Evidence of Evolution
Fossil timeline
Natural Selection
Mechanisms of evolution
Speciation and Population change
100

Structures that have similar anatomy but different functions, like a whale flipper and bat wing, are called these.

homologous structures

100

Slow, steady change in species over long periods of time is called this.

gradualism

100

Traits that help an organism survive and reproduce are called this.

adaptations

100

A random change in DNA is called this.

mutation

100

The formation of a new species is called this.

speciation

200

The study of where organisms live and how they are distributed around the world is called this.

biogeography

200

Long periods of little or no evolutionary change in the fossil record are called this.

stasis

200

Natural selection acts on this level of organization.

population

200

Movement of individuals into or out of a population that changes allele frequencies is called this.

gene flow

200

When populations become separated by a physical barrier like a river or mountain, this type of speciation may occur.

geographic isolation

300

Similar DNA sequences between humans and chimpanzees provide this type of evidence for evolution.

molecular homology

300

A species appears suddenly in the fossil record, remains unchanged for long periods, then disappears. This pattern supports this theory.

punctuated equilibrium

300

A population of insects develops resistance to pesticides over generations. This is an example of natural selection because the resistant insects do this

survive and reproduce more successfully

300

A natural disaster randomly kills many individuals in a population, leaving only a few survivors. This is an example of this mechanism.

genetic drift

300

If two populations of the same species can no longer interbreed to produce fertile offspring, they are considered this.

gametic / reproductive isolation

400

Embryos of fish, birds, and mammals share similar early developmental stages. This provides this type of evolutionary evidence.

embryology

400

A scientist finds fossils showing small changes in shell size across many layers of rock over millions of years. This most strongly supports this model of evolution.

gradualism

400

In a population of rabbits, some are faster than others. Predators catch the slower rabbits more often. Over time, the population of rabbits become faster because this occurs.

natural selection

400

During reproduction, chromosomes exchange genetic material, creating new combinations of alleles. This mechanism is called this.

genetic recombination

400

A small group of birds migrates to a new island and develops different traits over many generations due to limited genetic diversity. This is an example of this effect.

founder effect

500

Scientists discover fossils of similar organisms on continents that are now far apart. This most strongly supports the idea that these continents were once this.

biogeography

500

A fossil record shows long periods with no change followed by rapid appearance of new species after a major environmental event. This pattern best supports which explanation for evolutionary change?

punctuated equilibrium

500

A drought reduces available food in a population of finches. Birds with stronger beaks survive and reproduce more than birds with weaker beaks. Over several generations, most birds have stronger beaks. This demonstrates that natural selection causes change in this.

population

500

A population becomes resistant to disease after a mutation introduces a new allele. This mechanism changes the gene pool by adding this.

genetic variation

500

Two populations of frogs live in the same area but breed at different times of the year. Over time, they become separate species. This type of reproductive isolation is called this.

temporal isolation