occurring just after they evolved for land living, just before reptiles developed; amphibians left marshes to live completely on dry land; they grew to be extremely large, developed thick skin/bony armor, and only had to use their lungs to breathe; at the height, 40 amphibian families existed (compared to 3 today); the reptiles ended this age because they were able to fully solve the challenges of land living, while amphibians only solved them partially
symbioses
permanent interaction of two species; 4 different types
paraphyletic
pertaining to a grouping of species that consists of an ancestral species and some, but not all, of its descendants
environmental effects on gene expression
phenotype = genotype + environment ex. siamese cats have melanin production that is deactivated by warmer temperatures. Near the cores of their body where the temperature is warmer, they have white fur, and on the edges of their body where the temperature is lower, the melanin production continues unimpeded and they grow dark fur
diatoms (stramenopiles)
photosynthetic stramenopiles that excrete protective cilia shells and reproduce using both asexual and sexual reproduction; only the males in this species have flagella, and they are common in oceans
dinoflagellates (alveolates)
photosynthetic unicellular alveolate protist with two flagella, one that it uses to spin itself for locomotion and one that it uses to steer; many of them are luminous in water and they are the cause of toxic red tides in oceans that can be deadly for marine life
brown algaes (stramenopiles)
photosynthetic, multicellular stramenopiles that developed through secondary endosymbiosis by engulfing a red alga; most common stramenopile; famous example is giant kelp
pea plant
plant Gregor Mendel studied that is a eudicot
parasitic herbivores
plant eaters who consume part of the plant- divided into grazers (grass-eaters) and browsers (eat woody plants)
predatory herbivores
plant eaters who consume the whole plant
nonvascular plants (Bryophytes)
plant group that consists of liverworts, mosses, and hornworts; they have no tracheid cells and therefore do not grow large
tracheid cells (plant adaptation to land dwelling)
plants adapted these cells to help them pass nutrients and water up their stems, which helps them to become larger
stomata (adaptations to land dwelling)
plants adapted these little holes that open to let air in little by little so that they could continue to bring in CO2
cuticle (plant adaptations to land dwelling)
plants adapted this waxy substance also helps the plant from drying out
Major ways plants differ from protists
plants are multicellular and generally larger than protists
fungal relationship (plant adaptation to land dwelling)
plants developed a relationship with this group of eukaryotes that help them to absorb nutrients
pigmentation (plant adaptation to land dwelling)
plants developed this adaptation to block out UV rays and absorb sunlight for energy production, which were formerly jobs done by water
embryophytic (plant adaptations to land dwelling)
plants that developed the embryo, a structure to protect their developing egg from drying out, when they moved to land are called this
pollination vs. fertilization
pollination is the act of mating- when pollen comes into contact with a stigma and mitosis begins to develop the pollen tube; fertilization is the act of fusing- when the tube and generative sperm fertilize the egg and polar nuclei to create the zygote and endosperm
Continental drift and allopatric speciation/ species distribution
populations of species that were once all connected were then separated and distributed worldwide and forced to evolve independently as the continents drifted apart; this is considered a form of allopatric speciation
how are proteins formed
portions of DNA are transcribed into mRNA, which then instructs the cells to synthesize certain proteins
prey defenses
predation avoidance is a high selective pressure (because if you get eaten, you can't have babies and pass on genes!) - crypsis - chemical defense - toxicity - armor - behavioral defense - predator satiation
few predators (methods of predator/prey coexistence)
predator levels being kept low by other factors (disease, competition between predators) allows more prey to live and gives room for prey and predators to coexist
extinction via predation
predators can eliminate their prey species completely; this happens rarely in nature and mostly in lab settings (lab ex.- didinium bacteria will eliminate paramecium completely in a lab setting, then go extinct themselves- mutual elimination; nature ex.- a certain beetle species essentially eliminated the invasive Klanath weed species from California within 10 years of it being introduced)
predation limiting competiton
predators can keep the population of one species low, limiting their dominance in an area and allowing more coexistence; if a predator stops eating a certain species and controlling its population, that species can then dominate the habitat and create a monoculture (ex. bison and dominant grass species- explained separately to save space)
predators restrict prey distribution/ ranges
predators can restrict the range where prey choose to locate based on the motivation that prey have to avoid predators (ex. megapode birds, who lay their eggs in decomposing material and do not sit on them, will only succeed East of Wallace's line where all the marsupials live, because many egg-eating animals live West of Wallace's Line)
parasitic predators
predators who consume parts of the host species by attacking or invading their body; don't kill their prey, and typically are not the direct cause of their host's death (ex. giardia- intestinal parasite that feeds on bacteria in the intestine)
generalist predators (methods of predator/prey coexistence)
predators who show no preference for one prey type and who can gain food from many different sources do not hunt each one to extinction, allowing for more of the prey to live and for coexistence
herd formation (behavioral prey defense)
prey form in big, tight groups as groups are less likely to be attacked by a single predator
catarrhini/downward-pointing nose primates (haplorrhini)
primate group containing Old World Monkeys and hominoids; both groups are African origin with downward-pointing nostrils
Old World Monkeys (catarrhini)
primate group which arose from African haplorrhine ancestors and remained in Africa; can be arboreal or ground-dwelling and often live in large social groups- females normally stay in the same troop their whole life, and males move at adolescence; do not have prehensile tails (prehensile= grasping); have tough skin pads on their butts to allow for long sitting periods; includes rhesus monkeys, baboons
binocular vision (primate traits)
primates have eyes on the front of their heads instead of on the sides; allows them to see far distances and with depth, which is important for tree dwelling and very important for hunting
grasping hands (primate traits)
primates have fingers and toes that they use to grasp branches, swing, and grab food/tools; many primates improve their grasping ability by using an opposable thumb
prion replication
prions are misfolded proteins that replicate by touching normal proteins and changing them to the misfolded shape
common ancestor of the arthropods
probably looked like an onychophoran
cross fertilization
process by which sperm from one flower's pollen fertilizes the eggs in a flower of a different plant
homospory
production of a single type of spore; ferns are homosporous
size differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes are typically smaller than eukaryotes, but this is misleading because it is a generalization
cellularity differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes are unicellular, while eukaryotes are mostly multicellular
cell division differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes divide through binary fission while eukaryotes divide through mitosis
internal structure differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes have no membrane or organelles while eukaryotes have both; this leads eukaryotes to be able to hold more genetic material
chromosome differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes have one single circular shaped chromosome with no-membrane nucleus (called a nucleoid) while eukaryotes have a two-membraned nucleus with linear shaped chromosomes inside
