Evolution Fathers
Natural Selection
Evidence for Evolution
Micro
Evolution
Macro
Evolution
100

Naturalist aboard the HMS beagle

Who is Charles Darwin

100

This rule states that organisms produce more offspring than can survive, leading to competition.

What is overproduction?

100

This form of evidence examines early developmental stages; similarities among embryos indicate a shared ancestry.

What is embryology?

100

This evolutionary mechanism involves the movement of genes between populations through migration.

What is gene flow?

100

This occurs when a species completely disappears from Earth and no individuals remain alive.

What is extinction?

200

This naturalist believed a giraffe could stretching its neck & pass on this trait to it's offspring.

Who is Lamarck?

200

This rule describes how organisms compete for resources like food, space, and mates because not all offspring can survive.

What is the struggle for survival?

200

This type of indirect evidence compares DNA or protein sequences to show how closely related species are.

What is biochemical evidence?

200

This term refers to the total collection of all the alleles in a population.

What is the gene pool?

200

This type of evolution happens when related species accumulate differences and become more distinct over time.

What is divergent evolution?

300

This scientist believed organisms change because they want or need to adapt to their environment

Who is Lamarck

300

This principle explains why individuals best adapted to their environment leave more offspring than others.

What is survival of the fittest?

300

These structures have similar origins but different functions, providing evidence of divergent evolution from a common ancestor.

What are homologous structures?

300

This genetic drift event happens when a small group breaks off from a larger population, creating a new population with reduced genetic variation.

 What is the founder effect?

300

This process occurs when two species influence each other’s evolution, often seen in predator-prey or pollinator-plant relationships.

What is coevolution?

400

This theory states that evolution happens when individuals with advantageous traits survive and reproduce.

What is Darwin’s theory of natural selection?

400

According to this rule, accumulated differences over long periods can cause one population to evolve into an entirely new kind of organism.

What is the origin of new species?

400

These structures have similar functions but different evolutionary origins, showing convergent evolution in organisms facing similar environments.

What are analogous structures?

400

This type of non-random mating occurs when individuals choose mates with traits similar to themselves.

What is assortative mating?

400

This form of speciation occurs when a population is geographically separated, leading to the formation of new species.

What is allopatric speciation

500

According to this theory, traits acquired during an organism’s lifetime

What is Lamarck’s theory of acquired characteristics?

500

This rule explains why only genetic traits—not acquired ones—can be passed on to the next generation.

What is inheritable variation?

500

These structures no longer serve their original function—like the human appendix—and show remnants of evolutionary history.

What are vestigial structures?

500

This type of natural selection favors individuals at both extremes of a trait, potentially leading to two distinct phenotypes.

What is diversifying selection?

500

This form of speciation happens without physical separation, often through behavioral or ecological differences within the same area.

What is sympatric speciation?