Evolutionary Agents
Prinicples of Natural Selection
Modes of Natural Selection
Evidence for Evolution
100

 Often called "survival of the fittest", where individuals with advantageous traits reproduce more successfully.

Natural Selection

100

The process by which humans, rather than the environment, select for desirable traits in plants or animals.

Artificial Selection

100

This mode favors the average phenotype, such as human birth weights that are neither too high nor too low.

Stabilizing Selection

100

What is the study of fossils and preserved remains called?

 Paleontology

200

This agent increases genetic variety through random changes in DNA and is the only source of entirely new phenotypes.

Mutation

200

These four principles—Variation, Competition, Adaptation, and Selection—were proposed by this famous scientist.

Charles Darwin

200

This mode favors one extreme phenotype, causing the bell curve to shift in one direction.

Directional Selection

200

These are physical features in different species that are similar in structure because they were inherited from a common ancestor.

Homologous structures (or organs)

300

This occurs when the individuals move into or out of population, bringing or taking their alleles with them  

Gene Flow

300

This occurs when more offspring are produced than the environment can support, leading to competition for resources.

Overpopulation
300

What is the major difference between Natural and Artificial selection?

In natural selection, the environment determines which traits are best for survival and reproduction and in artificial selection, humans intentionally choose and breed organisms for specific desirable traits.


300

Name the type of evolution where unrelated species evolve similar traits, like the fins of a shark and a dolphin, because they live in similar environments

Convergent evolution

400

Random fluctuations in allele frequencies that have a much larger impact on small populations than large ones.

Genetic Drift

400

An environmental factor, such as a predator or a change in climate, that determines which phenotypes are successful.

Selecting Agent

400

Why does competition occurs within population?

Competition occurs because of overpopulation, where more organisms are born than the environment has resources (like food and shelter) to support.

400

What do you call an organ, like the human appendix or a whale's pelvic bone, that has lost its original function through evolution?

A vestigial organ

500

A specific type of genetic drift that occurs when a population's size is drastically reduced by a disaster like a flood or fire.

Bottleneck Effect

500

A biological phenomenon where a palatable (edible) species evolves to look like an unpalatable one to avoid predators.

Mimicry

500

What is the term for the environmental factors that determine which individuals survive?

The term for these environmental factors is selecting agents.

500

This branch of science provides evidence for evolution by examining how geographical barriers, such as mountains or oceans, influence the distribution of species like the marsupials of Australia.

Biogeography