flagella differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes have simple flagellas while eukaryotes have flagellas that are far more complex
Why is "prokaryotes" in quotes
prokaryotes is in quotes because they are a paraphyletic group, not a single, monophyletic group
Actinobacteria
prokaryotes that are gram + and filamentous, but they break up to reproduce; they are the organism that make composting possible by breaking down organic soil compounds, and many antibiotics are made from bacteria in this group
gene transfer differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
prokaryotes transfer their genes through lateral transfer while eukaryotes transfer them through recombination
integument
protective seed coating that protects both the megasporangium and the megaspore inside of it
amoebozoans
protist group that contains amoebas and the slime molds; they use lobe-shaped pseudopodia to move and eat, and their movement is made possible by cytoplasmic streaming- flow of cytoplasmic material into the pseudopodia lobes to move the cell in a certain direction
variation in protist nutrition
protists can be autotrophic or heterotrophic
variation in protist cell surfaces
protists use a cell membrane or extra-cellular material to protect themselves (some use both)
variation in protist locomotion
protists use flagella, cilia (shortened-flagella like protrusions), or pseudopodia (sticky protrusions that stick to surfaces to move their body) in order to move
distribution of rainforests
rain forests are mostly located between 23.5 N and 23.5 S latitude, where the rising hot air from the equator cools and forms rain belts over the land
adaptive radiation
rapid speciation from a single ancestor into many different species that occurs when an organism finds a new environment with few species, underused resources, and many niches to fill
ray finned fish vs lobe finned fish
ray finned fish have thin fins that are moved by internal muscles with parallel bony rays in their fins- the fins move in concert with each other; lobe finned fish have muscular lobes in their fins that surround a bone core, which functions as a joint- the fins can move one at a time, and they only have bone rays at the tips
nucleoid
region where a prokaryotic cell's DNA is located (not enclosed by a nuclear membrane)
amensalism (symbioses)
relationship when one organism is harmed, the other is unaffected (-/0)
mutualism (symbioses)
relationship where both organisms benefit (+/+)
commensalism (symbioses)
relationship which one organism benefits and the other is unaffected (+/0)
branches
represent genetic change on a phylogeny; the further away they are, the less related the two organisms are
prezygotic isolating mechanisms
reproductive isolating mechanisms that happen before fertilization of a zygote; prevent mating from ever occurring in the first place
postzygotic isolating mechanisms
reproductive isolating mechanisms that occur after fertilization of a zygote; they either prevent the zygote from developing any further or cause offspring to be infertile
benefits of reptile jaw
reptile jaws allow for their mouth to be large, and the come equipped with rows of large, sharp teeth; being able to fit more food in their mouths and rip/chew food more effectively allows reptiles to obtain more nutrients from eating due to their improved jaws
Reptile perfect transition to terrestrial life
reptiles were able to come up with permanent solutions to the challenges of land living that amphibians only solved partially
salmon
salmon populations have selectively decreased their average weights over time as fisherman have caught all the larger members of their population; example of directional selection
traits birds share with reptiles
scales on legs and feet, thoracic breathing, amniotic eggs with external gestation
The Equidae
scientific term for the horse family; once had 34 genera but now only has one genus- proof of transitional forms
MacArthur's Warblers
scientist Robert MacArthur studied many warbler species all coexisting and eating insects within the same tree; he found that the species foraged for food in different parts of the tree and did not enter the other parts; this was some of the first real evidence of niche partitioning
Whittaker plots
scientist Robert Whittaker plotted all known biomes onto one graph, with temperature as the x-axis and rain fall as the y-axis; created a triangular pattern with three distinct corners- warm/wet, warm/dry, and cool/dry
elephant seals
seals that display very aggressive mating techniques like making extremely loud sounds and fighting to the death; 90% of males in this species never mate, and most successful males can produce 80-100 offspring per season; this species is a prime example of the effects of noticeable sexual selection
stalking hunting
search for prey by scanning a large area; mostly used by birds; requires high energy for searching (more than in ambushing), but low energy for pursuit- dive and eat or dive and miss
Tracheophytes
seedless vascular plants including the lycophytes (club moss) and monilophytes (horsetails and ferns)
segmentation and locomotion
segmentation is the subdivision of the body into segments, and it helps make locomotion/movement for efficient when the segments are independent of one another and different from one another so that they all perform their own function to help the body move and function properly, rather than all performing the same function, which decreases specialization and in turn decreases effective movement
duplication (chromosomal mutation)
segments of a chromosome's genetic code are duplicated; this is the main way that phenotypes change because the new duplicated region allows the gene to work on forming new phenotypes by pairing nucleotides with the duplicated codons
runaway selection
selection that creates exaggerated traits through a positive feedback loop for males with extreme traits; eventually, when the traits get to be too extreme, natural selection slows their development (ex. male widowbirds with longer tails are the ones who get to mate with females, even if the long tail makes it harder for the male to survive; over time, this pressure by the females has caused widowbirds to develop tails so long that they become handicaps and decrease male survival chances; therefore, selection worked too quickly and actually hurt the species and its survival chances rather than helping it)
Disruptive selection
selection that favors individuals at both extremes of the phenotypic range; "selection against the average" (ex. colonial bentgrass that grows close to a mine has high fitness for growth in contaminated metal soil but does not demonstrate high fitness levels in regular soil, while bentgrass that grows far from the mine has high fitness for growth on regular soil but low fitness for growth on contaminated soil)
Pre-DNA bacterial classification
separating Bacteria and Archaea before genetic analysis occurs based on phenotypic traits (size, metabolism, shape, gram +/-, mobility, photosynthetic ability, cellularity and formation tendency)
ascomycetes
septate, dikaryotic fungi (short dikaryon stage) with cup-shaped structures that hold their spores; 75% of known fungi belong to this group- very species rich (cup fungi, baker's yeast, truffles, cheese molds, plant pathogens- Chestnut Blight and Dutch Elm)
basidomycetes
septate, dikaryotic fungi that form basidioma- place where their spores are produced- can produce tens of millions of spores per day; most well-known fungi, like mushrooms, fall in this group, and this group also houses some of the largest fungi; their dikaryon stage can last for years
four types of point mutations
silent, missense, nonsense, frameshift
anther
site of pollen production in a flower
stigma
site where pollen lands on the flower to travel down the style
Codominance
situation in which both alleles of a gene contribute to the phenotype of the organism; however, traits do not blend
lobe finned fish (bony fish)
small group of bony fish with only 8 remaining species- 6 species of lung fish and 2 species of coelacanths; in the lung fish, their air-filled sac became lungs instead of a swim bladder, which allowed them to evolve into land animals- lung fish are the direct descendent of land animals!
