Term
Name 7 characteristics something must have to be considered alive |
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Definition
1. Reproduction
2. Cells (interact w/other cells)
3. Genetic Info
4. Metabolize
4. Evolved
6. Regulate
7. Interaction |
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Term
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Definition
1. Bacteria
2. Archaea
3. Eukarya
Bacteria and Archaea have no nucleus |
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Term
Name the steps in the scientific process and how each is used. |
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Definition
1. Make observations - occurs before experiment
2. Create Hypotheses - must be testable and have independent (treatment) and dependent (what is measured) variables.
3. Design Experiment - can be controlled or comparative. Controlled gives better data comparative gives real world data
4. Collect and Summarize Data
5. Analyze Results
6. Communicate Findings |
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Term
List the 4 Eukaryotic kingdoms and give examples of organisms found in each. |
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Definition
1. Animal - (ingests food)
2. Plant - (makes food)
3. Fungi - (absorbs food)
4. Protest - (all other eukaryotes) |
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Term
Gives the rules for the proper form of a species binomial name |
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Definition
Genus is capitlized, species isn't
Both are italicized
Genus can stand alone, species can't
Genus can be abbreviates with 1st inital after first use of the binomial |
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Term
Explain the difference between covalent, ionic, and hydrogen bonds |
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Definition
Covalent-strongest bond, share electrons that orbit both atoms indicated with a solid line
Ionic-weak bond, creates salts contains elements normally found as ions
Hydrogen-weakest bond, does not create molecules, changes molecules properties indicated with a dashed line |
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Term
Draw the chemical structure of water including hydrogen bonds |
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Definition
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Term
Define Hydrophilic, hydrophobic, polar, and nonpolar |
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Definition
Hydrophilic - water loving
Hydrophobic - water hating
polar - polar covalent bond electronics are shared unequally e.g. O2
nonpolar-nonpolar covalent bonds electrons are shared equally e.g. H2O |
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Term
Gives values for acidic, basic and neutral pHs |
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Definition
Acidic - less than 7
Basic - 7
Neutral - more than 7 |
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Term
What are the 4 macromolecules/polymers found in organisms |
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Definition
1. Proteins
2. Lipids
3. Carbohydrates
4. Nucleic Acids |
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Term
Name the monomers or subunits of which each macromolecule is formed |
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Definition
1. Proteins-amino acids 2. Carbohydrates - Monosaccharide 3. Lipids - Triglycerides 4. Nucleic Acid - Nucleotides |
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Term
Give an example of each type of macromolecule and its function |
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Definition
Protein: Enzyme - catalyze reactions, transport, structural Carbohydrate:Monosaccharide, disaccharide, oligosaccharide, polsaccharide, energy, transport, cell recognition, stores energy Lipis: Steroids, cholesterol, pigments & vitamins, energy storage, repel water, cell membrane, captures light Nucleic acids: DNA, RNA, ATP storage transmission, genetic information |
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Term
List the three parts of the cell theory |
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Definition
1. Cells are fundamental units of life 2. All organisms are composed of cells 3. All cells come from preexisting cells |
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Term
Describe the difference between prokaryote/eukaryote cells and plant/animals cells |
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Definition
Prokaryote are archaea and bacteria, have no nucleus or organelles. Plant cells have chloroplasts, cell wall, vacuole and plastids. Animals have centrioles and lysosomes |
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Term
Explain the endosymbiotic theory of the origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts |
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Definition
mitochondria and plastids arose when one cell engulfed another cell |
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Term
List the 3 types of molecules found in the fluid mosaic model of the plasma membrane |
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Definition
1. phospholipid bilayer 2. Cholesterol 3. Proteins |
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Term
Draw a phospholipid bilayer. Label heads and tails which parts are hydrophobic and hydrophilic |
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Definition
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Term
Describe simple diffusion, facilitated diffusion, osmosis |
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Definition
Simple diffusion - diffusion directly through the membrane, only to small uncharged molecules like water oxygen, CO Facilitated Diffusion - molecules use proteins to cross the membrane, no energy is required can go either direction across membrane Osmosis - Diffusion of water across a semipermeable membrane. Goes from high concentration to low concentration |
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Term
Describe Endocytosis and active transport |
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Definition
Endocytosis - membrane folds around material and engulfs it Active Transport - moves substance against concentration gradient, requires energy |
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Term
Explain hypertonic, isotonic, and hypotonic |
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Definition
Hypertonic - high solute concentration Isotonic - equal solute concentration Hypotonic - low solute concentration |
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Term
Label components of a reaction |
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Definition
Substrate - left side of equation Enzyme - over the arrow Products - right side of equation |
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Term
Give function of enzymes and explain how they work |
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Definition
Enzyme is a biological catalysts. Speeds up the rate of reactions by reducing the amount of energy required |
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Term
How do temperature and pH affect enzyme activity |
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Definition
pH and temperature change the shape of the enzyme and affects fluidity of bond |
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Term
Write the equation of aerobic respiration |
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Definition
c6h12o6+602 = co2+h2o+energy |
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Term
Explain step 1 of aerobic respiration |
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Definition
Glycolysis - occurs in the cytoplasm starts with 6 carbons, 4 atp produced 2 consumed for net atp=2 and 2 pyruvate produced |
