exam 1 Flashcards
phonetic approach to evolutionary trees
grouping organisms based on current similarities
cladistics approach to evolutionary trees
grouping organisms based on common ancestory, more common approach
monophyletic
a common ancestor and all of their descendants
paraphyletic
a common ancestor and some but not all of their descendants
polyphyletic
groups of organisms not sharing a common ancestor
Occam’s razor
parsimony; the idea that the evolutionary tree with the fewest steps is most likely correct because the odds of convergence and regression are low
polytomy
not enough information is available to separate two groups or to determine where the two groups diverged
homologies
shared morphological or molecular traits; fundamental similarities underlie the physical differences ex: limb structure
plesiomorphies
ancestral homologies
apomorphies
derived homologies
autoapomorphies
apomorphies unique to a specific group
synapomorphies
apomorphies shared among a small group, most commonly used to build cladistic trees
theory of special creation
organisms were created individually by a creator and never change
theory of descent with modification
microevolution, macroevolution, speciation, and species derived from shared ancestory
micro evolution
species have minor changes throughout time, proved by selective breeding, variation creates differential success, and vestigial structures
speciation
lineages split and diverge into new species,
macro evolution
over long periods of time, new forms of life rise from the old; proven by fossils which prove extinction, succession, and transitional forms
vestigial structures
a body part that has lost function and become useless in one species but remains functional in closely related species ex: the human coccyx
3 stages of speciation
- a single population
- 1 population divided into interbreeding subpopulations
- formation of distinct populations with limited interbreeding
ex: sickle backs
species
population or group of populations capable of interbreeding