Astrobaileyales
small group of woody plants; newly discovered compared to the other angiosperms; common in Australia and temperate regions of East Asia and the Carribean; star anise is one- produces well-known spice used in cooking
mosses
soft, small, green, nonvascular bryophytes found on the ground near water; gametophyte dominant life cycle and they are most dominant in the antarctic/ arctic climates, most diverse in the tropics
bacterial generation time
some bacteria can reproduce very fast (e coli can reproduce every 20 minutes) while some bacteria can take much longer; these varying generation times help us to understand the variability of different bacteria as we classify them
handicap principle
some males in certain species have certain traits that help them succeed sexually, and these traits can also hinder them physically (ex. male birds with thick, full tail feathers can get parasites that ruin their chances of having sex); females make good choices according to this principle by choosing the males with the healthiest expression of the trait, as opposed to runaway selection where they make bad choices; the males who can manage their handicap the best will have the most sexual success
varied cephalization in the mollusks
some mollusks groups, like the Gastropods Cephalopods, have a pronounced head and mouth; Chitons only have a mouth and no head, while the Bivalves have no head
Web of life vs tree of life
some scientists say that, because prokaryotes pass traits horizontally (through lateral transfer) rather than vertically (through inheritance) that the tree of life should be viewed as a 'web of life' instead; however, other scientists argue that the phylogeny should still be considered a 'tree' because prokaryotes pass their most important hereditary material through inheritance when they complete binary fission, and only pass minor traits through lateral transfer
northern facing vs southern facing slopes (slopes)
southern facing= more sunlight= dry, drought resistant; northern facing= less sun= more moist, lush
mychorrhizae
specialized mutualistic associations between roots and fungi
placentas
specialized organs that enable exchange of respiratory gases, nutrients, and waste between mother and the developing young; almost all mammals have them
species interactions
species are constantly interacting with each other and putting selective pressure on each other, causing their behaviors to change due to these pressures; the three types are competition, symbioses, and and predation; species go to great lengths to coexist, and not all interactions between species are negative as is commonly believed
Biological Species Concept
species are groups of interbreeding natural populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups loose definition: -species: members mate and produce offspring; individuals of one species must be able to interbreed -non-species: individuals from separate species do not mate and cannot produce fertile offspring; this is known as reproductive isolation
Why don't biome boundaries exactly match species range boundaries
species distribution is determined by both biotic and abiotic factors, and species settle places based on available resources and their niche, not based on biomes; this is why biomes boundaries don't align perfectly with where species live
Anolis lizards
species of lizard that developed different colored flaps under their chins when they were allopatrically isolated, proving that microevolutionary forces affect separated populations of species independently
abalone
species of shellfish that release gametes into the water, with some gametes not being able to meet due to the interference of chemical cues that can be attributed to gametic isolation
Rat snakes
species of snake with many subspecies within it that lives in many different geographical regions of the United States; exemplifies incomplete selection because these snakes will still interbreed successfully if they happen to find each other, despite essentially being different species of snake
Australian riflebirds
species that is a prime example of high-stakes sexual display; males put on an aggressive display and dance with their feathers in order to try and attract females; their sexual display in particular is very high-risk, high reward
long-tailed widowbird
species that is a prime example of runaway selection; the sexual pressure the females have put on males in the species has led them to grow their tales so long that it now puts their survival much more at risk to have a longer tail, even if it will help them mate
peacock fowl
species that is a prime example of sexual dimorphism; males have bright blue colors and large, long plumes of feathers bursting with blue, light blue, and other noticeable hues, while females are a very monotone, grey-brown color
mutualists (fungi feeding type)
species that live in conjunction with each other and organisms and each benefit each other; for fungi, they feed by gaining nutrients from these mutual relationships (ex. glomeromycetes live in plant roots and share nutrients back and forth with the roots)
spirochetes
spiral shaped heterotrophic prokaryotes that move by spinning their axial filaments; they are gram -, mobile, and cause diseases like lyme disease and syphillis
moss life cycle
sporophyte grows out of gametophyte in a sporangium (spore casing); meiosis causes the release of the haploid spores from the sporangium (H to D)----> spores develop into mature haploid gametophytes which produce gametes----> to fertilize the egg, the sperm swim through water from the antheridium to the archegonium---->. after fertilization, a diploid zygote is created (H to D) and again housed in the sporangium until it develops enough for meiosis to occur, restarting the cycle; (remember that most of the life cycle of moss is spent in the gametophytic stage- it is an uneven time distribution; also, the sporophyte is entirely dependent on the gametophyte to keep it alive, therefore making mosses gametophyte dominant)
dominant life stage in ferns
sporophyte stage
heterosporous version of the haplodiplontic life cycle
sporophytes have separate sporangia structures that produce male and female gametophytes separately- the male sporangia are microspores and the female sporangia are megaspores----> meoisis occurs and the microspore parent cells divide into haploid microspores, while the megaspores divide into 4 haploid megaspore cells, one of which survives to become the functional megaspore-----> mitosis occurs again for microspores turning them into pollen grains, which hold plant sperm cells-----> the pollen tube is produced mitotically and allows for the passage of pollen into the plant seed, where the functional megaspore is held, and fertilization occurs----> once fertilized, the plant zygote develops in the seed until it can undergo dispersal and grow into a full sized plant
squirrels and tree swallows