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Term
Explain step 2 of aerobic respiration |
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Definition
Pyruvate Oxidation- takes place in mitochondria matrix, starts with 2 pyruvate and 3 carbons. Ends with acetyle coa and 2 carbons. NAD+ is reduced to NADH |
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Term
Explain step 3 of aerobic respiration |
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Definition
Citric Acid Cycle (Kreb's Cycle) - takes place in mitochondria matrix. Starts with acetyle coa 2 carbons. Ends with 4co2 and 1 carbon each. NAD+ and FAD is reduced to 6 NADH and 2 FADH2. Makes 2 atp. |
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Term
Explain step 4 of aerobic respiration |
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Definition
Electron Transport-takes place in innermotichondrial membrane. Starting reactant is oxygen. Makes 28 atp, Electrons go through 5 proteins total of 6 steps, 6 enzymes |
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Term
How can cells produce ATP in the absence of oxygen |
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Definition
Anaerobic Respiration. Energy is harvested from glucose through lactic acid/fermentation |
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Term
Compare respiration in plants to respiration in animals. Equation? Location in cell? |
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Definition
Respiration in plants requires light + 6co2+6h20 and makes glucose. Plants use the calvin cycle. Happens in the reaction center. |
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Term
What colors of light are used by chlorophyll for photosynthesis? Why are plants green? |
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Definition
Photosynthesis uses red and blue lights. Not using green light that's why plants are green |
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Term
What is equation for photosynthesis and the role of each item. |
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Definition
light+6co2+6H20 enzyme is chlorophyll and makes glucose. light reactions makes ATP and NADPH. 6co2 is needed to calvin cycle. H2O used in light dependent reactions. |
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Term
List 2 steps of photosynthesis and give the location where each occurs |
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Definition
1. light reactions occur in thylakoids creates ATP and NADPH 2. Light independent reactions occur in stroma. creates glucose and uses ATP & NADPH |
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Term
Draw the basic structure of DNA |
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Definition
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Term
Draw the basic process of semiconservative DNA replication |
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Definition
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|
Term
What are homologous chromosomes |
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Definition
2 separate chromosomes with the same gene |
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Term
What are sister chromatids |
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Definition
2 identical double helices formed from duplication of original chromosome (replicated chromosome) |
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Term
Explain haploid and diploid cells |
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Definition
Diploid contains two of each size chromosome, haploid has one |
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Term
List the phases of the cell cycle |
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Definition
1. Gap 1 - chromosomes are unreplicated 2. S phase - chromocomes duplicates into 2 sister chromatids 3. Gap 2 - cell prepares for mitosis 4. M phase - Microsis (division of nucleus) and cytokinesis (division of cytoplasm). All but mitosis is Interphase |
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Term
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Definition
makes 2 identical daughter cells, same as the parent. Used for growth, repair and asexual reproduction |
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Term
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Definition
Produces haploid gametes, used in sexual reproduction offspring not identical to parents. Prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase |
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Term
Name 5 differences in mitosis and meiosis |
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Definition
1. Meiosis creates homologous pairs 2. Mitosis creates 2 daughter cells and meiosis creates 4 gametes cells. 3. Meiosis creates haploid cells 4. Crossing over occurs in meiosis 5. Meiosis has 2 phases of division |
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Term
Who was the father of genetics and what are his 2 laws of heredity |
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Definition
Gregor Mendel - 1. Laws of inheritance 2. Law of independent assortment |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
not all particles for a trait are identical S or s |
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Term
Explain dominant and recessive |
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Definition
Dominant SS or Ss and Recessive is ss displayed |
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Term
What is homozygous and heterozygous |
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Definition
Homozygous - 2 copies of the same allele Heterozygous - 2 different alleles |
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Term
What is phenotype and genotype |
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Definition
Genotype is the genetic makup Phenotype is the physical appearnce from the gentic makeup (blue eyed, tall) |
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Term
Explain the one gene one polypeptide relationship |
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Definition
Each gene codes for a single polypeptide (protein) |
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Term
How do cells make other molecules needed for growth |
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Definition
using reactions catalyzed by enzymes |
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Term
List the steps in the central dogma of molecular biology and where it occurs |
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Definition
1. Replication - nucleus 2. Transcription- nucleus 3. Translation - cytoplasm |
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Term
List 3 differences between RNA and DNA |
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Definition
1. DNA never leaves the nucleus 2. RNA transcribes and translates DNA 3. DNA is double stranded RNA is single |
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Term
Why does DNA always stay in the nucleus |
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Definition
keep it safe from enzymes that might damage it |
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Term
How does genetic information get from the nucleus to the cytoplasm |
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Definition
messenger rna carries gene info to cytoplasm |
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Term
How does DNA specify the amino acid sequence in a protein |
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Definition
through Translation - tRNA and rRNA |
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Term
Name 3 types of RNA and function of each |
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Definition
