Key Terms
Darwin
Evidence of Evo
Speciation
Mechanisms of Natural Selection
200

This term describes the differential survival and reproduction of individuals due to differences in phenotype.

What is natural selection?

200

The book in which Darwin published his theory of evolution by natural selection.

What is “On the Origin of Species”?

200

Structures that are similar because of common ancestry, such as the limb bones of vertebrates.

What are homologous structures?

200

The type of speciation that occurs without geographic separation.

What is sympatric speciation?

200

The selection process where individuals with extreme phenotypes have an advantage.

What is directional selection?

400

The process by which organisms better adapted to their environment tend to survive and produce more offspring.

What is adaptation. 

400

The group of islands where Darwin made significant observations that contributed to his theory.

What are the Galápagos Islands?

400

Structures that have no apparent function and appear to be residual parts from a past ancestor.

What are vestigial structures?

400

The process by which new species arise due to a population becoming reproductively isolated from other populations.

What is reproductive isolation?

400

This type of selection favors intermediate variants and acts against extreme phenotypes.

What is stabilizing selection?

600

The genetic variation within a population that can be acted upon by natural selection.

What is genetic diversity?

600

The naturalist who independently conceived the theory of evolution by natural selection and prompted Darwin to publish his own theory.

Who is Alfred Wallace?

600

The field that involves comparing the DNA and protein sequences of different organisms to infer evolutionary relationships.

What is Molecular Biology? 

600

The term for when two species live in the same area but utilize different habitats and thus do not encounter each other.

What is ecological/habitat isolation?

600

Selection that occurs when conditions favor individuals at both extremes of a phenotypic range over intermediate phenotypes.

What is disruptive selection?

800

The contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation, relative to the contributions of other individuals.

What is fitness?

800

The concept that describes how all species of organisms arise and develop through the natural selection of small, inherited variations that increase the individual’s ability to compete, survive, and reproduce.

What is descent with modification?

800

The phenomenon where closely related species evolve similar traits independently due to similar environmental pressures.

What is convergent evolution?

800

This phenomenon occurs when a few individuals from a larger population establish a new population with a gene pool that is not reflective of the original population, often leading to rapid evolutionary changes and speciation.

What is the founder effect?

800

The type of natural selection that favors traits that increase an individual’s chance of mating and producing offspring.

What is sexual selection?

1000

Structures in different species with a common ancestor or developmental origin but which serve different functions.

What are homologous structures?

1000

Explains how individuals with traits better suited to their environment tend to survive and reproduce more successfully, passing on these advantageous traits to their offspring, while those less adapted tend to diminish over generations.

What is Natural Selection?

1000

This type of selection occurs when humans breed plants and animals for particular genetic traits.

What is the artificial selection?

1000

An effect caused by large population death due to natural events.

What is the bottleneck effect?

1000

The principle stating that allele frequencies in a population will remain constant from generation to generation in the absence of other evolutionary influences.

What is the Hardy-Weinberg Equalibrium?

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