Evidence for Common Ancestry
Darwin's Mechanism
Mechanisms of Evolution
Environmental Change & Outcomes
Real-World Evolution Examples
100

Name one of the five main lines of evidence listed for common ancestry. 

What is fossils, homologous structures, vestigial structures, DNA/protein similarities, or embryology

100

The term for when a population produces far more offspring than can possibly survive.

What is overproduction or overproduction of offspring

100

The only evolutionary mechanism that consistently produces adaptations.

What is Natural Selection
100

Term for when a species disappears entirely because change happens too fast and it lacks variation.

What is extinction

100

The group of animals whose DNA shows they are the closes living relatives of whales. 

What is hippos

200

Structures that are similar in different species due to common ancestry.

What is homologous structures

200

The two main sources of heritable genetic variation mentioned on the study guide.

What is mutations and sexual reproduction 
200

Random changes in allele frequencies that is especially important in small populations.

What is genetic drift

200

When the same environmental change causes one species' population to increase while another's decreases or faces extinction.

What is different outcomes from the same change

200

The fossil organism considered an early stage in whale evolution that still had hind legs.

What is Pakicetus

300

Structures that are reduced in function but were useful in ancestors.

What is a vestigial structure

300

In the Galapagos finches example, what environmental condition caused intense competition for food?

What is drought/seed shortage

300

In the MRSA example, what caused the resistant bacteria to become the majority of the population so quickly?

What is Natural Selection
300

The 1800s example where tree bark color changed and affected which moth color survived better. 

What is peppered moths

300

The temporary structure that appears in whale embryos but disappears before birth.

What is hind-limb buds

400

The requirement for strong evidence of common ancestry.

What is converge on the same conclusion

400

The process during sexual reproduction that creates new combinations of alleles.

What is genetic recombination

400

The movement of alleles into or out of a population, often due to migration.

What is gene flow

400

Process that can occur when populations of the same species are isolated and face different environmental pressures.  

What is speciation

400

The approximate number of millions years ago that the land-mammal ancestors of whales lived.

What is about 50 million years ago.

500
Name all five lines of empirical evidence for evolution/common ancestry.

What is fossils, homologous/vestigial structures, DNA/protein similarities, embryology, and biogeography

500
In one generation, what happened to the average beak size in the Galapagos finch population during the drought?

What is increased

500

Why can genetic drift sometimes amplify antibiotic resistance in small MRSA outbreaks?

What is small population size makes random changes have bigger effects. 
500

Two modern examples of species affected (in opposite ways) by Artic sea-ice loss.

What are polar bears and warm-water fish
500

The series of organisms that show whale evolution from land to fully aquatic.

What is Pakicetus to modern whales

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