History & Theories of Evolution
Natural Selection & Adaptations
Evidence for Evolution
Genetics & Evolution
Speciation & Evolutionary Patterns
100

What is a scientific theory?

In science, this term refers to a broad explanation supported by repeated observations, experimentation, and evidence.

100

What does “fitness” mean in evolution?

An organism’s ability to survive and reproduce successfully.

100

What are fossils?

Preserved remains or traces of ancient organisms.

100

What is a mutation?

A random change in DNA.

100

What is a species?

A group of organisms that can reproduce and produce fertile offspring.

200

What idea about Earth did Hutton and Lyell support?

Earth is millions of years old and changes gradually over time.

200

What are selective pressures?

Environmental factors that affect survival and reproduction.

200

What is the difference between relative dating and radiometric dating?

Relative dating compares fossil ages, while radiometric dating gives exact ages using radioactive materials.

200

Which mutations can be passed to offspring?

Mutations in gametes (egg or sperm cells).

200

What is allopatric speciation?

The formation of new species due to geographic isolation.

300

What did Lamarck believe happened when organisms used or did not use certain body parts?

Used body parts became stronger, while unused parts weakened or disappeared.

300

What is an adaptation?

An inherited trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce.

300

What are homologous structures?

Body parts with similar structures because species share a common ancestor.

300

What is genetic drift?

Random changes in allele frequencies, especially in small populations.

300

What is convergent evolution?

When unrelated species evolve similar traits because they live in similar environments.

400

What is natural selection?

The process where organisms with helpful traits survive and reproduce more successfully.

400

Why did black peppered moths become more common during the Industrial Revolution?

Pollution darkened trees, helping black moths camouflage from predators.

400

What are analogous structures?

Structures with similar functions that evolved independently in unrelated species.

400

What is the founder effect?

When a small group starts a new population with different allele frequencies than the original population.

400

How are Darwin’s finches an example of divergent evolution?

One ancestral species evolved into many species adapted to different niches.

500

What does “descent with modification” mean?

Modern species evolved from common ancestors and changed over time.

500

Why does natural selection affect populations instead of individual organisms?

Individuals do not evolve; populations change over generations as allele frequencies change.

500

How do embryos support evolution?

Many species show similar early development, suggesting common ancestry.

500

How does gene flow affect populations?

It moves alleles between populations and reduces genetic differences.

500

What is gametic isolation?

When sperm and egg from different species cannot successfully fuse.

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