12.1: History of Evolutionary Theory
12.2: Microevolution
12.3: Speciation
12.4: Macroevolution
Miscellaneous
100

Differences in rates of survival and reproduction was described by Darwin as survival of the ________.

fittest

100

A measure of an organism's ability to survive and reproduce in its natural environment is called this

fitness

100

this driving force behind microevolution is considered to NOT be random.

natural selection

100

the process by which a single species evolves into many different forms that live in different ways over a relatively short period of time

adaptive radiation

100

The RNA world hypothesis proposes this

RNA was the first biomolecule

200

Change in allele frequencies over time is known as this

microevolution

200

Most mutations are this

neutral

200

In order for two organisms to be in the same species, they  must be able to do this.

produce viable, fertile offspring in a natural environment.

200
These fossils are used to establish and compare the relative ages of rock layers.

index fossils

200

This is the only way to create NEW alleles

mutation

300
The principle of __________ proposes that all species, living and extinct, are descended from ancient common ancestors.

common descent

300

Any heritable characteristic that increases an organism's ability to survive and reproduce in its environment is called this

an adaptation

300

This pre-zygotic barrier occurs when two organisms do not mate due to differences in their times of reproductive activity.

temporal isolation

300

The Miller-Urey experiment in 1952 isolated what biomolecule? 

amino acids (left and right handed)
300

Bat wings and butterfly wings are an example of this type of evolution

convergent

400

this deliberate practice (which influenced Darwin's theory) included breeding domesticated animals with desirable traits so their offspring possess these traits in increasing numbers

artificial selection or selective breeding.

400

A type of natural selection in which the average phenotype is favored over the extremes

stabilizing selection

400

A mule is an example of this post-zygotic barrier.

hybrid sterility

400

the term used to describe long periods during which there is little change that are interrupted by brief periods of rapid change.  (this is used to explain gaps in the fossil record). 

punctuated equilibrium

400

Name one requirement that must be present for genetic equilibrium to occur in a population

no nonrandom breeding, large population size, no natural selection, no migration, no mutations

500

This principle states that the geologic processes at work today, such as earthquakes, volcanoes, erosion, and weathering, are the same as those at work in the past.

uniformitarianism

500

Name three random causes of microevolution

Population bottleneck, founder's effect, and gene flow.

500

This process creates two separate species when a geographic barrier physically separates members of a population from coming into contact.

allopatric speciation.

500
According to the endosymbiosis theory, which two organelles are the result of a bacteria engulfing another prokaryotic cell? 

mitochondria and chloroplasts.

500

Name one way asexually reproducing organisms generate variation in a population

viral transduction, bacterial transformation, conjugation

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