Mutations
Evidence of Evolution
Populations
Natural Selection
Vocab
100

Mutations are the initial cause of this in all species

What is Biodiversity? (also accept adaptations/genetic variation)

100
We can find evidence of diverging species by looking at these remnants from long extinct organisms. 

What are Fossils?

100

For a group of organisms to be a population they need to be both of these things

What are 1) living in the same place and 2) being of the same species?

(100 points each)

100
A species that is very likely to reproduce (or will, on average, reproduce many times) in their natural habitat has a high this​​​​

What is Fitness? (Reproductive Success)

100

This is the set of all genes and alleles in a population.

What is the Gene Pool?

200

Organisms pass down their _____(mutated/unmutated) DNA.

What is Mutated DNA?

200

All species on earth have these, indicating that the common ancestor of all life on Earth had these things. 

(3 things, 200 points each)

What are:

DNA

RNA

Proteins (made of the same 20 amino Acids)

200

In nature, populations typically produce ____(more/less) offspring than can survive.

What is more?

200

This pattern of Natural Selection represents when a ecosystem biases towards individuals on an extreme end of a phenotypic range.

What is Directional Selection?

200

This describes how common a particular allele is in a population

What is Allele Frequency?

300

Give an example of trait in some or all humans that is present thanks to a mutation

Great Job!

300

Two species having organs, limbs, etc. that complete similar tasks while being completely different from each other are an example of this. Bonus points for what this is a sign of.

What are Analogous Structures?

A sign that they evolved to do that task separately.

300

Being of the same species means that organisms can do this.

What is reproduce?

Bonus points for fertile offspring.

300

This pattern of natural selection biases towards either extreme of a phenotypic range, resulting in two distinct forms of a species with high fitness.

What is disruptive selection?

300

Two species having organs/structures that are very similar (ex. similar bones) is a sign of their common ancestor having that trait and an example of this.

What are Homologous Structures?

400

Mutations that result in traits that give the organism better odds of reproducing are known as this.

What are adaptations?

400

A more recent this between two species indicates a closer genetic tie.

What is common ancestor?

400

For speciation to occur, a species requires this rift in its population.   

What is a Reproductive Isolation?

400

This pattern of Natural Selection biases towards individuals in the middle of a phenotypic range, resulting in fewer individuals with traits that fall into extremes

What is stabilizing selection?
400

This is the process of one species splitting into two distinct species.

What is Speciation?

500
Species that have shorter generations (individuals mature and reproduce faster) mutate _____ (faster/slower)

What is faster?

500

Organisms may have these structures, being organs, limbs, or other body parts that serve no obvious purpose, indicating that the species likely has an ancestor that made use of that structure. 

What are Vestigial Structures/Organs?

500

This is when a population, over only a few generations at most, changes from having mostly one phenotype to mostly a different phenotype.

What is Microevolution?

500

Humans did not evolve from modern apes, describe in words or drawings a more accurate model of human ancestry.

Winning answers indicate that humans and apes evolved from a common ancestor, bonus points for speciation, or referencing reproductive isolation 

(max 1000 points for this question)

500

When scientists study the difference between two different species' fetal stages, they are engaging in this.

What is Comparative Embryology? 

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