AP Bio Part 1/2 Term Memorization

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511 Terms

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polar
Molecule with partial charges. Mixes with water.
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nonpolar
No partial charges. Do not mix with water.
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electronegativity
Attraction of an atom for electrons in a covalent bond.
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cohesion
Water molecules sticking to each other.
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adhesion
Water molecules sticking to other surfaces.
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solute
Something dissolved in a solution.
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solvent
Dissolving agent of a solution.
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isomers
Same atoms but different arrangement.
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structural isomers
Differ in arrangement of atoms.
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geometric isomer
Differ in arrangement around a double bond.
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enantiomers
Structures that are like a mirror-image.
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alpha glucose
Monomer for starch and glycogen.
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beta glucose
Monomer for cellulose and chitin.
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cellulose
Carbohydrate component of plant cell walls.
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starch
Storage polysaccharide of plants.
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glycogen
Extremely branched polymer of glucose.
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chitin
Polysaccharide found in arthropod exoskeletons and fungal cell walls.
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-ose
Suffix of a sugar.
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tryiacylglycerol
Glycerol and three fatty acids.
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steroids
Made of four rings of carbon.
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cholesterol
Steroid common in cell membranes, also in many hormones.
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peptide bond
Bonds that connect amino acids.
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Fredrick Sanger
Determined amino acid sequence of proteins.
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disulphide bridges
Reinforce tertiary structure.
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primary structure
Chain of amino acids.
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secondary structure
Either an alpha helix or beta pleated sheet.
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tertiary structure
Results from interactions between side chains.
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quaternary structure
Results from two or more polypeptide subunits.
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-in
Suffix of a protein.
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purines
Bases with a double-ring structure.
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pyrimidines
Bases with a single-ring structure.
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phosphodiester bonds
Bonds between phosphate group and pentose sugar in nucleic acids.
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synthesis
To put together.
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digestion
To break apart.
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dehydration synthesis
Condensation reaction where molecules are connected by loss of a water molecule.
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hydrolysis
Reaction where water split into two hydrogens and one oxygen; this breaks a polymer.
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anabolism
Metabolic pathways that construct molecules, requiring energy.
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catabolism
Metabolic pathways that break down molecules, releasing energy.
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natural selection
A population can change over time if individuals with more fit traits leave more offspring than less fit individuals.
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evolutionary adaptation
An accumulation of inherited characteristics that enhance organisms' ability to survive and reproduce in specific environments.
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artificial selection
Humans modifying species for desired traits through selective breeding.
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decent with modification
Darwin's way of referring to evolution.
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MRSA
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
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fitness
Individuals whose inherited traits confer an advantage have a better chance of surviving in a given environment and will leave more offspring.
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homology
Similarity resulting from common ancestry.
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homologous structures
Same structure, different function. Comes from common ancestor.
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comparative embryology
Embryos of vertebrates share many anatomical homologies.
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vestigial structures
Are little or no importance to organism, but remain from an ancestor.
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biogeography
Geographic distribution of species.
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microevolution
Change in genetic makeup of a population from generation to generation.
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macroevolution
Evolutionary change above the species level.
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population
Group of individuals of the same species living in the same area.
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population genetics
Study of allele frequency distribution and change under the influence of evolutionary processes.
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gene pool
All the genes in a given population at a given time.
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allele frequency
Proportion of an allele in a gene pool.
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Hardy-Weinberg Theorem
Helps measure changes in allele frequencies over time . Provides an "ideal" population to use as a basis of comparison.
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mutation
Changes in the nucleotide sequence in DNA.
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sexual recombination
Crossing over and shuffling of genes during meiosis.
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genetic drift
Change in allele frequencies due to chance.
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bottleneck effect
When a population has been dramatically reduced, and the gene pool is no longer reflective of the original population's.
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founder effect
When a small number of individuals colonize a new area; the new gene pool is not reflective of original population.
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gene flow
When a population gains or loses alleles., movement of alleles into or out of a population due to the migration of individuals to or from the population.
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genetic variation
Heritable variations in a population.
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discrete characteristics
Characteristics that are classified on an either-or basis, determined by a single gene locus.
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quantitative characteristics
Characteristics that vary along a continuum, usually due to influence of two or more genes.
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geographic variation
Difference in variation between population subgroups in different areas.
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cline
A graded change in a trait along a geographic axis.
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relative fitness
Fitness of a particular genotype.
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directional selection
Shift toward a favorable variation.
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disruptive selection
Shift toward the extremes.
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stabilizing selection
Shift that favors the mean.
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heterozygous advantage
Maintains recessive alleles in a population,
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sexual selection
Natural selection for mating success.
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sexual dimorphism
Differences between the sexes in secondary sexual characteristics.
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speciation
Origin of new species and the source of biological diversity.
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biological species concept
Species is a group of populations whose members have the potential to produce fertile offspring.
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reproductive isolation
Barriers that impede members of two different species fro producing fertile offspring.
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prezygotic barriers
Barriers that impede mating or hinder fertilization.
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habitat isolation
When two species encounter each other only rarely.
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temporal isolation
When two species breed at different times of day, season, or years.
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behavioral isolation
Incompatible courtship rituals, pheromones, or bird songs.
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mechanical isolation
Morphological differences prevent fertilization.
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gametic isolation
When sperm can't fertilize the eggs.
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postzygotic barriers
Barriers that prevent the hybrid zygote from becoming a fertile adult.
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reduced hybrid viability
When the genes of different species interact and impair hybrid development.
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reduced hybrid fertility
Sterile hybrids due to uneven chromosome number.
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hybrid breakdown
Hybrid is fertile, but when they breed the next generation is sterile.
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allopatric speciation
When a population is divided; leads to speciation.
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sympatric speciation
Speciation without a divided population.
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polyploidy
In plants, the result of an extra set of chromosomes during cell division.
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autopolyploid
Having more than two sets of chromosomes from a single species.
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allopolyploid
Sterile hybrid is changed to a fertile polyploid due to mutation ; fertile with each other, but not parent species.
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adaptive radiation
Evolution of many new species from a common ancestor as a result of introduction to new environments.
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punctuated equilibrium
A model of evolution in which a new species will change the most as it buds from a parent species, and then will change little for the rest of its existence.
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gradualism
A model of evolution in which gradual change over a long period of time leads to biological diversity.
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heterochrony
Change in the rate or timing of a developmental event ; an organism's shape depends on relative growth rate of body parts.
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allometric growth
Proportioning that gives a body a specific form.
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homeotic genes
Genes that determine basic features of where a body part is.
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Hox genes
Class of homeotic genes. Changes in these genes can have a profound impact on morphology.
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phylogeny
Evolutionary history of a species or group of species.