Topic 1-4 Flashcards

1
Q

Biodiversity

A

The variety of life on Earth, including animals, plants, fungi, and microorganisms

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2
Q

3 Main Components of Biodiversity

A
  1. Genetic diversity
  2. Species diversity
  3. Ecosystem diversity
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3
Q

Types of Ecosystem services

A
  1. Provisioning services
  2. Regulating services
  3. Supporting services
  4. Cultural services
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4
Q

Provisioning services

A

Products humans obtain from nature including food, raw materials, medicines, energy, and water

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5
Q

Regulating services

A

Benefits of biodiversity that humans receive beyond raw materials, such as climate regulation, water and air purification, pollination, and pest control

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6
Q

Supporting services

A

Ecosystem services from biodiversity that are critical to biosphere viability. Ex: oxygen production, CO2 absorption, and cycling of biomass, nutrients, and water

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7
Q

Cultural services

A

Non-material benefits from biodiversity that people obtain from nature and ecosystems, such as recreational, aesthetic, and spiritual experiences

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8
Q

Threats to biodiversity

A
  1. Habitat loss
  2. Invasive species
  3. Overexploitation
  4. Global climate change
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9
Q

Scientific Method 4 Key Parts

A
  1. Observations
  2. Inductive Reasoning
  3. Forming hypotheses
  4. Testing hypotheses
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10
Q

Mechanistic Questions

A

What things are and how they work. Ex) what pigments make spiders green?

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11
Q

Evolutionary Questions

A

Questions about WHY things work how they do for observations. Ex) why is a spider green? How might it benefit the spider to be green?

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12
Q

Inductive Reasoning

A

Draw conclusions through the logical process of induction from repeated observations. It is how we make generalizations in biology.

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13
Q

Deductive Reasoning

A

Used to make specific predictions that can be used to test hypothesis with “if . . . Then . . .” Logic.

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14
Q

Limitations of hierarchical classification of binomial nomenclature

A
  1. Higher-level taxa are not directly comparable across different lineages because of the amount of morphological and genetic diversity
  2. Hierarchical classification does not provide information about evolutionary relationships
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15
Q

Systematics

A

The theory and practice of classifying organisms based on evolutionary history (phylogeny)

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16
Q

Phylogeny

A

Evolutionary relationships between organisms

17
Q

Why are Phylogenetic Trees important?

A

Biologists use phylogenies to:
- Organize biological diversity
- Visualize evolution
- Structure classifications
- Guide research

18
Q

Two Types of Data used to Infer Phylogenies

A
  1. Morphological data
  2. Molecular date (DNA, RNA, and protein structures)
19
Q

Cladograms

A

Phylogenetic tree that depicts evolutionary relationships where only the branching patter is important (branch length and position)

20
Q

Phylograms

A

Phylogenetic tree that depicts evolutionary patterns, and branch lengths represent evolutionary change. Branch length would mean time, or the number of character changes

21
Q

Phylogenetic Polytomies and what they indicate

A

Branch points on phylogenetic trees that have more than two taxa.
Indicates that there is insufficient data to determine relationships to lineages or rapid speciation

22
Q

Taxonomic Ranks

A

Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class Order, Family, Genus, Species

23
Q

Difference between Taxonomy v. Systematics

A

Taxonomy organizes organisms based on similarities and differences into taxonomic ranks, while systematics group organisms based on evolutionary relationships

24
Q

Clades

A

Groups that include a common ancestor to all its descendants

25
Homology v. Analogy
Two reasons why traits can appear similar between organisms. Homology is a similarity between organisms due to shared ancestry (homologous). Analogy is a similarity between organisms due to convergent evolution from an adaptation between similar environments (analogous)
26
4 Steps to Build a Phylogenetic Tree
1. Select the taxa 2. Identify homologous traits 3. Construct the phylogenetic trees 3. Validate the tree
27
Ingroup v. Outgroup
Ingroup: the group of taxa whose evolutionary relationships you are studying Outgroup: one or more taxa related to the Ingroup but that diverged earlier.
28
Basal Taxon
A taxon that diverges early in the history of a group and originates near the common ancestor of the phylogeny
29
Character states
The observed variations of a characteristic
30
Cladistics
Method to infer evolutionary relationships using homologous characters that group taxa based on shared derived characters,
31
Monophyletic
An adjective for a group of taxa that consists of an ancestor taxon, all its descendants, and no other unrelated taxa. Monophyletic group = Clade
32
Paraphyletic
An adjective for a grouping that consists of a common ancestor, but not all of the descendants of the common ancestor. They often arise from one or more highly divergent taxa that were removed form a once Monophyletic clade
33
Causes for Polyphyletic Grouping
Incorrect taxonomic classification, absence of fossil records, or multiple common ancestors
34
Polyphyletic
An adjective for a grouping that includes distantly related taxa but does not include the common ancestor of all group members
35
Synapomorphy
A derived character (apomorphy) present in an ancestral taxon and its descendants but is absent from distant ancestors
36
Symplesiomorphy
An ancestral character (plesiomorphy) present in several groups that inherited from a distant common ancestor