Natural Selection
Population Genetics
Hardy-Weinberg
Evidence of Evolution
Speciation and Phylogeny
100

Darwins theory explains that organisms with these traits are more likely to survive, reproduce and pass on their traits.

What are favorable phenotypes?

100

A random change in allele frequencies in small populations is called this.

What is genetic drift?

100

Hardy-Weinberg condition states that this cannot occur in the population.

What is one of the five options...?

Random mating, no mutations, no gene flow, very large population size and no natural selection

100

Structures with similar anatomy due to common ancestry are called these, even if they serve different functions.

 What are homologous structures?

100

Speciation caused by geographic isolation is called this.

 What is allopatric speciation?

200

This type of selection occurs when humans breed organisms for desired traits.

What is artificial selection?

200

This type of genetic drift occurs after a population is drastically reduced.
 

 What is the bottleneck effect?

200

Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium serves as this type of scientific comparison model.

 What is a null hypothesis?

200

Structures with different anatomy, but similar function.
 

What are analogous structures?

200

Evolution occurring rapidly after long periods of little change is known as this.

 What is punctuated equilibrium?

300

Natural selection acts directly on this type of variation within populations.

What is phenotypic variation?

300

The movement of alleles between populations is known as.

What is gene flow?

300

In Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, mating within the population must occur in this way.

What is random mating?

300

Scientists compare these sequences to show evidence of common ancestry.

What are DNA nucleotide sequences?

300

These diagrams show evolutionary relationships among organisms.
 

 What are phylogenetic trees or cladograms?

400

Greater biodiversity in a population increases its ability to do this when environments change.

What is survive/adapt to environmental change?

400

Mutations are important because they create this in populations.
 

 What is genetic variation?

400

If allele frequencies change over time, the population is experiencing this.

 What is evolution?

400

These preserved remains or traces provide geological evidence for evolution.
 

What are fossils?

400

Similar adaptations evolving independently in unrelated species is called this.
 

What is convergent evolution?

500

Competition for these drives natural selection according to Darwin.

What are limited resources?

500

This process occurs when a small group starts a new population separate from the original.

 What is the founder effect?

500

This equation represents genotype frequencies in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
 

What is 1p^2+2pq+q^2=1

500

The dating method that uses radioactive decay is called this.

What is radiometric dating?

500

On a phylogenetic tree, these represent the most recent common ancestor.
 

 What are nodes?