Evolution
adaptation
A characteristic that improves an individual's ability to survive and reproduce in a particular environment
camouflage
A structural adaptation that enables an organism to blend in with its environment
fitness
Ability of an organism to survive and reproduce in its environment
comparative embryology
Among different species, there are similarities in embryo appearance and anatomy. This concept supports the theory of evolution.
homologous structure
Body parts that are structurally similar in related species
analogous structure
Body parts that share a common function, but not structure
evolution
Change in an organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms.
genetic drift
Changes in the gene pool of a small population due to chance
comparative biochemistry
DNA is similar in species that share a common ancestor
Charles Darwin
English naturalist and scientist whose theory of evolution through natural selection was first published in 'On The Origin of the Species" in 1859 after a trip around the world on the HMS Beagle.
speciation
Evolutionary process in which new species arise.
mimicry
Gaining protection by looking and acting like a different species
bottleneck
Genetic drift resulting from the reduction of a population, such that the surviving population is no longer genetically representative of the original population.
founder effect
Genetic drift that occurs after a small number of individuals colonize a new area
biogeography
Geographic distribution of species meaning animals are closer together geographically are more alike than those separated
sexual selection
Mode of natural selection in which some individuals out reproduce other because they are better at securing mates
disruptive selection
Natural selection in which individuals on both extremes of a phenotypic range survive or reproduce more successfully than do individuals with intermediate phenotypes.
directional selection
Natural selection that favors individuals at one end of the phenotypic range.
stabilizing selection
Natural selection that favors intermediate variants by acting against extreme phenotypes.
derived trait
New feature that had not appeared in common ancestors
natural selection
Process by which individuals that are better suited to their environment survive and reproduce most successfully
artificial selection
Selection by humans for breeding of useful traits from the natural variation among different organisms
ancestral trait
more-primitive characteristic that appeared in common ancestors
vestigial structure
remnant of a structure that may have had an important function in a species' ancestors, but has no clear function in the modern species