Evolution: Unit 4, Topic 2 Flashcards
What is Evolution?
- The change in the genetic composition of a population during successive generations.
- may result in the development of new species.
What are the 2 types of evolutions?
- Micro and Macro Evolution
Microevolution:
- small-scale variations of allele frequencies within a species or population
- descendants are of the same taxonomic group as the ancestor
- refers to any change ein the gene pool of a populations
- occurs at the species level
- Occurs due to mutation, selection, gene flow, and genetic drift.
Macroevolution:
- variation of allele frequencies at or above the level of species over geological time, resulting in the divergence of taxonomic groups.
- descendants it is a different taxonomic group to the ancestor
- almost identical to microevolution, but different in time scales
- changes occur between species and through a longer time.
What is Evolutionary radiation?
- an increase in taxonomic diversity or morphological disparity
- increase in the diversity of clade
- The diversity of the clade is generally measured by taxonomic value.
- may be slow or rapid.
- usually follows after mass extinction.
What is mass extinction?
- the rapid and widespread extinction of a large number (75%) of species, due to a catastrophic global event or rapid, widespread environmental change.
- when the phenotype, viability, or reproductive success of a species fails to change in response to environmental change, a species can die out.
What is the evolutionary timescale?
- geological timescale subdivided into eon, eras, periods and epochs
what are phylogenetic relationships?
- evolutionary relationship that exists between a group of species
- the closer the relationship between two organisms, the greater the similarities in their DNA.
Phylogenetic tree - shows evolutionary relationships and the point at which lineages diverged
What are comparative Genomics?
- involves comparing the structure of living things and fossil evidence of extinct species to infer evolutionary relationships with a focus on DNA sequences.
- identifies similarities and differences in DNA from different sources.
What is the theory of Evolution?
Organic life on Earth has changed over long periods of time and continues to change by the process of natural selection.
What is the evidence for evolution?
homologous structures - evidence for common ancestry (divergence),
analogous structures - similar selective pressures can produce similar adaptations (convergent)
similarities and difference among biological molecules (DNA sequence) are used to determine species’ relatedness
biological patterns - how species are related to each other
the fossil record provides information about what species existed at particular times of Earth’s history.