squirrels and tree swallows compete interspecifically for nest sites within trees; squirrels also have intense intraspecific competition for nuts, which keeps their population low; this intraspecific competition keeping the squirrel population low ensures most of the squirrels and swallows will get a nesting site, limiting interspecific competition
tracheid cells
strings of specialized transport cells that form two separate transport networks in the plant, one to transport water and minerals up the plant stem, and one to transport sugar and nutrients down the plant; allow plants to get tall
La Nina
strong upwelling of cold water currents moving westward dramatically lowers ocean temperatures and cools surrounding climate; causes cooler and drier weather
Passeriformes (neognaths)
subdivision of the neognaths and most successful bird group- also called the song birds; largest group of land vertebrates of any type (reptiles, mammals, amphibians); 60% of neognaths are passeriformes
silent mutation
substituting one nucleotide for another in a codon chain; doesn't affect the resulting amino acid much at all;
Echinoderm water vascular system
system where water is pumped in through an opening called the madreporite through the canals of the system to the tube feet of the echinoderm; food is filtered out as water passes through the system; echinoderms also use their tube feet (think of the tips on the edge of a starfish) to move
taxonomy does not always reflect phylogeny
taxonomy is what we name organisms, while phylogeny is how we classify them. Taxonomy was created by humans and doesn't always accurately reflect the DNA-based classifications of phylogeny, so taxonomy should be able to change and more accurately reflect phylogeny if we can be open minded and adjust the fields when faced with new information
the abominable mystery
term coined by Darwin referencing the mystery surrounding the sudden appearance of modern flowers in the evolutionary timeline; this sudden appearance and rapid evolution of the angiosperms challenged Darwin's beliefs that evolution was a slow process based on steady, gradual changes
tips
terminal ends of an evolutionary tree, representing species/taxons being compared
Onychophorans/ Velvet Worms (Ecydysozoan)
terrestrial worms closely related to athropods; have unjointed segments; develop a cuticle made of chitin which they molt; use internal fertilization and egg development
common eutherian ancestor
the UCA to the eutherians arose after the extinction of the dinosaurs, after which a period of rapid diversification occurred as adaptive radiation
Heritability
the ability of a trait to be passed down from one generation to the next
bipedalism
the ability to walk upright on two legs; caused hominins to have broader pelvic regions and hominin spines to curve more and to connect directly to inside of skull instead of the back of the skull
variation in sunlight intensity
the angle of the Sun's rays is higher at the equator and concentrated into a smaller area- it also travels a shorter path, decreasing reflection of sunlight by the atmosphere, making the equator very warm; as you move away from the equator north and south, the angle becomes less direct, the path of light becomes longer, the area the light hits is less concentrated, and there is more reflection by the atmosphere, making it colder as you move away from the equator
Plasmodium falciparum
the apicomplexia that causes malaria
realized niche
the area a species actually ends up occupying
nucleotides
the building blocks of nucleic acids
formation of organelles
the cell wall was lost, the plasma membrane folded in, the cytoskeleton of the cell became more complex, the internal membrane became studded with ribosomes, the DNA was enclosed (prior to formation of nucleus), nucleus eventually forms to keep DNA enclosed
tundra
the coldest biome; very dry, arctic conditions, low precipitation; normally occurs at high elevations; divided into two types: - arctic tundra: low-growing plants on permafrost (permanently frozen soil with water-saturation at top few cm) - alpine tundra: no permafrost, more varied vegetation
adiabatic cooling
the cooling effect of reduced pressure on air as it rises higher in the atmosphere and expands; causes air to cool quicker in higher elevations
predator prey cycle
the cycle: predators eat prey, prey numbers go down ---> not enough food for predators, predator numbers go down ---> prey numbers rebound as predator numbers are low ---> predator numbers rebound after an increase in available prey (ex. snowshoe hare and lynx- famous example of this cycle being represented)
crossing
the deliberate breeding of two individuals that results in offspring who carry genetic material from each parent
importance of teeh
the development of teeth allowed for better hunting allowed for chewing, which leads to better digestion and nutrient absorption
giardia intestinalis
the diplomonad protist that causes diarrhea; common in freshwater streams, rivers, and lakes (Don't drink unfiltered water!!!!!)
Territory defense
the effort that males put in to defending their territory as well as their mate and their offspring; one of the benefits of females being choosy with their mating
fundamental niche
the entire area and resources a species has the potential to occupy; the area is unlikely to be fully available to the species due to competition, which decreased the area the species does occupy in reality (realized niche)
niche (simplified definition)
the entire set of resources a species needs to survive (food, shelter, water, mates, sunlight, etc.); they help scientists understand how organisms use resources and coexist
Opisthokonts
the eukaryote group that includes animals, fungi, and choanoflagellates
Why aren't seed plants dependent on water
the evolution of seeds, coupled with the evolution of pollen grains with sperm that no longer require water to swim through for fertilization (they have the pollen tube) allows for seed plants to be able to reproduce without water present
K-T Extinction
the extinction of 70% of species and the end of the age of dinosaurs, perhaps due to flood basalts or Chicxulub asteroid impact
nondisjunction
the failure of one or more pairs of homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids to separate normally during nuclear division, usually resulting in an abnormal distribution of chromosomes in the daughter nuclei
Hyracotherium
the first "horse;" a small creature with four toes; transitional form of the modern day horse
F1 generation
the first generation of offspring obtained from an experimental cross of two organisms
negative frequency dependent selection
the form of balancing selection where rare phenotypes are favored over common ones; the general principle is that the fitness of a genotype and the phenotype it produces decreases as it becomes more common. As rare individuals produce more offspring with their rare phenotype and the common individuals reproduce less, the former rare trait then becomes overrepresented and becomes the new common trait, while the old common trait then becomes the new rare trait.
