CHP 18- Evolution (BIO 1)
While an organism is alive, its ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-_________ is the same as that in the atmosphere
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___________ _____________ _____________ (1823-1913), a British naturalist who studied plants and animals of the Malay Archipelago, arrived at the same conclusion at the same time as Darwin
Alfred Russell Wallace
Pre-Darwinian Ideas about evolution __________________ (384-322 BCE) -visualized organisms as "moving toward a more perfect state"
Aristotle
______________ _____________observations while voyaging on the HMS Beagle were the basis for his evolutionary theory. He tried to explain the similarities between animals and plants of the arid Galápagos Islands and the humid South American mainland.
Charles Darwin
_______________ ___________ (1809-1882) proposed that all species currently living on our planet arose from earlier ones by the process of gradual evolution
Charles Darwin
At one time the continents were joined to form a supercontinent. ________________ ____________, which caused the various landmasses to break apart and separate, has played a major role in evolution.
Continental drift
1831: ______________ embarked on a 5-year exploratory cruise around the world aboard the HMS Beagle -collected and cataloged thousands of plant and animal specimens and kept notes of his observations -noticed similarities b/w animals and plants of the Galapagos and those of South America, and saw differences in reptiles and birds from one island to the next
Darwin
_______________'s Theory of Natural Selection
Darwin
__________'s On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection was published in 1859, but ______________'s Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection, was published in 1870
Darwin's, Wallace's
what are the 4 premises of evolution described by Darwin and Wallace.
First, genetic variation exists among the individuals in a population. Second, the reproductive ability of each species causes its populations to have the potential to geometrically increase in number over time. Third, organisms compete with one another for the resources needed for life, such as food, living space, water, and light. Fourth, offspring with the most favorable combination of inherited characteristics are most likely to survive and reproduce, passing those genetic characteristics to the next generation.
Island Population _______________ ____________________ Darwin inferred that these birds are derived from a common ancestral population of seed-eating birds from South America. Variation in their beaks is the result of adaptation to the availability of different kinds of food. The cactus finch, which feeds on the fleshy parts of cacti such as their flowers, has a long, pointed beak. (b) The large ground finch has an extremely heavy, nutcrackertype beak adapted for eating thick, hard-walled seeds. (c) The warbler finch has a slender beak for eating insects. (d) The woodpecker finch digs insects out of bark and crevices by using spines, twigs, or even dead leaves.
Galapagos finches
1831: Darwin embarked on a 5-year exploratory cruise around the world aboard the HMS Beagle -collected and cataloged thousands of plant and animal specimens and kept notes of his observations -noticed similarities b/w animals and plants of the _______________ and those of _____________ ____________, and saw differences in reptiles and birds from one island to the next
Galapagos, South America
Pre-Darwinian Ideas about evolution __________________ (1744-1829) -suggested that organisms pass traits they acquired during their lifetimes to their offspring
Jean Baptiste de Lamarck
______________ _______________ ___________ ______________ was the first scientist to propose that organisms undergo change over time as a result of some natural phenomenon rather than divine intervention. -He thought that organisms were endowed with a vital force that drove them to change toward greater complexity over time. -He thought that organisms could pass traits acquired during their lifetimes to their offspring.
Jean Baptiste de Lamarck
_____________ proposed the theory that traits acquired during an organism's lifetime could be passed along to their offspring.
Lamarck
_______________ was the first to propose that organisms change over time as a result of some natural phenomenon.
Lamarck
_______________ _______________was probably the first to recognize that fossils are the remains of extinct organisms.
Leonardo da Vinci
______________ suggested that the conflict b/w population growth and food supply generates famine, disease, and war, which serve as inevitable brakes on population growth
Malthus
_____________________ made the important mathematical observation that populations increase in size geometrically until checked by factors in the environment.
Malthus
The modern synthesis theory incorporates the ideas and observations of Darwin and ________________
Mendel
The Modern Synthesis Darwin was unable to explain how individuals transmit traits to the next generation, or why individuals vary -about the same time, Gregor Mendel was working on the basic pattern of inheritance -only in the 1930s and 1940s did biologists combine the principles of _____________ ____________ with Darwin's theory of natural selection
Mendelian inheritance
Darwin's Theory of ____________ _______________ -better adapted organisms are more likely to survive and become parents of the next generation -as a result of this, the population changes over successive generations -the frequency of favorable traits increases, and less favorable traits become scarce
Natural Selection
Developing a Theory Upon return home, Darwin attempted to develop a explanation for the distribution of species among the islands -Studied Charles Lyell's _____________ ____________ ____________, which described how Earth's features developed slowly over long periods by geological processes -Noted that many varieties of plants and animals could be developed in just a few generations by ___________ ______________
Principles of Geology, artificial selection
___________________ present in a rock provide a way to accurately measure the rock's age.
Radioisotopes
Developing a Theory Darwin studied ___________ _____________ (1766-1834), who suggested that inherited variations favorable to survival tend to be preserved, while unfavorable ones are eliminated -eventually, the accumulation of modifications might result in a new species
Thomas Malthus
Darwin applied ________________ ______________ ideas on the natural increase in human populations to natural populations. Darwin was influenced by the idea that Earth was extremely old, an idea promoted by Charles Lyell and other geologists.