mRNA-messenger carries gene info tRNA-adapts the molecule for the correct amino acid/codon rRNA - lines everything up and links amino acids together |
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Term
List the 3 steps of transcription |
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Definition
1. - Initiation uses a promoter that marks the beginning of ag ene and RNA polymerase that unzips DNA and links RNA bases 2. Elongation - transcribes DNA 3' to 5' and synthesizes mRNA 5' to 3; 3. Termination - stops transcription at specific site |
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Term
What are the start codons |
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Definition
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|
Term
|
Definition
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|
Term
How many amino acids are there in living things |
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Definition
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|
Term
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Definition
set of 3 mRNA bases that code for 1 amino acid |
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Term
Do different types of organisms have different genetic codes? |
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Definition
No - all organisms use the same coding |
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Term
Describe the structure and function of tRNA and ribosome |
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Definition
tRNA - anticodon pairs a specific codon to mRNA Ribosome - holds the mRNA and tRNA during translation "workbench" |
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Term
List 3 steps of translation |
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Definition
1. Initiation - ribosome, mRNA and tRNA bound together 2. Elongation - tRNA matches next mRNA adds on 3. Termination - mRNA reaches stop codon no tRNA will bind to it Several ribosomes can work on one mRNA at same time |
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Term
Which components of gene expression can be reused |
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Definition
All but T. U replaces the T in RNA |
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Term
Do dominant alleles become more common than recessive alleles over time? |
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Definition
No, dominant/recessive is unrelated to how common something is in a population |
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Term
Explain Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium principle |
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Definition
Allele frequencies do not change if mating is random, no mutation, migration, population size is large and no natural selection. Gives a basis to measure |
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|
Term
List the 5 assumptions of Hardy-Weinberg |
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Definition
1. Mating is random 2. No mutation 3. No migration in/out of population 4. Population size is large 5. No natural selection |
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Term
Give examples of nonrandom mating |
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Definition
Individuals choose mates with particular phenotypes |
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Term
Explain the role of mutation in evolution |
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Definition
Origin of genetic variation. Mistakes in replication, if it benefits becomes more common and results in evolution |
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Term
What is gene flow and what are its consequences |
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Definition
migration of individuals moves alleles among populations. Maintains high genetic diversity to overcome environmental change hinders speciation |
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Term
What is genetic drift and when does it occur |
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Definition
random change in allele frequencies. Common in small populations |
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Term
Explain 2 cases of genetic drift |
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Definition
1. Founder effect - genetic drift affects small populations that colonize in new region (fruit flies in N&S America 2. Population bottleneck-populations that become small have less variation when they grow again - natural disaster,disease |
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Term
Describe and give examples of stabilizing, directional and disruptive selection |
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Definition
Stabilizing-medium phenotype becomes most common (human birth weights) Directional - one extreme selected for trait (Texas Longhorn Cattle) Disruptive - both extremes favored and medium becomes rare (black bellied seed crackers) |
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Term
Explain difference between a hypothesis, fact, law and theory |
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Definition
Hypothesis - tentative explanation Fact-simple observation that has been confirmed and accepted as true Law-generalization from recurring facts Theory-well tested explanation of how something occurs |
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Term
Explain 2 meanings to the word evolution |
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Definition
1. Law of evolution - species change over time (organisms share a common ancestor) 2. Theory of evolution - natural selection is mechanism by which species change over time |
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Term
Describe pre-Darwin evolutionary thought by Lamarck |
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Definition
species acquired characteristics by having a need (giraffes gained longer necks by reaching for food) |
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Term
What was Darwin's voyage and what observations did he make? |
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Definition
The voyage of the Beagle 5 years. Observed that fossils were similar to but different from living species and differences in species by location |
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Term
Who was Alfred Russel Wallace |
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Definition
Proposed a theory almost identical to Darwin. Joined with Darwin to present paper |
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Term
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Definition
Survival and # of offspring that successfully reach adulthood |
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|
Term
How does adaptation occur |
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Definition
adaptation is characteristic and process. Increase in frequency because it benefits the species |
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Term
Does the process of natural selection happen to individuals or groups |
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Definition
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|
Term
Give an example of natural selection that leads to adaptation |
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Definition
natural selection favored light moths prior to pollution after the dark moths did better |
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Term
Name 4 types of evidence to support evolution |
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Definition
1. Fossil records 2. Development - embryos 3. Comparative Anatomy - similarities in form 4. Genetic and Molecular Biology - comparison of DNA |
