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evolution
change in the genetic makeup of a population over time; descent with modification
natural selection
a process in which individuals that have certain traits tend to survive and reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits
adaptations
inherited characteristics of organisms that enhance their survival and reproduction
artificial selection
the selective breeding of domesticated plants and animals to encourage the occurrence of desirable traits
population
a group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area and interbreed to produce fertile offspring
gene pool
a population’s genetic makeup
microevolution
small scale genetic changes in a population
genetic drift
chance events that cause a change in allele frequency from one generation to the next
bottleneck effect
when a large population is drastically reduced by a non-selective disaster
founder effect
when a few individuals become isolated from a large population and establish a new small population with a gene pool that differs from the large population
gene flow
the transfer of alleles into or out of a population due to fertile individuals or gametes
relative fitness
the number of surviving offspring that an individual produces compared to the number left by others in the population
directional selection
selection towards one extreme phenotype
stabilizing selection
selection towards the mean and against the extreme phenotypes
disruptive selection
selection against the mean. both phenotypic extremes have the highest relative fitness
se-x-ual selection
a type of natural selection that explains why many species have unique/showy features
Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium
a model used to assess whether natural selection or other factors are causing evolution at a particular locus
fossils
remains or traces of past organisms
fossil record
gives a visual of evolutionary change over time
comparative morphology
analysis of the structures of living and extinct organisms
homology
characteristics in related species that have similarities even if the functions differ
embryonic homology
many species have similar embryonic development
vestigial structures
structures that are conserved even though they no longer have a use
molecular homology
many species share similar DNA and amino acid sequences
homologous structures
characteristics that are similar in two species because they share a common ancestor (same structure, different function)
convergent evolution
similar adaptions that have evolved in distantly related organisms due to similar environments
analogous structures
structures that are similar but have separate evolutionary origins (same function, different structure)
biogeography
the distribution of animals and plants geographically
systematics
classification of organisms and determining their evolutionary relationships
taxonomy
naming and classifying species
phylogenetics
hypothesis of evolutionary history
phylogenetic trees
diagrams that represent the evolutionary history of a group of organisms
nodes
represent common ancestors
root
the common ancestor of all the species
sister taxa
two clades that emerge from the same node
basal taxon
a lineage that evolved from the same root and remains unbranched
synapomorphy
a derived character shared by clade members
derived characteristic
similarity inherited from the most recent common ancestor of an entire group
ancestral characteristic
similarity that arose prior to the common ancestor
outgroup
a lineage that is the least closely related to the rest of the organisms
monophyletic group
includes the most recent common ancestor of the group and all of its descendents (clade)
paraphyletic group
includes the most recent common ancestor of the group, but not all of its descendents
polyphyletic group
does not include the most recent common ancestor of all members of the group
principle of parsimony
use the hypothesis that requires the fewest assumptions (DNA changes)
species
a group able to interbreed and produce viable, fertile offspring
speciation
formation of new species
allopatric speciation
physical barrier divides population or a small population is separated from main population
sympatric speciation
a new species evolves while still inhabiting the same geographic region as the ancestral species
prezygotic barriers
prevent mating or hinder fertilization
habitat isolation
species live in different areas or they occupy different habitats within the same area
temporal isolation
species breed at different times of the day, year, or season
behavioral isolation
unique behavioral patterns and rituals separate species
mechanical isolation
the reproductive anatomy of one species does not fit with the anatomy of another species
gametic isolation
proteins on the surface of gametes do not allow for the egg and sperm to fuse
postzygotic barriers
prevent a hybrid zygote from developing into a viable, fertile adult
reduced hybrid viability
the genes of different parent species may interact in ways that impair the hybrid’s development or survival
reduced hybrid fertility
a hybrid can develop into a healthy adult, but is sterile
hybrid breakdown
the hybrid of the first generation may be fertile, but when they mate with a parent species or one another, their offspring will be sterile
macroevolution
large evolutionary patterns
punctuated equilibrium
when evolution occurs rapidly after a long period of stasis
gradualism
when evolution occurs slowly over hundreds, thousands, or millions of years
divergent evolution
groups with the same common ancestor evolve and accumulate differences resulting in the formation of a new species
adaptive radiation
if a new habitat or niche becomes rapidly available, species can diversify rapidly
convergent evolution
two different species develop similar traits despite having different ancestors
extinction
the termination of a species
RNA World Hypothesis
proposes that RNA could have been the earliest genetic material