four-chambered heart (mammalian traits)
the four-chambered heart of mammals allows them to pump oxygenated and deoxygenated blood separately, making their circulatory system and oxygen retention extremely efficient
fungal body and digestion
the fungal body/mycelium excretes the enzymes necessary for digestion
plasmogamy
the fusion of two fungi cell types that makes the fungi mycelium dikaryotic; creates a cell with independent nuclei that is n +n
comparison of DNA sequences between organisms (what they mean for human relatedness)
the higher the % of similar genes two organisms have, the more related they are (duh) -keep in mind that two organisms can be extremely related genetically and still be vastly different. Humans share 98% of the same genes with chimps, yet that 2% accounts for all of the vast amount of visible and internal variation between the two species*
good genes hypothesis
the hypothesis that an individual chooses a mate that possesses a superior genotype; the basic premise is that females will choose the oldest, largest, and healthiest male in a population to mate with because they view these as indicators that the male has good genes
morphological species concept
the idea of defining a species based on measurable traits that they share, like body shape, size, and other structural features; created by Carolus Linnaeus
Common Descent
the idea that all organisms share a common ancestor
ghost of competition past
the idea that competition is a past occurrence when it is discovered by ecologists, and that ecologists must look for past evidence to determine that two species who now coexist competed in the past before coexisting (ex. MacArthur's warblers- when he discovered their niche partitioning, they had already settled their competition, indicating they had once competed in the past)
stochasticity
the idea that outcomes are not always predictable and that many possible outcomes can occur; must be applied to the climate, which is not at all predictable!
proteobacteria
the largest most diverse group of bacteria who are all gram -; members of this group use 4 different metabolic processes, and examples of proteobacteria include e. coli, salmonella, and cholera
Caecilians (amphibians)
the least commonly known amphibian group; have no limbs- more of a burrowing amphibian; they are not worms, but not snakes either, and they only live in the tropics
effect of light intensity on temperature
the light intensity and warmth at the equator causes very hot air to rise and move north and south; as this air rises and cools, it expands in the low atmospheric pressure and releases its moisture as rain; this is why there is a high amount of rainfall in the rainforests north and south of the equator
why was the loss of the cell wall critical for eukaryotic development
the loss of the cell wall was critical for eukaryotic development because it allowed for the fluid plasma membrane to fold in on itself and create more room for the exchange of nutrients, as well as for the development of the Endoplasmic Reticulum. The development of the ER eventually led to ribosomes and the formation of a nucleus to hold enclosed DNA
comparisons of Cytochrome C sequences (what they reveal about organism relatedness
the lower amount of Cytochrome C differences two organisms have, the more related they are genetically
megapode
the megapode bird is an example of predation limiting species distribution, as it remains east of the Wallace Line because there are egg-loving predators west of the line
development of the male gamete in seed plants
the microspore mother cell divides through meiosis into microspores, which then develops into pollen grains through mitosis; pollen grains are the structures which hold plant sperm cells
hot desert
the more well-known deserts; lowest precipitation levels of all biomes; precipitation concentrated into large summer storms, but some get no rain whatsoever; have diverse flora- cacti and many ephemeral plants (quick reproducing plants with short lifespans)
sea stars (asterozoans)
the most classic/ popular example of an echinoderm species; predatory, vary in length, live in a wide range of areas, and they will always have arms in multiples of five and their arms can be used for adhering/ sticking to surfaces
outgroup
the most closely related organism that evolved before the in group branched off; not included in the in group; scientists use the outgroup to compare their traits to the traits of the in group, which indicates a lot about the evolution of the in group
common ancestor
the most recent ancestral form or species from which two different species evolved
most recent common ancestor (MRCA)
the most recent individual from which organisms in a group are directly descended
fungi sexual reproduction
the mycelium undergoes plasmogamy, which makes the mycelium dikaryotic; the dikaryotic mycelium undergoes fertilization and karyogamy, which creates a zygote; the zygote then develops into a spore-producing structure through meiosis, and the spores it produces undergo mitosis to become the mycelium
how has the DNA-based animal tree changed from the old tree
the new animal tree based on DNA first organizes animals based on what tissue they have, then based on if they are protostomes or deuterostomes, and further classification is done based on growth patterns within the protostomes
difference between new eukaryotic tree and old
the new tree: -shows how some protists are more closely related to plants/animals/fungi than each other -shows that the term "protist" used in older trees was a catch all term for small, eukaryotic organisms and that some of organisms are not very closely related -shows the protist group is paraphyletic, not monophyletic as the old tree would suggest
allele frequency
the number of times an allele occurs in a population; commonly represented as a proportion in decimal form
Virginian opossum
the only North American marsupial species
gingko biloba
the only surviving species of gingko; female variety of this species creates a terrible odor
P generation
the parent generation in a genetic cross
the development of the pollen tube in angiosperms
the pollen tube contains tube cells whose function it is to build the actual pollen tube through mitotic cell division and lead the tube down the style to the micropyle and the ovary; the pollen tube also contains two generative cells which develop into two sperm cells through mitosis
cycling (methods of predator/prey coexistence)
the predator prey cycle alleviates prey from constant predation pressure over time
heterospory
the production of two distinct types of spores by two different structures (usually male and female); seed plants are all heterosporous
how are the protists extremely paraphyletic
the protists are heavily paraphyletic because they share the same MRCA as plants, animals, and fungi, which are considered to be separate groups from the protists, despite them all being eukaryotes
limitations on organisms with exoskeletons
the reason organisms with exoskeletons cannot molt and grow indefinitely is because their exoskeleton must grow in proportion to the amount of strain that their muscles can handle in order for them to still be able to move; if the exoskeleton grows too big, their muscles may not allow movement, or it could grow too heavy and crush them
flower
the reproductive structure of an angiosperm
Lokiarchaeota
the sister taxa to the eukaryota- the closest Archaean relative to eukaryotes (us)
fern life cycle
