Unit 2 - Evolution Flashcards

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1
Q

What is evolution?

A

The change over time in the proportion of individuals in a population differing in 1 or more inherited traits.

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2
Q

What are the non-random processes that changes in allele frequency occur through?

A

Natural and sexual selection.

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3
Q

What is a random process that changes in allele frequency occurs through?

A

Genetic drift.

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4
Q

What does natural selection act on?

A

Genetic variation in populations.

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5
Q

What does variation in traits arise as a result of?

A

Mutations.

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6
Q

What is sexual selection?

A

The non-random process involving the selection of alleles that increase the individual’s chances of mating and producing offspring.

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7
Q

What might sexual selection lead to?

A

Sexual dimorphism.

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8
Q

What is sexual dimorphism?

A

The difference in appearance between males and females of the same species.

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9
Q

What can sexual selection be due to?

A

Male-male rivalry and female choice.

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10
Q

How is reproductive success increased in male-male rivalry?

A

Large size or weaponry increases access to females through conflict.

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11
Q

What does female choice involve?

A

Females assessing the fitness of males.

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12
Q

What are 4 signals that indicate fitness and are therefore beneficial in sexual selection?

A

Physical appearance or display
Chemical signs
Presence or absence of parasites
Earlier life history events

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13
Q

When does genetic drift occur?

A

When chance events cause unpredictable fluctuations in allele frequencies from one generation to the next.

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14
Q

Is genetic drift more important in small or large populations and why?

A

Small as more alleles are likely to be lost from the gene pool.

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15
Q

What are the two major types of genetic drift?

A

Population bottlenecks and founder effects.

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16
Q

When do population bottlenecks occur?

A

When a population size is reduced for at least one generation.

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17
Q

How do founder effects occur?

A

Through the isolation of a few members of a population from a larger population. The gene pool is not representative of that in the original gene pool.

18
Q

Why is a gene pool altered by genetic drift?

A

Certain alleles may be under-represented or over-represented and allele frequencies change.

19
Q

What happens to the rate of evolution when selection pressures are strong?

A

Rate of evolution is rapid.

20
Q

What are selection pressures?

A

Environmental factors that influence which individuals in a population pass on their alleles.

21
Q

What are the two types of selection pressure?

A

Biotic and abiotic.

22
Q

Give 4 examples of biotic selection pressures.

A

Competition, predation, disease, parasitism.

23
Q

Give 5 examples of abiotic selection pressures.

A

Changes in temperature, light, pH, humidity, salinity.

24
Q

What does the Hardy-Weinberg principle state?

A

In the absence of evolutionary influences, allele and genotype frequencies in a population will remain constant over the generations.

25
Q

What are the conditions for maintaining the HW equilibrium?

A

No natural selection, random mutation, no mating, large population size and no gene flow.

26
Q

What can the HW principle be used to determine?

A

Whether a change in allele frequency is occurring in a population over time.

27
Q

What is fitness?

A

Fitness is an indication of an individual’s ability to be successful at surviving and reproducing.

28
Q

What is fitness a measure of?

A

The tendency of some organisms to produce more surviving offspring than competing members of the same species.

29
Q

What two terms can fitness be measured in?

A

Absolute and relative fitness.

30
Q

What is the calculation formula for absolute fitness?

A

Frequency of a particular genotype after selection
——————————————————
Frequency of a particular genotype before selection

31
Q

What does an absolute frequency of 1 indicate about the frequency of that genotype?

A

Frequency of the genotype is stable.

32
Q

What is the formula for relative fitness?

A

Number of surviving offspring per individual of a particular genotype
———————————————————
Number of surviving offspring per individual of the most successful genotype

33
Q

What is co-evolution?

A

The process by which two or more species evolve in response to selection pressures imposed by each other.

34
Q

What is the impact of a change in the traits of one species in a co-evolutionary relationship?

A

Acts as a selection pressure on the other species.

35
Q

When is co-evolution frequently seen?

A

Co-evolution is frequently seen in pairs of species that have symbiotic interactions.

36
Q

What is symbiosis?

A

Co-evolved intimate relationships between members of two different species.

37
Q

What is the impact of symbiotic relationships?

A

Positive, negative or neutral for all individuals involved.

38
Q

What are the 3 types of symbiotic interactions?

A

Mutualism, commensalism and parasitism.

39
Q

What is mutualism?

A

Both organisms in the interaction are interdependent on each other for resources or other services. As both organisms gain from the relationship, the interaction is (+/+).

40
Q

What is commensalism?

A

One species benefits from the relationship while the other species is unharmed and does not gain any benefit. The interaction is (+/0).

41
Q

What is parasitism?

A

The parasite benefits in terms of energy or nutrients and the host is harmed as a result of the loss of those resources (+/-).

42
Q

What does the Red Queen hypothesis state?

A

In a co-evolutionary relationship, changes in the traits of one species can act as a selection pressure on the other species so both species must adapt to avoid extinction.