Thomas Malthus's
Both Darwin and ________________ arrived at the conclusion that evolution occurred by natural selection.
Wallace
An evolutionary modification that improves the chances of survival of oak trees in North America would be considered to be an ___________________.
adaptation
Natural selection results in _________________, evolutionary modifications that improve the chances of survival and reproductive success in a particular environment. Over time, enough changes may accumulate in geographically separated populations to produce new species.
adaptations
_______________: an evolutionary modification that improves the chances of survival and reproductive success in a given environment
adaption
__________________: evolution of pesticide resistance in insects and other pests
agriculture
the fossil record is biased toward _____________ organisms and the few ______________ habitats conducive to fossil formation Example: rarely are tropical rainforest organisms found due to rapid decay
aquatic, terrestrial
Darwin was influenced by ____________ ________________, in which breeders develop many varieties of domesticated plants and animals in just a few generations
artificial selection
When horse breeders mate female and male horses to produce the strongest and fastest racing horse, they are using _______________ ___________________ to produce these traits.
artificial selection
The study of the past and present geographic distribution of plants and animals is called ____________________
biogeography
______________: the study of the past and present geographic distribution of organisms -Darwin observed that species found on ocean islands tend to resemble species of the nearest mainland, even if the environment is different*** -Darwin also observed that species on ocean islands do not tend to resemble species on islands with similar environments in other parts of the world
biogeography
___________________, the geographic distribution of organisms, affects their evolution. Areas that have been separated from the rest of the world for a long time contain organisms that have evolved in isolation and are therefore unique to those areas.
biogeography
The use of bacteria to digest oil from an oil tanker spill is an example of _______________________
bioremediation
_____________________: evolution of micro-organisms in polluted soils for clean-up
bioremediation
The Fossil Record some more recent remains have been well preserved in _______________, ____________, ______________ (__________________), or __________ Example: The remains of a woolly mammoth frozen in Siberian ice for more than 25,000 years were so well preserved that part of its DNA could be analyzed
bogs, tar, amber (ancient tree resin), or ice
Artificial Selection in ______________ ____________ -an enlarged terminal bud (the head) was selected in cabbage, flower clusters in broccoli and cauliflower, axillary buds in brussels sprouts, leaves in collards and kale and stems in kohlrabi
brassica oleracea
_______________ _________ -dates the carbon remains of anything that was once living -is continuously produced in the atomosphere from nitrogen 14
carbon-14
What types of gene changes are most associated with the evolution of new anatomical features in a population?
changes the affect developmental patterns
__________________ _________________: uses evolutionary principles of population genetics for rare and endangered species
conservative management
In 1915, Alfred Wegener proposed that a single land mass called Pangaea had broken apart in a process known as _______________ __________________
continental drift
Homoplastic features demonstrate ______________ _______________, in which organisms with separate ancestries adapt in similar ways to comparable environmental demands.
convergent evolution
There are times when organisms living in similar environments but not in the same geographical region evolve similar adaptations. The independent evolution of similar structures is referred to as _______________ _______________
convergent evolution
__________________ _____________ _____________: individuals with the most favorable combination of characteristics are more likely to reproduce and survive
differential reproductive success
The Effect of Chance on ____________________ -natural selection appears to be more important agent of evolutionary change than chance Examples: Fruit fly evolution proceeded the same way on two different continents (large and small wings) -Stickleback evolution proceeded the same way in three different lakes (large and small species) -if it were chance, then evolution would have likely been different observed pattern
evolution
______________: the accumulation of genetic changes within populations over time
evolution
_______________ is the accumulation of inherited changes within a population over time; this is the unifying concept of biology because it links all fields of the life sciences into a coherent body of knowledge.
evolution
_________ ______________ requires that an organism be buried under conditions that slow or prevent the decay process -this is most likely if the remains are covered quickly by a sediment of fine solid particles suspended in water -over time, sediments harden to form sedimentary rock, and minerals replace the organism's remains so that many details of its structure, even cellular details are preserved
fossil formation
Another reason for bias in the ______________ ___________ is that organisms with hard body parts are more likely to form fossils than those with soft body parts
fossil record
The __________________ ___________ shows a progression from the earliest unicellular organisms to the organisms living today
fossil record
Direct evidence of evolution comes from _______________, the remains or traces of ancient organisms. Layers of sedimentary rock normally occur in their sequence of deposition, with the more recent layers on top of the older, earlier ones. I
fossils
___________________ are remains of traces typically left in sedimentary rock by previously existing organisms
fossils
Evidence for evolution a vast body of scientific evidence supports evolution: Name the 5
fossils, biogeography, comparative anatomy, molecular biology, and developmental biology
Evolution occurs over many ____________________
generations
Evolution is the accumulation of ____________________ changes within _____________________ over time
genetic, populations
Island Populations -Over time, enough changes may accumulate in __________________ __________________ populations (often with slightly different environments) to produce new species
geographically separated
Evolutionary Relationships using fossils of organisms from different _______________ ages, scientists can sometimes infer lines of descent (evolutionary relationships) that give rise to modern organisms
geologic
_____________ ______________have basic structural similarities even though the structures may be used in different ways because these derive from the same structure in a common ancestor. Evolutionary affinities exist among the organisms that have these features
homologous features
____________________ features are those derived from the same structure in a common ancestor and the condition is known as ________________.
