Evolution
Natural Selection
Patterns/Speciation
Evidence for Evolution
Miscellaneous
100

This "father" of evolutionary theory.

Who is Charles Darwin?

100

Survival of the fittest is also known as . . . .

What is Natural Selection?

100

The process when one species splits off into multiple species. 

What is speciation?

100
The hip bones of a dolphin and the tailbone of a human
What are Vestigial Structures?
100

The movement of individuals into/out of a population, increasing genetic diversity.

What is immigration/emigration?

200

In its most simplest terms, what is evolution?

What is a change in species over time.

200
The variety of dog and cat breeds that we have today are a product of _________ _____________.
What is Artificial Breeding (Selective Breeding)
200

Large male lobsters get most of the females to breed with.  The tiny males sneak in and breed as well.  The medium males cannot do either, so they tend to miss out on breeding.  What type of selection is this? (Stabilizing, Disruptive, or Directional)

What is disruptive selection?

200
An example of a structure that is homologous to a cat’s paw.
What is a Dog’s paw, human arm, bat wing, whale flipper
200

The search for the "missing link" specimens that show the evolutionary transition between species.  

What is fossil record?

300

Where did Darwin make his groundbreaking discoveries with the tortoises and finches?

Where are the Galapagos Islands.

300

Biologically speaking, this is the ability of an organism to survive AND reproduce young.  

What is fitness?

300

Two species of birds are isolated from each other because they build different types of nests and they don't find each other attractive.  What type of isolation is this? (Geographic, Behavioral, or Temporal)

What is behavioral isolation.

300
Body parts that share a common function but have a different structure
What is an analogous structure?
300

A random change in DNA that helps cause evolution.

What is a mutation?

400

All individuals are born with different DNA; some will survive better than others.  

What is Genetic Variation?

400

Random events (weather, natural disaster, etc.) that kill off enough individuals and isolate a small segment of a population, forcing them to start their new population with a small gene pool.  

What is a genetic bottleneck?

400

Red foxes live near the city, while gray foxes live out in the countryside, so the two species never cross paths.  What type of isolation is this? (Geographic, Behavioral, or Temporal)

What is geographic isolation?

400

Two organisms share a large amount of genetic material, indicating they are probably related.

What is DNA comparison?

400

The choosing of mates with a particular set of traits that make them attractive.  

What is sexual selection/nonrandom mating?

500

Evolution is a change in the gene pool over time; what is that shift in gene percentages called?

What is allele frequency?

500

A small group of individuals leave the main population, and as a result, their new population has a very limited gene pool. (Hint: Amish)

What is Founder's Effect.

500

Hippos with tusks that are too small are outcompeted by bigger males, while those with massive tusks may suffer health issues.  Therefore, the medium-length tusks fare the best.  What pattern of selection is this (Disruptive, Stabilizing, or Directional)

What is stabilizing selection?

500
When the developing fetuses of different animals look the same, showing that maybe they came from a common ancestor. 

What is embryology?

500

What is the name of the mathematical theory that looks at the allele frequencies in a population?  AND what are the 2 formulas that are used for it?

What is Hardy-Weinberg Theorem

p + q= 1           p2 + 2pq + q2= 1