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Term
Explain Homologous structure |
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Definition
features shared by two or more species that were inherited from a common ancestor - vertebrate forelimbs |
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|
Term
Explain Vestigial Structures |
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Definition
Structures that had a function in an ancestor that no longer have a function - human tailbone |
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Term
Explain Analogous structure |
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Definition
not evolved from common ancestor - bat and bird wings |
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Term
Explain Divergent Evolution |
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Definition
traits are changed for a different use - |
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Term
Explain Convergent evolution |
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Definition
similar environmental pressures may favor similar characteristics in unrelated groups |
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Term
Explain evolutionary reversal |
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Definition
Loss of structures present in ancestor - loss of legs in whales |
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Term
Give useful applications of evolution research |
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Definition
Develop crops and agricultural practices Develop industrial processes Understand anatomy and physiology understand diversity of life and relationship to each other |
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Term
Explain 3 definitions of species |
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Definition
1. Morphological species - species have similar physical traits 2. Lineage species - species begin at event of evolutionary tree and end at extinction 3. Biological species - species will only breed within their species |
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Term
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Definition
Genetically different but can still interbreed (brown bear vs. grizzly bear) |
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Term
What is speciation and what condition is required for it to occur |
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Definition
process by which a species splits - must have reproductive isolation |
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Term
How do genetic incompatibilities arise and spread in a population |
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Definition
alleles that are compatible with the parent population but not with the other daughter population. |
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Term
What is the difference between sympatric and allopatric speciation |
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Definition
allopatric occurs when species are separated by a physical barrier, sympatric species are not physically isolated |
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Term
Give example of allolpatric speciation |
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Definition
Grand canyon - different squirrels on each side |
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Term
Give examples of sympatric speciation |
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Definition
apple maggot fly switched to hawthorn apple due to finding mates at the same food source |
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Term
How does polyploidy lead to speciation |
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Definition
hybrid forms or one species chromosomes doubles. Common in plants. |
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Term
Explain the difference between prexygotic and postxygotic mechanisms for preventing hybrids between species |
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Definition
Prezygotic operation before fertilization occurs. Postzygotic reduces survival and offspring |
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Term
Describe 5 types of prezygotic barriers |
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Definition
1. Habitat isolation-don't nest or feed together 2. Temporal isolation - mating periods don't overlap 3. Mechanical isolation - difference in shape/size of reproductive organs 4. Gametic isolation-sperm can't attach or penetrate egg 5. Behavioral isolation-fail to recognize potential mating partners |
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Term
Describe 3 types of postzygotic barriers |
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Definition
1. Low hybrid zygote viability-failure to mature or severe abnormalities 2. Low hybrid adult viability-lower survival rate 3. Hybrid infertility-hybrids survive but can't reproduce |
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Term
Explain adaptive radiation |
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Definition
proliferation of large number of species from single ancestor. |
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Term
Where is adaptive radiation likely to occur |
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Definition
abundant and diverse resources. Following mass extinctions, new areas (hawaii) |
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Term
Explain difference between gradualism and punctuated equilibrium |
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Definition
Gradualism changes slowly but continuously over time-punctuated stays the same for a long time then changes rapidly |
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Term
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Definition
scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environment |
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Term
Distinguish between abiotic and biotic environment |
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Definition
abiotic-physical and chemical parts of environment (temp, light, fertilizer) biotic-living parts of environment (predators, competitors, parasites_ |
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Term
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Definition
groups of individuals of the same species living in the same area |
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Term
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Definition
interactions between different species living in the same area |
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Term
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Definition
interactions of all organisms in an area plus their physical environment |
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Term
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Definition
All regions of the planet where organisms live |
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Term
Explain the difference between clumped, regular, and random dispersion |
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Definition
Clumped-presence of one individual that increases probability of another one being near(elk,deer) Regular-presence of one reduces probability of one being near (cheetahs, mtn lions_ Random-equal probability (grasshoppers, flies) |
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Term
Explain Type I, II and II survivorship |
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Definition
Type I high survivorship through adulthood (humans) Type II constant risk of mortality at all ages (mice, rabbits Type III low juvenile survivorship (turtle, salmon) |
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Term
