Biodiversity and Diversification
Evolutionary Changes and
Speciation
Darwin and Wallace
Punctuated vs Gradual Evolution
Extra Evolution Facts
100

The term used to describe the variety of living things on earth.

Biodiversity

100

The mechanism by which advantageous traits become more common in populations over generations.

Natural selection

100

The scientist who formulated natural selection after observing variation in finches.

Charles Darwin

100

The concept that species evolve slowly and gradually over long periods.

Gradualism

100

Features that improve an organism's survival or reproduction in its environment.

Adaptations

200

Variation in DNA sequences among individuals in a population that allows natural selection to act.

Genetic diversity

200

Small genetic changes in populations that accumulate over generations.

Microevolution

200

The scientist who independently developed the theory of natural selection after observing species diversity in Southeast Aisa.

Alfred Wallace

200

The theory that species remain mostly unchanged for long periods, then undergo rapid evolutionary change.

Punctuated equilibrium

200

The type of adaptation that involves changes in an organisim's actions that help it survive in its environment.

Behavioural adaptations

300

The process by which a single lineage splits into multiple, distinct evolutionary pathways or species.

Evolutionary diversification

300

The changes in the horse's ancestral species show gradual modifications in body size and limb structure over time.

Cumulative evolutionary change

300

The islands where Darwin studied finches, leading to observations that helped explain species adaptation and natural selection.

The Galapagos Islands

300

The main difference between gradualism and punctuated equilibrium.

The speed and timing of evolutionary change

300

Body structures descended from a common ancestor but serve different functions.

Homologous structures

400

The process by which new species emerge and occupy different ecological roles over time

Species diversification

400

The platypus shows unique adaptations like egg-laying and venomous spurs, demonstrating gradual trait evolution.

Adaptive specialisation

400

The evolution of different traits in closely related species adapting to different environments.

Divergent evolution

400

Fossil records show the sudden appearances of species with few transitional forms.

Punctuated evolutionary patterns

400

One ancestral species giving rise to multiple species in different ecological niches.

Adaptive radiation

500

The decline in species numbers and ecosystem complexity caused by habitat destruction.

Reduction in biodiversity

500

When populations diverge to the point that they can no longer interbreed successfully.

Reproductive isolation - Speciation

500

The evolution of similar traits is unrelated species exposed to similar environmental pressures.

Convergent evolution

500

Environmental events such as mass extinctions can trigger this type of rapid species change.

Burst evolution

500

The process that causes random changes in allele frequencies in a population which can lead to evolution over time.

Genetic drift