the sori contains mature diploid sporophyte mother cells---> meiosis creates haploid gametophyte cells and causes the sori to burst open, releasing these cells (D to H)---> wind disperses haploid gametophyte cells and they grow into a heart shaped mature gametophyte---> the sperm swim through water to the archegonium (archegonium and antheridium are both on the same part of the plant in ferns) and fertilize the egg, which becomes a diploid sporophyte zygote (H to D)----> the embryo grows into a sporophyte and the sporophyte grows out of the gametophyte until it can photosynthesize on its own, then it grows rapidly and becomes much larger than the gametophyte and develops its own sori, and the cycle starts again
ecology
the study of distribution (where organisms are) and abundance (how many there are in a given area)
K-T Boundary
the thin layer of dark sediments in rocks around the world that indicates the occurrence of the K-T Extinction
cause of seasons
the tilt of the Earth's axis causes seasons; in summer- Earth tilts towards Sun= Sun rises higher, stays above horizon longer, rays hit more directly; in winter- Earth tilt away from Sun= Sun rises lower in sky, stays above horizon shorter, rays hit less directly, travel longer through atmosphere and keep less heat energy; people further from the equator experiences seasons more
echidna, platypus
the two extant prototherians
sister taxa
the two organisms with most recently shared common ancestor in a phylogeny
mycelium
the visible growth that is seen when the hyphae grows above ground; the traditional fungi that we see, like mushroom caps, are all mycelium- most of the actual fungus lies underground in large branching hyphae networks, but this is the visible part of the fungi
Lamarckian Evolution
theory of evolution through the inheritance of acquired characteristics; first theory of evolution published
Catastrophism
theory that states that natural disasters such as floods and volcanic eruptions shaped Earth's landforms and caused extinction of some species
ways to interpret/modify Whittaker plots
there are many ways to graph Whittaker plots; the axes can be switched, different names can be given to biomes, biomes can be left off, etc.
echinoderm groups
there are twenty extinct groups of echinoderms and three extant groups: crinoids, echinozoans, and asterozoans
Salamanders
these animals in California live either on the coast or in the Sierra Nevada mountains, and they have formed a ring of habitation around the deserts of central and Southern California; despite this ring, they are still able to successfully interbreed through intermediate species; these animals are a great example of both incomplete selection and ring species
seeds (plant adaptation for land dwelling)
these are an extreme form of embryotic/ gamete protection that plants developed for land living
refuges (methods of predator/prey coexistence)
these are places where prey can hide away and get relief from being hunted by predators
lungs (amphibian traits)
these breathing structures are simple and sac-like in amphibians, and are not good at gas exchange compared to other animals
polar deserts
these deserts form at the poles because the very cold air here and cannot collect much moisture and remains dry
rays (Gnathostomes)
these fish can be viewed as "flattened" sharks and exemplify shark diversity; have an extremely flexible cartilage skeleton and are able to move very delicately and intricately
sticklebacks
these fish live in lakes in British Columbia; lakes with two species of them show evidence of resource partitioning- the species develop two different feeding methods to be able to coexist: - limnetic= lives and feeds on upper surface of lake - benthic= lives and feeds in the lowest/deepest part of the lake
trap flowers
these flowers exemplify how plants have adapted to ensure that they fulfill their pollination goals
methods of predator prey coexistence
these methods allow predators and prey to coexist: 1. refuges 2. cycling 3. few predators 4. generalist predators
Choanoflagellates (opisthokonts)
these opisthokontic protists are the closest living relatives of animals; one of these is likely the ancestor of all animals, and they are closely related to sponges in terms of structure
blue and red-footed boobies
these two birds cannot interbreed due to different mating behaviors that do not attract each other; example of behavioral reproductive isolation
Galium saxatile and pumilium
these two very similar plants were involved in the first experiment that proved competition existed in nature; they can thrive on each other's home soil when planted alone, but when planted together, the plant on it's home soil always dominates
why were prions called slow viruses
they were originally called slow viruses because years would pass between when the disease would appear and when it could be detected
mantle
thickened sheet of skin that covers and surrounds the mollusk respiratory organs- sometimes is used as a shell for general protection
Aristolochia flower (goal achievement of pollination)
this flower is large and tube-shaped with a trumpet-like opening that leads to its stigma being deep down in the tube, requiring flies to travel through a patch of hairs and deep into the flower in order to pollinate; once flies leave their pollen on the stigma, they cannot leave because the hairs allow them into the flower but do not allow them out; in an overnight process, the stigma of the flower release their own pollen which dissolves the hairs and lets the fly free; this is an example of how flowers have adapted ways of assuring their pollination goals are achieved
therapsids
this group of synapsids evolved from the earlier Pelycosaur synapsids just before dinosaur age; completely endothermic, had hair, and were active during colder winters; most of them died off in the dinosaur age, but the ones who survived are now modern day mammals
dinosaurs (diapsids)
this group of well known reptiles evolved directly from archosaurs with certain adaptations- their legs pointed directly down from their body instead of out to the side; this allowed them to develop unprecedented speed and agility not seen in earlier archosaurs; dominated for 150 million years before extinction
post-anal tail
this is a tail extending away from the anus; all chordates have this tail at some point in their development
Predators lower prey abundance
this is the main effect of predation, and what occurs by definition of predation- predators eating prey will limit prey numbers
Wild lettuce (lactuca sp.)
this plant went through speciation because it was not able to interbreed with other populations due to different breeding periods; example of temporal reproductive isolation
nudibranch
this sea slug is a classic example of aposematic coloring which indicates its high toxicity; also an example of predators using toxins, because they use the jellyfish toxin for their venom as they consume the jellyfish
pea aphids
this small green insect species can be found on two different species of flower that grow closely together; however, the insects on each flower are actually very different from each other despite looking extremely similar; this species is a clear example of the early stages of sympatric speciation
chlorophyll types
three first types of chlorophyll are a, b, and c; red algae have a, brown algae have a and c, green algae have a and b, and land plants have a and b
Crick and Brenner experiments and results
through their experiments in deleting nucleotides in an RNA strain, they concluded that the genetic code is read as a triplet of nucleotides continuously, no punctuation. They also found the codes for amino acids to be degenerate, meaning more than one codon can code for the same amino acid.