Explain carrying capacity |
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Definition
maximum population that can be supported by resources available |
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Term
How can we manage populations of beneficial & harmful species |
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Definition
Beneficial Keep at 1/2K K=carrying capacity Harmful - reduce K |
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Term
Differentiate between density dependent and independent factors that limit populations |
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Definition
Dependent-effections are proportional to density of population (disease, competition) Independent-effects are same at all densities (storm, drouts, fires) |
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Term
Explain the difference between r and K strategists |
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Definition
R is high population growth rate (flies, mice weeds) K is slow population that remains near carrying capacity (humans, big trees) |
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Term
What steps can humans do to ensure survival of metapopulations |
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Definition
allow for species migration through corridors |
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Term
What might limit the future carrying capacity of humans |
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Definition
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|
Term
What is ecological footprint |
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Definition
acreage needed to provide all the resources used by one person. |
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Term
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Definition
One species is harmed the other benefits (ticks) |
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Term
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Definition
Both species lose energy (bear and wolves fighting over meat) |
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Term
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Definition
Both species benefit (plants, bees) |
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Term
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Definition
one species benefits the other is unaffected (barnacles on whales) |
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Term
Explain the difference between interference competition and exploitation competition |
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Definition
Interference - fighting over resource Exploitation-one species obtains resource more efficiently |
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Term
Explain difference between intraspecific & interspecific competition |
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Definition
Intraspecific-within a species Interspecific-between species |
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Term
Differentiate between Batesian & Mullerian mimicry |
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Definition
Batesian-harmless species mimic toxic species (fly that looks like a bee) Mullerian mimicry-toxic species mimic other toxic species (all been, wasps hornets are yellow and black) |
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Term
Explain how 2 species can co-evolve |
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Definition
Prey evolve to make them more difficult to catch, predator evolve with more effective ways to capture the prey |
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Term
Distinguish between fundamental niche and realized niche |
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Definition
fundamental-conditions where species could exist Realized-species actually exist. Shells on the beach could exist further down |
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Term
What is the competitive exclusion principle |
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Definition
2 species with identical niches cannot coexist indefinitely |
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Term
Explain trophic levels and give examples |
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Definition
1. Primary producers-plants 2. Primary consumers-herbivores, moose 3. Secondary consumers-predators, humans, wolves |
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Term
Describe how energy/biomass change as they flow through each trophic level |
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Definition
More biomass in plants than animals. nutrients get recycled by energy lost cannot be recycle |
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Term
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Definition
Interactions of a predator can cause a cascade of effects on lower trophic levels (wolves in yellowstone reduced trees) |
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Term
How does removal of a keystone species affect diversity |
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Definition
upsets balance. if no sea stars mussels crowd out all other competitors |
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Term
Explain differences between primary & secondary succession |
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Definition
Primary-colonization of a new area without soil (volcano) Secondary-after disturbance in which soil remains (fire) |
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Term
Name examples of pioneer and climax communities |
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Definition
Pioneer - r-strategists new habitat Climax-k-strategists stable community persists for long period |
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|
Term
Explain greenhouse effect |
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Definition
Light from the sun heats up the earth's surface, heat is radiated back to space. Greenhouse gases trap some heat and keeps the earth warmer |
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Term
What are some primary greenhouse gases |
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Definition
Carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, water vapor |
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Term
How is carbon added and removed to the atmosphere |
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Definition
added by respiration of organisms, deforestation, forest fires, volcanoes, fossil fuels. Removed-photosynthesis, ocean, animals shells |
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Term
How does global warming occur? |
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Definition
buildup of atmospheric CO2 |
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|
Term
What are some effects of global warming |
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Definition
species going extinct, oceans more acidic, glaciers melting, drought, more disease & hurricanes |
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Term
Explain how human activity has led to eutrophication and acid rain |
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Definition
use of fertilizers and animal/human wastes and acid rain from burning fossil fuels |
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Term
What 2 components are used to measure diversity |
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Definition
1. Species richness 2. Species evenness |
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Term
How do humans benefit from biodiversity |
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Definition
resources, scientific study, recreation |
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