Timelines of Change
Evidence of Evolution
Key Vocabulary
Natural Selection
Speciation
100

What term describes slow, continuous evolutionary change over long periods of time?

Gradualism

100

What type of evidence includes preserved remains or traces of organisms from the past?

Fossil record

100

What is Biological Fitness?

an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce in its environment

100

Scenario:
In a grassland ecosystem, rabbits vary in fur color. Dark-fur rabbits are more visible to predators, while light-fur rabbits blend into the environment and survive to reproduce more often.

Question:
How will the fur color of the rabbit population likely change over several generations, and why?


The population will have more light-fur rabbits because that trait increases survival and reproduction through natural selection.

100

What term describes the formation of new species?

Speciation

200

What pattern of evolution involves long periods of little change followed by short bursts of rapid change?

Punctuated Equilibrium

200

Scenario:
The forelimbs of humans, whales, and bats have different functions, but their bone structures are arranged in a very similar way.

Question:
What type of evolutionary evidence does this represent, and what does it suggest about these organisms?

Homologous structures

200

What is the total collection of genes in a population

Gene Pool

200

What three conditions are necessary for natural selection to occur?

Variation, overproduction, and differential survival/reproduction


200

What type of isolation occurs when populations are separated by physical barriers?

Geographic isolation

300

What is the term for a long period in which a species shows little or no evolutionary change?

Stasis

300

What type of structures perform similar functions but evolved independently?

Analogous Structures

300

Scenario:
A population of beetles lives on a windy island. A storm randomly kills many beetles, leaving only a few survivors. The surviving population has a different allele frequency than before the storm.

Question:
Which evolutionary mechanism best explains the change in allele frequency, and why?


Genetic drift, because the change was random and not due to trait advantages.

300

Why are variations within a population important for natural selection?

They allow some individuals to survive and reproduce better than others

300

What is it called when populations can no longer mate and produce fertile offspring

Reproductive Isolation

400

Scenario:
Scientists studying a species of marine snail observe that the species remains mostly unchanged for millions of years. Suddenly, after a major change in ocean temperature, several new shell shapes appear in a relatively short period of time.

Question:
Which evolutionary pattern does this scenario best represent, and why?

Punctuated equilibrium, because long periods of little change are followed by short bursts of rapid evolution.

400

How does molecular evidence (like DNA or proteins) support evolution?

Similar DNA or protein sequences suggest common ancestry


400

What is gene flow?

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

400

What happens to advantageous traits over time in a population?

They increase in frequency

400

How can changes in allele frequencies lead to speciation?

Accumulated genetic differences prevent successful reproduction between populations

500

Why does the fossil record often support punctuated equilibrium rather than gradualism?

Fossils form infrequently due to quick changes in the environment, so rapid changes in the organisms appear sudden with long gaps showing little change

500

Species in similar environments evolve similar traits due to shared ancestry or environmental pressures

Biogeography

500

What is coevolution

when two species evolve in response to each other

500

Explain why natural selection acts on populations, not individuals.

Individuals do not evolve; populations change as allele frequencies shift over generations

500

How can behavioral isolation lead to speciation even when two populations live in the same geographic area?

Differences in mating behaviors or timing prevent interbreeding, leading to reproductive isolation and the formation of new species