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A comprehensive overview of key concepts and principles in evolutionary biology, covering topics such as natural selection, adaptation, genetic drift, and phylogeny. It includes numerous questions and answers, making it a valuable resource for students studying evolutionary biology. The document also explores the historical development of evolutionary thought, highlighting the contributions of prominent scientists like darwin, wallace, and mendel.
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what are the five major developments that preceded darwins "on the origin of species"
some individuals leave more offspring in the next generation than others do, often due to advantages in survival or reproduction adaptation a trait that has been shaped by natural selection to serve the same primary function or functions that make it beneficial today exaptation a trait that has a different function today than it did in the past life-history trade-off an increase in one life history is coupled to a decrease in another life history trait what are mendels two laws?
mendelian traits discrete traits passed onto offspring in the expected mendelian ratios epigenetic inheritance alterations in gene expression without changes in DNA sequence, some epigenetic mechanisms can be heritable, chromosome structured as chromatin; DNA wound around histones, transcription doesnt occur when chromatin is tightly wound around histones DNA methylation addition of a methyl group to a C-G base pair
traits include the timing of sexual maturity, the timing of aging or senescence, the number and size of offspring, and whether an organism reproduces repeatedly over the course of its lifetime, or just once during its lifetime gene duplication provides another evolutionary pathway by which a protein can switch functions without loss of the original function. in a gene duplication event, an extra copy of a functional gene is formed. transmission genetics the mechanisms by which genes are passed from parents to offspring and a discussion of genetic variation and mutation evolution the change in allele frequencies over time in a population microevolution small incremental steps (changes in allele frequencies from one generation to the next), leads to macroevolution over long time scales
chi square test equation X^2 = EfiO-E^2/E overdominance heterozygote advantage: leads to a balanced polymorphism for both alleles maintained in a population under dominance heterozygote has lower fitness than either homozygote
a genetically inherited condition leading to shortened or malformed fingers and toes autosome a chromosome that is not a sex chromosome equilibria a "steady state", what traits will remain the same over a long period of time inbreeding depression when the offspring of genetic relatives have reduced fitnesses what do the results of a chi-square test mean?
characters any observable characteristic of organisms; for example, they may be anatomical features, developmental/ embryological processes, behavioural patterns, or genetic sequences taxon a group of related organisms nodes a branching point representing a common ancestor to all taxa that stem from it homologous trait a trait found in two or more species because those species have inherited this trait from an ancestor analogous trait
paraphyletic group is one that does include the common ancestor of all its members but does not contain each and every species that descended from that ancestor rooted trees rooted trees indicate the direction of time
measure the pairwise "distances" between species then we can use these distances to reconstruct the tree