Genetics Basics
Hard-Weinberg & Population Genetics
Behavior and Communication
Ecology and Interactions
Costs, Trade-offs and Variation
100

Genetic information that can be passed from parents to offspring.

What is Heritable Information?

100

All the alleles present in a population.

What is the gene pool?

100

Behaviors that are inherited vs. those learned through experience.

What are innate and learned behaviors?

100

The study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment.

What is ecology?

100

When gaining one benefit comes with a cost in another area.

What is a trade-off?

200

The genetic makeup of an organism, or the alleges it carries.

What is Genotype?

200

The model stating allele frequencies remain constant if no evolution is occuring.

What is the Hardy-Weinberg principle of equilibrium?

200

A random change in movement in response to a stimulus.

What is kinesis?

200

An interaction where one organism benefits and the other is harmed.

What is parasitism?

200

The energy required to perform or maintain a behavior.

What is energetic cost?

300

The observable traits of an organism, influenced by both genes and environment.

What is Phenotype?

300

No mutation, no migration, random mating, large population, and no natural selection.

What are the conditions for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium?

300

Behavior that benefits another at a cost to oneself.

What is altruistic behavior?

300

A principle stating that no two species can occupy the same niche indefinitely.

What is the competitive exclusion principle?

300

Increased chance of harm due to a behavior, like making noise that attracts predators.

What is risk cost?

400

Permanent changes in DNA sequence that can create a new variation.

What is a mutation?

400

p², 2pq, and q² represent genotype frequencies in this model.

What is the Hardy-Weinberg equation?

400

Smells, sounds, or visual displays are examples of this.

What are types of communication signals?

400

A close, long-term interaction between two species (mutualism, parasitism, or commensalism).

What is symbiosis?

400

When signals are misunderstood due to differences between individuals.

What is variation resulting in failed communication?

500

The reshuffling of genetic material during meiosis that creates new allele combinations.

What is recombination?

500

A statical test comparing observed vs. expected genetic data

What is a chi-squared analysis?

500

A strategy organisms use to maximize food gained while minimizing effort or risk.

What is optimal foraging behavior?

500

A measure of biodiversity that includes both richness and evenness.

What is the Shannon Biodiversity Index?

500

Lost opportunities because time/energy was invested in one behavior over another.

What is opportunity cost?