exam 1 Flashcards

1
Q

phonetic approach to evolutionary trees

A

grouping organisms based on current similarities

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2
Q

cladistics approach to evolutionary trees

A

grouping organisms based on common ancestory, more common approach

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3
Q

monophyletic

A

a common ancestor and all of their descendants

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4
Q

paraphyletic

A

a common ancestor and some but not all of their descendants

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5
Q

polyphyletic

A

groups of organisms not sharing a common ancestor

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6
Q

Occam’s razor

A

parsimony; the idea that the evolutionary tree with the fewest steps is most likely correct because the odds of convergence and regression are low

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7
Q

polytomy

A

not enough information is available to separate two groups or to determine where the two groups diverged

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8
Q

homologies

A

shared morphological or molecular traits; fundamental similarities underlie the physical differences ex: limb structure

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9
Q

plesiomorphies

A

ancestral homologies

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10
Q

apomorphies

A

derived homologies

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11
Q

autoapomorphies

A

apomorphies unique to a specific group

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12
Q

synapomorphies

A

apomorphies shared among a small group, most commonly used to build cladistic trees

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13
Q

theory of special creation

A

organisms were created individually by a creator and never change

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14
Q

theory of descent with modification

A

microevolution, macroevolution, speciation, and species derived from shared ancestory

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15
Q

micro evolution

A

species have minor changes throughout time, proved by selective breeding, variation creates differential success, and vestigial structures

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16
Q

speciation

A

lineages split and diverge into new species,

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17
Q

macro evolution

A

over long periods of time, new forms of life rise from the old; proven by fossils which prove extinction, succession, and transitional forms

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18
Q

vestigial structures

A

a body part that has lost function and become useless in one species but remains functional in closely related species ex: the human coccyx

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19
Q

3 stages of speciation

A
  1. a single population
  2. 1 population divided into interbreeding subpopulations
  3. formation of distinct populations with limited interbreeding
    ex: sickle backs
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20
Q

species

A

population or group of populations capable of interbreeding

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21
Q

ring species

A

a population found in all stages of speciation in a geographical ring, when thought of as a clock 12 and 1 cannot interbreed but all other neighboring species can ex: black backed and herring gulls

22
Q

law of succesion

A

pattern of similarities between fossils and extant groups in the same geographical areas

23
Q

transitional forms

A

species seemingly halfway between other species demonstrating evolution, help test the hypotheses of evolution ex: tiktaaluk

24
Q

processed pseudogenes

A

nonfunctional copies of normal genes that originate when processed mRNAs are accidentally reverse transcribed and placed back in the genome lacking introns and promoters; develop mutations over time making it possible to predict the age

25
evolution requires
fidelity: genetic material is passed unchanged & mutability: genetic material can change
26
repetetive DNA
coding and noncoding regions of DNA are repeated
27
point mutations
single nucleotide substitutions
28
missense mutation
SNP that results in the change of a single amino acid
29
nonsense mutation
changes a normal amino acid to a stop codon
30
synonymous mutation
silent, no change in the amino acid sequence
31
frameshift mutation
insertion or deletion of a base pair causing the reading frame to shift resulting in a completely different code
32
macromutations
large mutations altering up to whole chromosomes
33
inversions
2 breaks in DNA, a 180 degree rotation and reinsertion preventing crossing over
34
translocations
exchange of segments by non homologous chromosomes
35
polyploidy
increasing the number of chromosomes often due to failure of meiotic division
36
autotetraploidy
4N gametes combining from a species, typically not viable
37
allotetraploidy
hybrid between 2 species, more likely to be fertile and viable, often acting as an instant speciation event
38
gene duplication events
occur via unequal crossing over by putting 2 alleles of the same gene on one chromosome
39
paralogous
2 or more genes in the same genome that share a common ancestor through speciation ex: alpha and beta hemoglobin
40
orthologous
2 or more genes in different species that share a common ancestor
41
hardy weinberg requirements
no mutation, no selection, no migration, random mating, and an infinite population
42
deep homology
genes shared across a wide variety of groups
43
mutation
a weak evolutionary force, provides material for evolutionary change but must be acted upon by another force for evolution to occur
44
fitness
variation in the ability to survive and reproduce, measured by fecundity: number of offspring
45
relative fitness
fitness in relation to other genotypes of the same gene
46
deleterious recessive allele
dominant allele becomes fixed, highest mean fitness when p=1
47
deleterious dominant allele
recessive allele becomes fixed, highest mean fitness when p=0
48
overdominances
heterozygous advantage, both alleles even out around 0.5 highest mean fitness when p=0.5, stabilizing selection
49
underdominance
homozygous advantage, whichever allele has the higher starting frequency becomes fixed, highest mean fitness when p=1 or 0, disruptive selection
50
polygenic characters
coming from multiple loci, more difficult to determine models for so phenotypes are used
51
frequency dependant selection
the most common phenotype is selected against often flipping back and forth until stabilizing ex: fish with one sided mouths
52
multiple niche polymorphism
multiple forms of a single species exist to fill different ecological niches, requiring a heterogeneous environment ex: large and small billed finches