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
Q

evolution requires

A

fidelity: genetic material is passed unchanged & mutability: genetic material can change

26
Q

repetetive DNA

A

coding and noncoding regions of DNA are repeated

27
Q

point mutations

A

single nucleotide substitutions

28
Q

missense mutation

A

SNP that results in the change of a single amino acid

29
Q

nonsense mutation

A

changes a normal amino acid to a stop codon

30
Q

synonymous mutation

A

silent, no change in the amino acid sequence

31
Q

frameshift mutation

A

insertion or deletion of a base pair causing the reading frame to shift resulting in a completely different code

32
Q

macromutations

A

large mutations altering up to whole chromosomes

33
Q

inversions

A

2 breaks in DNA, a 180 degree rotation and reinsertion preventing crossing over

34
Q

translocations

A

exchange of segments by non homologous chromosomes

35
Q

polyploidy

A

increasing the number of chromosomes often due to failure of meiotic division

36
Q

autotetraploidy

A

4N gametes combining from a species, typically not viable

37
Q

allotetraploidy

A

hybrid between 2 species, more likely to be fertile and viable, often acting as an instant speciation event

38
Q

gene duplication events

A

occur via unequal crossing over by putting 2 alleles of the same gene on one chromosome

39
Q

paralogous

A

2 or more genes in the same genome that share a common ancestor through speciation ex: alpha and beta hemoglobin

40
Q

orthologous

A

2 or more genes in different species that share a common ancestor

41
Q

hardy weinberg requirements

A

no mutation, no selection, no migration, random mating, and an infinite population

42
Q

deep homology

A

genes shared across a wide variety of groups

43
Q

mutation

A

a weak evolutionary force, provides material for evolutionary change but must be acted upon by another force for evolution to occur

44
Q

fitness

A

variation in the ability to survive and reproduce, measured by fecundity: number of offspring

45
Q

relative fitness

A

fitness in relation to other genotypes of the same gene

46
Q

deleterious recessive allele

A

dominant allele becomes fixed, highest mean fitness when p=1

47
Q

deleterious dominant allele

A

recessive allele becomes fixed, highest mean fitness when p=0

48
Q

overdominances

A

heterozygous advantage, both alleles even out around 0.5 highest mean fitness when p=0.5, stabilizing selection

49
Q

underdominance

A

homozygous advantage, whichever allele has the higher starting frequency becomes fixed, highest mean fitness when p=1 or 0, disruptive selection

50
Q

polygenic characters

A

coming from multiple loci, more difficult to determine models for so phenotypes are used

51
Q

frequency dependant selection

A

the most common phenotype is selected against often flipping back and forth until stabilizing ex: fish with one sided mouths

52
Q

multiple niche polymorphism

A

multiple forms of a single species exist to fill different ecological niches, requiring a heterogeneous environment ex: large and small billed finches