BIOLOGY 1M03 Test 2

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Last updated 6:07 AM on 4/5/26
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152 Terms

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Biological species concept

Species are groups of actually or potentially interbreeding populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups (reproductive isolation)

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Downsides of the biological species concept

Difficult to apply to asexually reproducing organisms, fossils, and hybrids

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Prezygotic isolation factor

Barriers preventing species' from mating prior to zygote formation

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Postzygotic isolation factor

Barrier preventing species' from reproducing viable and fertile offspring

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Examples of prezygotic isolation factors

1. Temporal (timing)

2. Ecological (spacial)

3. Mechanical (reproductive organs are incompatible)

4. Gametic (gametes are incompatible)

5. Behavioural (mating rituals)

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Examples of postzygotic isolation factors

1. Hybrid inviability (zygote does not develop)

2. Hybrid sterility (zygote is sterile)

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Issues with the biological species concept: hybridization

- hybrids don't always look like the parental species, but it is not a distinct species

- sometimes able to reproduce with the parental species, however, they are normally selected against

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Morphospecies concept

members of the same species usually look alike

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Benefits of the morphospecies concept

1. applicable for fossils

2. applicable for asexually reproducing organisms

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Downfalls of the morphospecies concept

1. 2 distinct species may look similar, and thereby falsely classified as 1 species

2. 1 species may vary, thereby falsely being classified as 2 species

3. 2 species may not have visible differences

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Ecological species concept

Species are classified by how they interact with the environment

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Is it possible for 2 species to coexist in the same location if they have similar niches?

NO

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Downfalls of the ecological species concept

Sometimes males and females of the same species have varying niches

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Niche

The range of conditions a species can tolerate and how it interacts with its environment

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Phylogenetic species concept

Members of a species all share a common ancestry and a common fate

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Speciation

Byproduct of genetic divergence that occurs as a result of the fixation of different mutation in 2 populations that are not regularly exchanging genes

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Allopatric speciation

The formation of new species in populations that are geographically isolated from one another.

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Allopatric speciation mechansisms

Dispersal and vicariance

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Dispersal

When individuals colonize a distant place, far away and isolated from the source population

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Vicariance

Allopatric speciation caused by the formation of a geographic barrier, separating a population into 2

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Peripatric speciation

Few individuals from a mainland population disperse to a new location remote from the original and evolve separately

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Island population

Patch of habitat on the mainland that is appropriate for the species but remote from the mainland's habitat

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Adaptive Radiation

Rapid evolutionary diversification in which natural selection accelerates the rates of both speciation and adaptation to fulfil ecological niches

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Co-speciation

A process in which 2 groups of organisms speciate in response to each other and at the same time

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Sympatric speciation

Speciation occurring in the same location

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How does sympatric speciation arise?

Disruptive selection

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Instantaneous speciation

Caused by the hybridization between 2 species in which the offspring are reproductively isolated from both parents

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Tetraploid

When the offspring receives a full set of chromosomes from both parents, meaning they have double the diploid number of their parents

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What organism is tetraploidy common in?

Plants

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Allopolyploid

Multiple sets of chromosomes from DIFFERENT species

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Autopolyploid

An individual that has more than two chromosome sets that are all derived from a SINGLE species

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What is the phylogenetic species concept based on?

Monophyletic groups; a species is the smallest monophyletic group

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Synapomorphy

Shared derived trait

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How are monophyletic groups identified?

Synapomorphies

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Genetic synapomorphy

Mutation shared by all members of a monophyletic group

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Pros of the phylogenetic species concept

1. Can be applied to any type of population

2. Logical: different species have different synapomorphies due to a lack of gene flow and independent evolutions

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Cons of the phylogenetic species concept

- Phylogenies are currently available for only a tiny subset of populations on the tree of life

- Different gene trees can be discordant; some genes in the genome may be consistent with different relationships among groups

- May lead to recognition of many more species than either of the other species concepts

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Incomplete lineage sorting

gene trees do not always match species trees (gene tree discordance)

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Coalescence

Common ancestor

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How are species trees generated?

By evaluating entire genomes

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Subspecies

Populations that are not distinct enough to be considered a separate species

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Traits of a subspecies

- live in a discrete geographic areas

- have distinguishing features

- can interbreed if geographical barriers are removed

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What causes allopatric speciation?

Reduced gene flow between populations, causing genetic isolation

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Biogeography

The study of how species and populations are distributed geographically

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What does it mean to live in sympatry?

To live close enough to possibly interbreed

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2 mechanisms of sympatric speciation

External and internal events

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What causes sympatric speciation?

Isolation caused by different ecological niches

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Instantaneous speciation

Speciation that occurs in a single generation

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What causes instantaneous speciation?