How is time represented on a phylogeny
time runs from the bottom (past) to the top (present)
rotifers (Lophotrochozoan)
tiny pseudocoelomates with a complete gut (both mouth and anus) and complex organs; move by beating cilia; typically need water to survive, but can dry out and remain dormant for an extended period if necessary; take in food through a specialized part called the rotifer corona
Microsporidia
tiny, obligate parasites who infect their hosts with a polar tube; they are some of the smallest extant eukaryotes and cause chronic waste diseases in those they infect (weight loss, loss of fertility); lack true mitochondria, but might not require them due to their parasitic lifestyle; have their own version of mitochondria called mitosomes
foot
tough muscular structure used by mollusks for movement and attachment; also used for food capture in some mollusks
phloem
tracheid cell network that transports sugar and nutrients down the plant
xylem (UP)
tracheid cell network that transports water and minerals up the plant
benefits of tracheids
tracheids are beneficial because they allow plants to grow and more efficiently transport their nutrients and other substances
homoplasious traits/ convergent traits
traits resulting from convergent evolution; the trait develops independently in two different lineages- no common ancestor
Tiktaalik
transitional fossil between fish and tetrapods
making trees with DNA data
trees based on genetic data are much more accurate because they have physical evidence to back up their organization, while trees based on phenotypes are based more on observations and are less accurate in indicating evolutionary relatedness of organisms
4 extant reptile groups
tuataras, lizards and snakes, turtles and tortoises, crocodilians
turtles and tortoises (reptiles)
turtles and tortoises are included in a reptile group together; both groups are similar because they have no teeth and have shells; turtles are aquatic, but many come back to land to lay their eggs; tortoises are terrestrial; both turtles and tortoises are paraphyletic individually, but are monophyletic when grouped together
Diplomonads and Parabasalids (excavates)
two excavate protists that do not have mitochondria- prove that eukaryotes can live without mitochondria; common example is the giardia intestinalis, which causes diarrhea
Bryozoans and Entoprocts (Lophotrochozoan)
two groups of Bilaterians that are colonial- they group by collectively secreting a membrane around their colony that protects them and provides them nutrients; reproduce sexually; very common in coastal areas
trait and habitat convergence
two species can come to have the same trait, called converging on that trait, without ever being related; this can be caused by similar lifestyles or living in a similar climate/habitat; convergence also helps explain which habitats/regions of the world are similar to each other
anemone and coral
two species in the Cnidarian group that exhibit a polyp shape
sea jellies, box jellies
two species that all fall in the Cnidarian animal group that both exhibit a medusa shape
snowshoe hare and lynx
two species that are a classic example of a predator-prey cycle; their cycle lasts around 10 years- when snowshoe hair pop's fall, lynx follow soon after, and vice versa
Two State Cases vs. Multi-State Cases
two state cases are crossings of either/or nature (one thing or another affects the traits) while multi-state cases are crossings where multiple things can affect trait expression
plasmodial and cellular slime molds (amoebozoans)
two types of amoezoboan protists that reproduce and exist asexually; they grow indefinitely as long as there is enough food to sustain them, and if there isn't enough food, they stop reproducing and go into a resting period; both groups feed through oozing which engulfs food particles
truffles and morels
two types of ascomycetes that are commonly used in cooking
mormon tea
type of ephedra gymnosperm that grows in the US and has many medical uses; has been used to treat syphilis, arthritis, asthma, and colds
Gingkos
type of gymnosperm once though to be extinct- only one species remains called the gingko biloba; they are dioecious (separate male and female parts) and have motile sperm
foraminiferans (Rhizarians)
unicellular, Rhizarian, marine protist species that fossilizes easily due to the inorganic material in their shells; usually only 1mm across in length- very tiny
rhizarians
unicellular, aquatic protist group consisting of three species identifiable by their thin, rigid, psuedopodia
ciliates (alveolates)
unicellular, heterotrophic, alveolate protists that move using their cilia; famous example is a paramecium, a common marine ciliate
Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO)
unusual climate anomaly that involves a large change in ocean temperature lasting 20 to 30 years in Northern Pacific; fluctuates between warm and cold PDOs for each 20-30 year phase; can occur over El Ninos and La Ninas and further effect global weather patterns
crypsis (prey defense)
using a disguise to hide from a predator in plain sight; happens in two ways: cryptic coloration and object mimicry/ masquerade
ring species (incomplete speciation)
variation that occurs when populations of a species are separated by a "ring" (mountain range, desert) are still able to breed through intermediate populations of the species (ex. the desert in California creates a ring for the salamander species to interbreed around; coastal salamanders and mountain range salamanders will interbreed through intermediate salamander species around the desert/ring, therefore making their speciation incomplete)
subspecies (incomplete speciation)
variations of a species that live in different geographic areas, but that will still interbreed if they encounter each other; common example is the rat snake- lives in many different geographic areas in American which causes its variation as a species
benefits of varied tissues
varying tissues allows for increased cell specialization, which creates specialized tissues that help organisms to perform more functions (movement, thinking, growth) and perform functions more efficiently
tetrapods
vertebrate animals with four limbs
endoskeleton supported by vertebrae (vertebrate traits)
vertebrates have endoskeletons (internal skeletons) made of bone and cartilage that replaces their notochord in development; these skeletons are made of living, growing, strong tissues, which allows for large size and easy movement
internal organs (vertebrate traits)
vertebrates have lungs, liver, kidneys, endocrine glands, stomach, etc. all suspended in a coelem
circulatory system powered by a muscular heart (vertebrate traits)
vertebrates possess a highly advanced circulatory system powered by a muscular heart; good circulation allows vertebrates to be big so they can effectively circulate blood across their large bodies
snails
very common Gastropod with shell
firmicutes
