Mechanism of Evolution
Evidence of Evolution
Speciation
Hardy-Weinberg
Other
100

What are mutations? 

Random changes in DNA that create new alleles.

100

What are structures that we do not need?

Vestigial structures.
100

What is allopatric speciation?

A type of speciation where a physical barrier separates two populations.

100

What was Hardy?

A mathematician.

100

What is osmosis?

The movement of a solvent from a high to low concentration or the movement of a solute from a low to high concentration.

200

What is non-random mating?

When organisms prefer specific traits over other traits.

200

Which layers are the oldest and youngest when determining the age of fossils?

Top: Youngest

Bottom: Oldest

200

What is a zygote?

An egg cell that gets fertilized.

200

What is random mating?

When there is no preferences over certain traits.

200

What is the type of bell curve which favors one extreme trait over another?

Directional.

300

What is natural selection? 

Process where individuals with more advantageous traits are more likely to survive and reproduce.

300

What do early stages of embryos tell us.

Suggests they share a common ancestor and developmental pathways.

300

What are the prezygotic barriers?

Behavorial isolation: Different mating rituals.

Temporal isolation: Different mating time periods.

Mechanical isolation: Incompatible reproductive structures.

300

What was Weinberg?

A physician.

300
What is the type of bell curve that favors the extremes?

Disruptive.

400

What is gene flow?

An intentional movement of alleles between populations due to migration.

400

Which animal do humans share most of their DNA with?

Chimpanzees.

400

What are the two prezygotic barriers?

1. Hybrids are sterile

2. Hybrids do not survive long.

400

What is hardy-weinberg equilibrium?

A mathematical relationship between allele frequencies and genotype frequencies.

400

What is the type of bell curve in which it favors moderate traits?

Stabilizing.

500

What is the bottleneck and founder effect?

A sudden reduction in the population size due to a change in the environment.

When a few individuals become isolated from a larger population.

500

What is the difference between analogous and homologous structures?

Analogous: Structures that are physically different but share the same function.

Homologous: Structures that are physically similar but often have different functions.

500

What is the difference between sympatric and parapatric speciation?

Sympatric: Same location

Parapatric: Adjacent locations; may include a central area where they interbreed.

500

What needs to happen in a population to achieve hardy-weinberg equilibrium?

No mutation, no genetic drift, no gene flow, no natural selection, and random mating. 

500

What are types of selection pressures?

1. Human influence

2. Predation

3. Environmental changes

4. Competition