2 species hybridize and offspring is reproductively isolated by both parental species

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Polyploidization

Process by which an individual is formed with extra sets of chromosomes in cells due to accidents during meiosis or mitosis (more than 2 sets of chromosomes)

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What type of speciation might polyploidization cause?

Sympatric speciation

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Which is more common: autopolyploid vs allopolyploid

Allopolyploid

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Are allopolyploids fertile?

Yes!

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Are autopolyploids reproductively isolated from parents?

Yes!

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Offspring between a tetraploid and a diploid are______.

sterile

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Outcome of hybridization from 2 diploid species

Tetraploid; often sterile

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Who have higher levels of heterozygosity?

Polyploids (not as affected by inbreeding depression)

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Phylogenetic tree

A family tree that shows the evolutionary relationships thought to exist among groups of organisms

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Monophyletic group

A group that shares a common ancestor

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Root of phylogenetic tree

Most ancestral branch

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Outgroup (phylogenetic tree)

Sister group that shares a recent common ancestor, but is not part of the group of focus

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Polytomy (phylogenetic tree)

A node that divides into 3 or more branches suggesting that not enough data were available to resolve which taxa are most closely related

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Extant taxa (currently living)

Located at branch tips; none of the extant taxa are presumptive ancestors of the others

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Sister groups

Closely related taxa

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Trait

Genetic (typically DNA), morphological, physiological or behavioural characteristic to be studied

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What is an outgroup used to determine?

Whether a trait is ancestral or derived

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Ancestral trait

A trait that existed in the ancestor

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Derived trait

A modified form of the ancestral trait, found in a descendant

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How do derived traits arise?

Mutation, selection, genetic drift

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Cladistics

First formal method to infer phylogenetic trees; based on reconstructing relationships species by identifying synapomorphies

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Maximum parsimony

The principle that states the most likely explanation or pattern is the one that implies the least amount of change

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Homology

Similar traits due to shared ancestry.

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Homoplasy

Similar traits, not caused by common ancestry

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Are water lilies and wild roses a product of convergent or divergent evolution?

Divergent

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Are Streamlined Bodies in Dolphins and Ichthyosaurs Homologous or Convergent?

Convergent

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Adaptive radiation

The rapid production, from a single lineage, of many descendant species

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3 hallmarks of adaptive radiation

1. they are a monophyletic group

2. they speciated rapidly

3. they diversified ecologically into many niches

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2 mechanisms that can trigger adaptive raditations

1. Extrinsic factors such as a favourable new condition in the environment or access to a new environment

2. Intrinsic factors such as evolution of key morphological, behavioural, physiological...

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Ecological opportunity

The availability of new or novel types of resources - has driven a wide array of adaptive radiations

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4 hypotheses for the start of the Cambrian explosion

1. higher oxygen levels

2. evolution of predation

3. new niches beget more new niches

4. new genes, new bodies

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Hominids

Great apes

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Bipedal

The ability to walk upright on two legs

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How do oranguatans walk?

Fist-walk

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How do gorillas, bonobos, and chimps walk?

Knuckle-walk

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Bipedalism

The synapomorphy that defines the hominins

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When and where did the common ancestor of chimps and humans live?

6-7 million years ago; Africa

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4 hominin groups

1. Gracile australopithecines

2. Robust australopithecines

3. Early homo

4. Recent homo

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Ardipithecus

Combo of tree climbing and bipedal activity; protruding mouth and nose shape

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Gracile australopithecus

Small bipeds with small teeth; more ape-like appearance

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Robust Australopithecus (Paranthropus)

Small bipeds with big teeth; prolly ate plants

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Homo genus (early)

Larger braincase than australopithecines; reduced cheek teeth

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Homo genus (recent)

Even larger braincases

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H. neanderthalensis

Last hominin species to live at the same time as humans; heavy build, large brains, low foreheads, powerful jaws, large browridges, small chins

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Homo sapiens

Reduced browridge, flat face, largest braincase

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Pros of a large brain

Allows for more complex behaviours and language

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General skull evolution trend

Flatter and larger over time

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What can be deduced from the fossil record about hominins?

1. shared feature that defines hominins is bipedalism

2. the hominin family tree has many branches - there was not a linear progression from one species to another

3. species in the genus homo have extremely large brain cases in comparison to their overall body size

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Hypothesis for larger braincase

Natural selection selected for larger brains because it allowed individuals to communicate and work with tools

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Out-of-Africa hypothesis

The hypothesis that modern humans (Homo sapiens) evolved its distinct traits in Africa and then spread to other continents; H. sapiens evolved independently of earlier European and Asian species of Homo

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What can the fossil record NOT support regarding the out-of-africa hypothesis?

Whether or not there was inbreeding with Neanderthals

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