Chapter 15: The Theory of Evolution
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Created by:
2014juliamoeller on April 19, 2011
Subjects:
glencoe biology: the dynamics of life 2005
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24 terms
Terms | Definitions |
|---|---|
artificial selection | process of breeding organisms with specific traits in order to produce offspring with identical traits |
natural selection | mechanism for change in populations; occurs when organisms with favorable variations survive, reproduce, and pass their variations to the next generation |
mimicry | structural adaptation that enables one species to resemble another species; may provide protection from predators or other advantage |
camouflage | structural adaptation that enables species to blend with their surroundings; allows a species to avoid detection by predators |
homologous structures | structures with common evolutionary origins; can be similar in arrangement, function, or both; provides evidence of evolution from a common ancestor; forelimbs of crocodiles, whales, and birds are examples |
analogous structures | structures that do not have a common evolutionary origin but are similar in fuction |
vestigial structure | a structure in a present day organism that no longer serves its natural purpose, but was probably useful to an ancestor; evidence of evolution |
embryo | earliest stage of growth and development in both plants and animals; differences and similarities among embryos can provide evidence of evolution |
gene pool | all of the alleles in a population's genes |
allelic frequency | percentage of any specific allele in a population's gene pool |
genetic equilibrium | condition in which the frequency of alleles remains the same over generations |
genetic drift | alteration of allelic frequencies in a population by chance events; results in disruption of genetic equilibrium |
stabilizing selection | natural selection that favors average individuals within a population; results in a decline in population variation |
directional selection | natural selection that favors one of the extreme variations of a trait; can lead to rapid evolution in a population |
disruptive selection | natural selection that favors individuals with either extreme of a trait; tends to eliminate intermediate phenotypes |
speciation | process of evolution of new species that occurs when members of similar population no longer interbreed to produce fertile offspring within their natural environment |
geographic isolation | occurs when formerly interbreeding organisms can no longer produce fertile offspring due to an incompatibility of their genetic material or be differences in mating behavior |
reproductive isolation | occurs when formerly interbreeding organisms earn no longer produce fertile offspring due to an incompatibility of their genetic material or by differences in mating behavior |
polyploid | any species with multiple sets of the normal set of chromosomes; results from errors during mitosis or meiosis |
gradualism | idea that species originate through a gradual change of adaptations |
punctuated equilibrium | idea that periods of speciation occur relatively quickly with long period of genetic equilibrium in between |
adaptive radiation | divergen evolution in which ancestral species evolve into an array of species to fit a number of diverse habitats |
divergent evolution | evolution in which species that once were similar to an ancestral species diverge; occurs when populations change as they adapt to different environmental conditions; eventually resulting in a new species |
convergent evolution | evolution in which distantly related organisms evolve similar traits; occurs when unrelated species occupy similar environments |
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