Natural Selection
Adaptation
Variation
Mutation
Fitness
Competition
Fossil Record
Genetic Drift
Artificial Selection
Camouflage
Evidence of Evolution
Vestigial Structures
Speciation
Reproductive Isolations
Antibiotic Resistance
Types of Selection
100

A random change in an organism's DNA sequence that serves as the ultimate source of new genetic variation.

What is a mutation?

100

In evolutionary terms, this concept does not mean physical strength, but rather an organism's ability to survive and successfully pass its genes to the next generation.

What is evolutionary fitness?

100

An adaptation that allows an organism to blend into its surroundings to hide from predators or prey.

What is camouflage?

100

Anatomical structures that are similar in different species because they were inherited from a common ancestor, like the limb bones of a human, whale, and bat.

What are homologous structures?

100

The rapid evolution of bacteria to survive medications meant to kill them, often cited as a modern, real-time example of natural selection.

What is antibiotic resistance?

200

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

What is natural selection?

200

This occurs when two or more species or individuals vie for the same limited resources, such as food, water, or nesting sites.

What is competition?

200

The breeding of dogs, livestock, or crops by humans to emphasize specific desirable traits.

What is artificial selection?

200

The evolutionary process by which populations evolve to become distinct, isolated species that can no longer interbreed.

What is speciation?

200

A type of natural selection where the environment favors one extreme trait over the other, shifting the entire population curve in one direction.

What is directional selection?

300

Any heritable trait, such as a hawk's sharp eyesight or a cactus's water-storing stem, that improves an organism's ability to survive and reproduce.

What is an adaptation?

300

This historical archive of life shows that older sedimentary rock layers contain simpler organisms, while younger layers contain more complex ones.

What is the fossil record?

300

Unlike natural selection, this mechanism causes trait frequencies to change purely by random chance, usually affecting small populations.

What is genetic drift?

300

Structures that have lost all or most of their original function through evolution, such as the human appendix or the pelvic bones of a whale.

What are vestigial structures?

300

When two populations are capable of mating but do not because they have different courtship rituals, dances, or mating songs.

What is behavioral isolation?

400

Natural selection cannot occur without this pre-existing condition, which ensures that individuals within a population have different physical or behavioral traits.

What is genetic variation?

400

Scientists use the fossil record to look for these types of organisms, which show how a species gradually changed from an old form into a new form over time.

What are ancestral forms?

400

A type of genetic drift that occurs when a sharp reduction in the size of a population due to a sudden disaster (like a wildfire or flood) severely alters the remaining traits.

What is the bottleneck effect?

400

Besides looking at bones, scientists compare this molecular code found in all living things to see how closely related two species are.

What is DNA?

400

This type of natural selection favors individuals at both extremes of a trait's range, while selecting against the average or middle individuals.

What is disruptive selection?

500

While most mutations are neutral or harmful, this specific type of mutation provides an advantage to an organism in a changing environment.


What is a beneficial mutation?

500

Because organisms produce more offspring than the environment can support, this phrase describes the intense rivalry between individuals to get enough resources to survive.

What is competition?

500

A type of genetic drift that happens when a few individuals leave a large population and start a brand-new colony, carrying only a small fraction of the original group's traits.

What is the founder effect?

500

This type of isolation occurs when a physical barrier, like a mountain range, canyon, or river, splits a population into two groups so they can no longer mate.

What is geographic isolation?

500

This type of selection favors the average or middle individuals in a population, while selecting against both extremes (like human birth weights being mostly in the middle).

What is stabilizing selection?

M
e
n
u