homologous, homology
Non-homologous features that have similar function but evolved independently are called _______________ ________________
homoplastic features
____________ ____________ evolved independently to have similar functions in distantly related organisms.
homoplastic features
_____________ fossils are the remains of organisms that existed over a relatively short geological time period and that died and were preserved as fossils in large numbers. They are used to identify specific sedimentary layers and to arrange strata in chronological order.
index
Layers of sedimentary rock normally occur in their sequence of deposition, with the more recent layers on top of the older, earlier ones. I_____________ ______________ characterize a specific layer over large geographic areas
index fossils
________________ ____________: organisms that existed for a relatively short geologic time but were preserved as fossils in large numbers over large geographic areas
index fossils
The genetic changes that bring about evolution do not occur in ___________________ organisms but rather in ________________________
individual, populations
Pre-Darwinian Ideas about evolution __________________ (1452-1519) -correctly interpreted fossils as the remains of once existing animals that had become extinct
leonardo da vinci
_________________ ______________ _____________ ___________; organisms compete for limited resources; not all survive to reproduce
limits on population growth
______________________ -the major evolutionary events usually viewed over a long period, such as the formation of different species from common ancestors
macroevolution
Evolution of major taxonomic groups is called __________________ and evolution of populations is called _______________________.
macroevolution, microevolution
________________: rapid evolution of disease causing bacteria and viruses
medicine
____________________ -the minor evolutionary changes of populations, usually viewed over a FEW generations
microevolution
what are the two perspectives on evolution?
microevolution and macroevolution
Determining the Age of Fossils specific sedimentary rocks are identified by ___________ _____________ and __________ ___________ of certain organisms
mineral content and fossilized remains
The ____________ _______________ explains Darwin's observation of variation among offspring in terms of mutation, such as nucleotide substitutions -incorporates our expanding knowledge in genetics, systematics, paleontology, developmental biology, behavior, and ecology
modern synthesis
The _____________ ________________ combines Darwin's evolutionary theory by natural selection with modern genetics to explain why individuals in a population vary and how species adapt to their environment.
modern synthesis
The _______________ ______________ Darwin was unable to explain how individuals transmit traits to the next generation, or why individuals vary -about the same time, Gregor Mendel was working on the basic pattern of inheritance -only in the 1930s and 1940s did biologists combine the principles of Mendelian inheritance with Darwin's theory of natural selection
modern synthesis
__________________ provides the genetic variability that natural selection acts on during evolution.
mutation
The synthetic theory of evolution explains variation in terms of __________________, which are inheritable and therefore potential explanations for how traits are passed from one generation to another.
mutations
Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace independently proposed evolution by ______________ ________________, which is based on four observations.
natural selection
David Reznick and John Endler have studied the effects of predation intensity on the evolution of guppy populations in the laboratory and in nature. Such experiments are a powerful way for investigators to test the underlying processes of _______________ ____________
natural selection
____________ __________________ appears to be more important agent of evolutionary change than chance
natural selection
Although it cannot be proven, it appears that _________________ ________________ is a more important agent of evolutionary change than ___________________.
natural selection, chance
when an organism dies, the proportion of carbon-14 in its remains declines as carbon-14 decays to _______________ __________
nitrogen-14
___________________: in every generation each species has the capacity to produce more offspring than can survive
overproduction
What is Evolution? -______________________: a group of individuals of one species that live in the same geographic area at the same time -eventually, two of these may diverge to such degree that they become different species
population
Evolutionary Relationships Some fossils provide direct evidence of the origin of new species from __________________ species, including some transitional forms
pre-existing
_________________ ______________ emit nuclear particles and change into a different element (radioactive decay)
radioactive isotopes
Each _________________ has a characteristic rate decay; the time required for one half of a ________________'s atom to change into a different atom is its half-life Example: Uranium-235 decays into lead-207 with a half-life of 704 million years
radioisotope
Determining the Age of Fossils Fossils are dated by ____________ ___________ in sedimentary rock
relative positions
Aristotle was one of the first individuals to group and arrange organisms. To do this, he used what he called a _______________ ___________ _______________
scale of nature
_______________ ____________ forms by accumulation and solidification of particles produced by weathering of rocks; over time, they exhibit distinct layers, with the oldest at the bottom
sedimentary rock
A group of organisms that are capable of interbreeding are classified as a ____________________
species
What is Evolution? ____________________: a group of similar organisms that are capable of interbreeding with one another
species
____________________: individuals in a population exhibit variation in traits; some improve an individuals chance of survival and reproductive success- others do not
variation
Darwin's mechanism of evolution by natural selection consists of 4 observations on the natural world:
variation, overproduction, limits on population growth, differential reproductive success
_______________ structures are nonfunctional or degenerate remnants of structures that were present and functional in ancestral organisms. Structures occasionally become these as species adapt to different modes of life.
vestigial