Activity One & Two Flashcards

Review of concepts in Activity One of lab manual

1
Q

what is evolution defined as?

A

the change in genetic characteristics of a population over time

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2
Q

what is a haploid?

A

organism that has a single chromosome that has a given gene (so only express one allele)

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3
Q

what is a diploid?

A

organism that has two chromosomes with the same gene, therefore may have 2 copies of same allele or have two different alleles

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4
Q

what are frequencies of alleles in a population used to determine? what do they show?

A

used to determine phenotypic variation, changes in these frequencies over generations show evidence of evolution

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5
Q

what are the four processes that can drive evolution?

A
  1. natural selection
  2. genetic drift
  3. gene flow
  4. mutation
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6
Q

what is natural selection?

A

individuals with certain (beneficial) heritable traits that are better suited to their specific environment produce more offspring

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7
Q

what is genetic drift?

A

random allele frequency changes

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8
Q

what is gene flow?

A

migration of genes, between separated populations

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9
Q

what is mutation (in terms of processes driving evolution)?

A

the introduction of new alleles

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10
Q

What drives natural selection? (what is needed for natural selection to occur?)

A
  1. competition for limited resources
  2. phenotypic variation
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11
Q

What does natural selection act on?

A. population
B. individual phenotypes

A

B. individual phenotypes

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12
Q

what is a phenotype?

A

observable characteristics or traits of an organism (based on the expression of their genes)

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13
Q

what is phenotypic variation?

A

random mutation occurs & changes DNA sequence of a gene (or genes (aka genotype))

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14
Q

what types of affects can phenotypic variation result in?

A
  1. neutral
  2. lethal
  3. beneficial (very rarely)
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15
Q

what is meant by the term “fitness” when discussing biology?

A
  • the survival & therefore reproductive success of an organism.
  • leaving more offspring than other individuals in the population
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16
Q

what are possible causes for phenotypic variation to occur?

A
  1. inherited (mutation would occur in DNA replication)
  2. result of environmental conditions (change in response to environment)
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17
Q

what is phenotypic polymorphism?

A

when a species has two or more distinct phenotypes within a single population

18
Q

what is an adaptation?

A
  • features that allow an organism to survive in its environment
  • traits from natural selection before more prevalent in the population as a whole
19
Q

what is evolution actually changing?

A

the allele frequencies in a population over time

20
Q

why is the idea that “evolution occurs in individuals” wrong?

A
  • evolution is the change of allele frequencies of a population
  • individuals can adapt (which is not evolutionary change (change in genotype), rather an interaction between phenotype and environment)
  • natural selection, so adaptive advantages would get passed down (eg) giraffes cannot change the length of their necks, but the longer necked versions have adaptive advantage
21
Q

what are the most common misconceptions of evolution?

A
  1. … occurs in individuals
  2. … is for a purpose, goal, or progressive
  3. … perfects organism or leads to perfectly adapted organisms
  4. … is driven by mutation and therefore is random
  5. … is slow
22
Q

why is the idea that “evolution is for a purpose, a goal, or progressive” wrong?

A

inheritance isn’t based off of the organism “wanting it” it is caused by mutations (which can have bad effects), which leads to a degree of randomness

23
Q

why is the idea that “evolution perfects organism or leads to perfectly adapted organisms” wrong?

A
  • not all traits are adaptive in specific environments
  • fitness trade-offs may mean that the trait cannot be optimized (meaning the fitness is more important)
  • there can be genetic limitations, as in their DNA just does not allow for specific traits to occur even if in theory they would be beneficial
24
Q

why is the idea that “evolution is driven by mutation and therefore is random” wrong?

A

mutations are random, but the other part of evolution is the natural selection that occurs (which is not random)

25
why is the idea that "evolution is slow" wrong?
this is depends on the generation time of organisms, so can happen faster for some and slower for others
26
what are the most common misconceptions about natural selection?
1. = evolution 2. ... acts on the genotype as that was inherited
27
why is the idea that "natural selection = evolution" wrong?
- natural selection is only a mechanism of evolution (the others are genetic drift, mutation, and gene flow)
28
why is the idea that "natural selection acts on the genotype as that was inherited" wrong?
natural selection only acts on the phenotype (because that is what is interacting with the environment)
29
what is systematics?
branch of biology that attempts to categorize and classify the diversity of living things
30
what is phylogenetics?
- approach to classification that attempts to pinpoint species divergences over time, & indicate evolutionary relationships among groups of organisms. - used to determine the origins and relationships of all extinct and extant organisms in order to classify their evolutionary relationships with each other
31
what is taxonomy?
- the science of classifying, describing, and naming organisms. based on shared characteristics. - conventions by which organisms are named
32
what are monophyletic clades?
a group that includes a common ancestor and all of its descendants
33
what are cladistics?
- a school phylogenetic thought - attempt to derive and demonstrate evolutionary relationships based on common descent, but not the extent of divergence
34
what are phylogenies?
- family trees - constructed by systematists to show how they think the evolutionary relationships between these groups look - usually involves comparison of fossil and extinct species with living ones
35
what are homologous characteristics?
similarities in species that come from the same line of descent (common ancestors)
36
what is convergent evolution? what does it cause?
- when two or more unrelated species occur in habitats that have similar selection pressures (causing similarities in the species) - results in analogous characteristics
37
what are analogous characteristics?
similarities between species that do not have common ancestry (do not indicate evolutionary relationships), caused convergent evolution
38
which characteristics are more reliable for showing evolutionary relationships between species? (homologous or analogous)
homologous
39
what is the binomial system of nomenclature? who created it?
- Carl Linnaeus - used to create scientific name of species
40
what is the structure for the scientific name of a species (two parts)?
1. name of genus 2. name of epithet
41
what is the one taxa of a classification that is not capitalized?
specific epithet
42
which taxa of classification are always written either using italics or underlined?
- genus - epithet