very diverse group of prokaryotes that are gram + with thick cell walls; some can be extremely deadly and toxic, and some can form endospores, which are heat resistant structures that help the organism to survive harsh conditions when needed; these prokaryotes can also remain dormant (inactive) for thousands of years
C. elegans
very famous nematode that exhibits eutely with 959 cells by the time it reaches maximum development; the model organism of the field of developmental biology because of its low cell count that has a limit and its easily observable development
lanceletes (non-vertebral chordates)
very small chordates who use their notochord to burrow- they retain their notochord in adulthood; gonads burst during reproduction; chordate traits can be clearly seen for their whole life
tuataras (reptiles)
very small, rare group of reptiles- used to be widespread, but only two species remaining; they only live on certain islands off the coast of New Zealand
chlamydias
very small, spherical, parasitic cells that cause STDs and other infections; they are obligate parasites, which means they cannot live independently
Nematodes/ Roundworms (Ecydysozoan)
very species rich group- almost 2.5 million estimated to exist; they are typically parasitic and found almost everywhere- all organisms have some kind of parasite of this organism on them; covered by a cuticle that they molt; famous species is called C. elegans, which exhibits eutely
monocots
very successful angiosperms (about 70,000 species) with trimerous parts; have thin leaves with parallel veins; economically important angiosperm- grain products (corn, wheat, quinoa), and other products like palm, onions, bananas, and ginger are all this as well as lilies, daffodils and tulips
horsehair worms (Ecydysozoan)
very thin worm group that has variable length; can either be free-living in fresh water or parasitic; it is believed that the adults may not eat because they have no mouth and a non-functional gut
viral hereditary material
viruses contain either DNA or RNA, but never both of them
icosahedral virus shape
viruses with this shape have a capsid made up of triangles of protein that form a spherical shape optimal for holding lots of genetic material in as small a space as possible
helical virus shape
viruses with this shape have capsids made of proteins arranged in a helix shape around genetic material
binal virus shape
viruses with this shape have elements of both the icosahedral and helical shape (ex. a virus with a icosahedral head and a helical body structure); normally complex viruses come in this shape
distraction displays (behavioral prey defense)
visual display used to distract predators away from a nesting site or from other individuals of the prey species
reproductive strategy
ways a species uses its energy to produce offspring, helps determine fertility rates; includes factors like mate choice, mating frequency, mate defense, and parental care among other factors; males and females have different strategies for reproduction
why do we only spend one day on 2/3rds of the tree of lif
we only spend one day on 2/3rds of the tree of life because we know very little overall about prokaryotes
Strepsirrhini/ wet-nosed primates
wet-nosed primates; they are the most ancient primate group who were once prevalent globally, but now mainly live in Africa (Madagascar) and East Asia; they are aboreal (tree-dwelling) and nocturnal, which causes them to have large eyes with incredible vision so they can see in the trees and in the dark; contains lemurs, galagos/bush babies, and lorises
intraspecific competition leading to less interspecific
when a species engages in intraspecific competition, its keeps its population low, allowing them to compete less with their interspecific competitors for resources (ex. squirrels and birds- explained separately to save space)
character displacement
when competition leads to a change in a physical trait of a species, which then leads to less physical similarities between the two competing species and eventual coexistence
resource acquisition
when males in a species bring back food and other necessary items to keep their mate and offspring alive; another benefit of the choosy mating process for females
parasitism (symbioses)
when one organism benefits and the other is harmed; most common is one organism eating another (+/-)
predation
when one species eats another; positive for predator and negative for prey; conflict between the two causes prey to develop hiding/evasive strategies and predators to develop location strategies (+/-)
competitive exclusion
when one species wins a competition and permanently eliminates another competitor (ex. Paramecium Aurelia and Caudatum- explained separately)
zygosporangium
when plasmogamy occurs in zygomycetes, the cells from both mating types fuse WITHOUT nuclei fusion, and this firmly spherical structure of combined nuclei from the two fungi mating types is produced
alarm calling (behavioral prey defense)
when prey make loud calls and noises to alert the entire group that a predator is nearby
Balancing selection
when selection maintains multiple alleles at larger than expected frequencies; two different ways this happens: - heterozygote advantage - negative frequency dependent selection
incomplete speciation
when species still find ways come into contact and interbreed despite having varied phenotypes and being from different habitats or geographical areas (ex. six types of rat snake with different colors and patterns that live in different regions of the United States will still interbreed if they encounter each other)
Klamath weed and chrysolina beetle
when the klamath weed was introduced, it became invasive, so the beetle was brought in to predate it, and the beetle eventually predated the weed to extinction- an example of mutual extinction observed in nature
zygospore
when the zygosporangium undergoes fertilization an karyogamy, the nuclei of the two mating types that were combined in the zygosporangium fuse and produce this structure, which can remain dormant for a long time until the zygomycete is ready to reproduce
competition
when two or more species need the same resource, and the use of it by one reduces its availability for the other (-/-)
Coevolution
when two species depend on each other to evolve and evolve together; happens when they rely on each other (ex. plants and pollinators) or oppose each other (ex. predators and prey)
coastal mountains and rain shadows (topography/ elevation)
winds collect moisture as they cross ocean; coastal mountains force warm/wet air upwards, dropping rain as the air cools; the dry air swoops downward on the other side of mountain and warms, creating desert - windward side= lush/moist - leeward= dry/desert-like
Difference between incomplete dominance and codominance
with incomplete dominance, the traits of the parents blend; this blending does not occur with codominance
Chloranthaceae
woody group of angiosperms found in tropics, not much known about them
daffodil
yellow-petaled flower that is a monocot
Given a DNA or RNA transcript, can you "build" a protein
yes you can by using an amino acid table