Evolution Test Review

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Evolution Test Review

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Evolution Test Review. 1. Give a definition for evolution. Why do living things need to evolve?. Definition : species change over time As the environment changes, living things need to survive, so they must change as time goes on. 2. How are fossils dated?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Evolution Test Review

Page 1: Evolution Test Review

Evolution Test Review

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1. Give a definition for evolution. Why do living things need to evolve?

• Definition: species change over time

• As the environment changes, living things need to survive, so they must change as time goes on

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2. How are fossils dated? • Radiometric/ Radiocarbon Dating: measures the

amount of radioactive isotopes in a fossil to determine its age– Pro: can give you the exact age of a fossil– Con: can’t be used on really old fossils because the

radioactivity goes away with time• Relative Dating: compares the age of a fossil to

other fossils found in the same rock layer– Pro: can be used to give you an estimated age of

really old fossils– Con: rock layers can be shifted by earthquakes or

mudslides and this can give an inaccurate estimate

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3. How can we get evidence for evolution from the fossil record?

• The fossil record shows us how living things have changed their forms over time

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4. What are homologous structures? Give an example. How do they

provide evidence for evolution?

• Similar structures with different functions• Example: a human’s arm and a bat’s wing• Evidence: they show that there was a

common ancestor

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5. What are vestigial structures? Give an example. How do they provide

evidence for evolution?

• Structures that no longer serve a purpose but had a purpose in an ancestor

• Example: Tailbone in humans; wings on flightless birds

• Evidence: show how things change over time

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6. How does embryology (study of embryos/development) provide

evidence for evolution?

• Similarities among embryos show a common ancestor

• Also show how things have changed over time (ex – human embryos have gill slits and tails as embryos that go away during development)

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7. What molecular evidence can be used to support the theory of

evolution? Why does it support the theory?

• Similar DNA sequences and proteins• The more close the DNA sequences and

proteins are, it is thought that the more closely related the two species will be

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8. How does biogeography provide evidence for evolution?

• It shows that island species have a lot of similarities to animals on the closest mainland

• It shows how species have adapted for the climate that they live in

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9. Explain Charles Darwin’s discoveries (finches and tortoises).

• Finches: – Darwin noticed that where there were nuts for

food, the finches had short, hard beaks– Where there was fruit and insects for food, the

finches had long, thin beaks• Tortoises:– Darwin noticed that where there was low

vegetation, the tortoises had short legs and necks– where there was high vegetation, the tortoises

had long legs and necks

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10. What are adaptations? Give an example of an adaptation

• Adaptation: a beneficial change that allows an organism/species to survive

• Example: thick fur on a rabbit that lives in the arctic

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11. What 3 things can we learn by studying cladograms?

• Cladograms show:– Shared traits– The order the traits appeared in– Probable relationships

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12. How do you read a cladogram?

• Reads from the bottom up– Oldest/most common trait at the bottom– Newest/least common trait at the top

• Each organism on the cladogram has all the traits below it

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13. What are Linnaeus’ 7 different taxonomic groups from largest to

smallest? What can classifying things tell you about evolution?

• Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species

• Classification can tell you how closely related two species are and how recently they shared a common ancestor – the more of the above groupings they have in common, the more closely related they are

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14. How do you read a dichotomous key?

• Select an organism/specimen to identify• Begin reading the key at line 1• Follow directions on key until you are able to

identify your organism/specimen

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15. Describe survival of the fittest.

• The best adapted to the environment will survive and leave offspring behind to continue the species

• Example: the fastest running prey will be able to avoid predators and survive better than slower prey

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16. What is the purpose of sexual selection?

• Gives males traits to attract the best females to mate with

• This allows the species to better survive

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17. Describe extinction (include background and mass). Why do

species become extinct?• Background: happens over longer time

periods at a slow rate• Mass: happens suddenly and drastically

(wipes out lots of species on a global level)• Species become extinct because they lack the

variations needed to survive

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18. Describe genetic drift. Include the bottleneck effect and founder effect.

• Genetic drift: changes in the alleles of a population due to chance

• Bottleneck effect: occurs when a “bottleneck event” (ex – natural disaster) drastically reduces the population so that it no longer resembles the original population

• Founder effect: occurs when part of a populations colonizes a new area and most likely evolves into a new species

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19. What is gene flow?

• Movement of alleles between populations– Example: migration

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20. What does it mean to be biologically fit?

• It means that the individuals are able to survive and reproduce

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21. What are variations? Give an example.

• Differences in a population• Example: different beak types in finches

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22. What is a gene pool?

• All the genes available to a population

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23. What are allele frequencies?

• How often certain alleles are seen in a population

• They can tell you which genes better help a population survive (a more common gene would be thought to be more beneficial)

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24. What is natural selection?

• Organisms will inherit beneficial adaptations that will help them survive and leave behind more offspring than other individuals

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25. What happened in the Wooly Worm lab? Why was it easier to find certain colors over others?

• “worms” of different colors were collected during different timed intervals

• Certain colors stood out so it was easier to see them and collect them than it was the colors that could camouflage themselves against the colors of the room

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26. Describe directional, stabilizing, and disruptive selection. Give examples.

• Directional: favors phenotype at one extreme– Example: bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics will survive and

shift the population to all (mostly) have that same trait• Stabilizing: favors the intermediate phenotype– Example: gall flies lay their eggs in plants and that creates a “gall”

in the plant – the medium sized galls are left alone while the small galls are destroyed by wasps and the large galls are destroyed by woodpeckers

• Disruptive: favors both extreme phenotypes– Example: bright blue (dominant trait) male buntings (birds) will

attack and kill blue-brown (intermediate pheno.) males and leave the brown (recessive) males alone

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27. How do you correctly type and handwrite a scientific name? Give an

example.• Two words, first letter of the first word capitalized– Typed: in italics– Handwritten: underlined

• Example: Homo sapiensHomo sapiens (pretend this is handwriting)