100

53
100 200 300 400 500 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 200 300 400 500 100 Pattern s of Evoluti on How it works Natural Selecti on Evidence of evolution Speciation

Upload: joella

Post on 22-Feb-2016

72 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Patterns of Evolution. How it works. Natural Selection. Evidence of evolution. Speciation. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 300. 300. 300. 300. 300. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 500. 500. 500. 500. 500. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 100

100

200

300

400

500

200

300

400

500

100

200

300

400

500

100

200

300

400

500

100

200

300

400

500

100

Patterns of

Evolution

How it works

Natural Selection

Evidence of evolution Speciation

Page 2: 100

Which type of selection is occurring in a cricket population that is

changing from curved wings to flat wings?

100 points

Page 3: 100

Directional selection

100 points

Page 4: 100

The two types of genetic drift are the bottleneck effect and____________

200 points

Page 5: 100

the founder effect

200 points

Page 6: 100

What process of natural selection favors the extreme phenotypes of a trait and eliminates intermediate phenotypes?

?

300 points

Page 7: 100

Disruptive Selection

300 points

Page 8: 100

The situation in which allele frequencies in the gene pool of a

population remain constant is called

400 points

Page 9: 100

Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium

400 points

Page 10: 100

Double Jeopardy

Page 11: 100

A change in the _______ _______ exemplifies biological evolution.

Page 12: 100

Gene pool

Page 13: 100

The allele frequencies of a population are more likely to change if

100 points

a. there are no disastersb. there is no gene flowc. mating is not random

d. there are no mutations

Page 14: 100

Mating is not random

100 points

Page 15: 100

“Fitness” refers to what?

200 points

Page 16: 100

those individuals with favorable traits survive and reproduce

200 points

Page 17: 100

The cheetahs have very little variation in their population. This is due in part to an ice age thousands of years ago which drastically reduced their population and more recently, it is due to poaching and habitat loss. The cheetahs loss of variation occurred as a result of ________.

300 points

Page 18: 100

the bottleneck effect

300 points

Page 19: 100

Besides mutation, what else provides variation in a population?

400 points

Page 20: 100

sexual reproduction

400 points

Page 21: 100

A horse and a donkey can mate to produce a mule. The mule is sterile and cannot reproduce. Using this example, explain that a horse and donkey are NOT the same species.

500 points

Page 22: 100

To be the same specie the offspring must be fertile

500 points

Page 23: 100

What is the raw material of natural selection?

100 points

Page 24: 100

Variation

100 points

Page 25: 100

200 points

If a mutation introduces a new skin color in a lizard population, which of the following would determine if the frequency of that new phenotype might increase

Page 26: 100

Fitness of the mutation for the environment.

200 points

Page 27: 100

If all of the alleles for a trait are equally favorable in the

environment, what happens to natural selection for that trait?

300 points

Page 28: 100

The trait is not selected by natural selection.

300 points

Page 29: 100

If a cricket population is changing from curved wings to flat wings, which wing shape should be the

fittest for the environment?

400 points

Page 30: 100

Flat wings

400 points

Page 31: 100

Daily Double

Page 32: 100

According to fossil evidence, whales evolved from 4-legged ancestors. The modern baleen whale has forelimbs, but inspection of its skeleton reveals only tiny vestigial hind limbs. What is the best explanation for this loss of hind limbs in the baleen whale?

500 points

Page 33: 100

Random chance and genetic drift led to the reduction in size of hind limbs.

Page 34: 100

Structures that no longer serve their original purpose in the body are

called what? 100 points

Page 35: 100

vestigial

100 points

Page 36: 100

Penguin feathers and eagle feathers are structurally similar. Penguins need feathers for warmth while eagles use them in flight. These are _____________________structures.

200 points

Page 37: 100

homologous

200 points

Page 38: 100

Which of the following indicates a recent common ancestor?

a. homologous structuresb. analogous structuresc. flight

300 points

Page 39: 100

homologous structures

300 points

Page 40: 100

Molecular evidence in support of natural selection includes

400 points

Page 41: 100

the universal code of DNA

400 points

Page 42: 100

According to the cladogram, ferns are most closely related to?

500 points

Page 43: 100

Flowering plants

500 points

Page 44: 100

What is require of offspring if the parents are to be considered to be the

same specie ?100 points

Page 45: 100

They must be fertile.

100 points

Page 46: 100

When a species includes organisms with a great deal of variation, what happens to the chances of survival

after a catastrophe?

200 points

Page 47: 100

It improves the chances of survival.

200 points

Page 48: 100

Two species of lizard are separated by the formation of a wide river. Even when the climate changes and the river dries up, the two species do not interbreed. This is ______________ isolation.

300 points

Page 49: 100

geographical

300 points

Page 50: 100

The mating dance of the blue-footed booby creates __________ isolation

with other species of birds.?

400 points

Page 51: 100

behavior

400 points

Page 52: 100

In order for speciation to occur, What isolation MUST take place?

500 points

Page 53: 100

reproductive

500 points