Term
Heterozygote Disadvantage |
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Definition
- depends on allele frequencies
- allele with higher frequency will survive
- unstable type of selection
- allele arises in short amount of time
- hard to notice in natural environment
- less common allele found in heterozygote (which is why it diminishes so rapidly)
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Term
Negative Frequency-Dependent Selection |
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Definition
- advantage because of a rare phenotype
- predators recognize the more common phenotype and form a search image
- maintains variation
- frequency of rare phenotype increases until it outnumbers the common phenotype (in that case the selection would reverse)
- 'balancing selection'
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Term
Positive Frequency-Dependent Selection |
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Definition
- Prey learns to recognize warnings (colours)
- stay away from the certain phenotype
- Ex. If all frogs are poisonous, the predator will avoid the most common, even though all are poisonous
- Gets rid of variation
- Less common forms die off
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Term
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Definition
- Can only be caused by selection
- However, it is not the only force that causes a population to evolve
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Term
What are the Hardy-Weinberg assumptions? |
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Definition
- no selection
- no mutation
- no gene flow
- random mating
- very large population size
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Term
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Definition
- random sampling error due to finite population size
- a random change in allele frequencies
- The large a population is, the less effective genetic drift is
- Always operating, but stronger or weaker depending on the population size
- can oppose selection, but it depends on the selection, and the population size
- the larger the population, the less likely genetic drift will have any effect on it
- increases genetic variation between populations
- if the selection is small its more likely genetic drift will get rid of it
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Term
Will an allele go to fixation when pressured by genetic drift? |
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Definition
- Eventually, one allele drifts to fixation, while other alleles are completely lost
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Term
Genetic Drift: Founder Effects |
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Definition
- isolated and closed to gene flow
- high frequencies in certain alleles
- founded by a small number of individuals that left a large number of source populations
- by chance, the allele became abundant
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Term
What is the only source of genetic variation within a population? |
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Definition
A: mutations
- new alleles can only come from mutations
- it's not random, however, there are factors that make mutations more or less likely
- a lot of mutations have no effect on fitness
- mutation rates are generally low
- the environment does not have any effect on getting 'good' mutations
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Term
What's another word for gene flow? What's it do? |
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Definition
A: migration, moves alleles between populations
- introduces new alleles to a population
- often opposes selection
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Term
T or F? Mutations act in the direction of selection, rather than in the opposing direction. |
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Definition
A: False. Mutations act opposite to selection. |
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Term
T or F? Gene flows operate in the same direction as natural selection, rather than in the opposing direction. |
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Definition
A: False. Gene flows operate in opposition to natural selection.
Natural selection wants less variability, while gene flows promotes variation. |
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Term
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Definition
- involves a single trait
- eye colour, hair colour, height, etc
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Term
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Definition
- mating of individuals having traits more dissimilar to one another
- aggressive bird with a calm bird
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Term
Can you name four types of non-random mating? |
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Definition
- inbreeding
- inbreeding avoidance
- assortative
- disassortative
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Term
What will happen if all genotypes mate with their genotypes? (AA with AA, Aa with Aa and aa with aa) |
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Definition
- AA with AA will produce AA
- aa with aa will produce aa
- Aa with Aa will produce Aa, but also AA and aa
- increases the number of homozygous individuals
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Term
What are some factors that limit selection? |
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Definition
- dominance status of alleles
- frequency dependence
- time
- available genetic variation
- trade offs (attracting mates with colours vs. trying to survive)
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Term
What's the biological term for sex? |
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Definition
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Term
Why is sex not equal to reproduction? |
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Definition
- single celled organisms have sex without reproducing
- binary fission --> share genetic information without dividing
- parasexuality
- a lot of organisms reproduce asexually
- a lot of organisms can do both
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Term
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Definition
- means 'two houses'
- male and female gametes are from two different 'houses'
- have to have a male and a female
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Term
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Definition
- both male and female parts housed together
- hermaphrodites
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Term
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Definition
- every individual belongs to one sex and then at some point switches to the other sex
- bluestreak wrasse, clownfish
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Term
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Definition
- if you have less to lose by being a male, you will be born as a male first
- after a certain point you may have more to gain by being the opposite sex, so you will change
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Term
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Definition
- You have more to gain by being born a female, but may change to male
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Term
Do most living organisms reproduce sexually or asexually? |
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Definition
- Asexually
- pretty much everything but plants and animals
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Term
What percent of animals reproduce sexually? |
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Definition
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Term
Explain the advantage to reproducing sexually. |
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Definition
- Mutations bring different allele combinations together
- population evolves faster
- increases the speed of harmful mutations being weeded out
- increases the speed of good mutations being added
- decreases the likelihood of extinction! :D
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Term
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Definition
- says that the number of harmful mutations increases over time
- in asexual organisms, these harmful mutations increase over time
- there is no way of completely losing them
- sexually reproducing breaks this ratchet-ass ratchet
- introduces more scatter in these results
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Term
Discussion Question:
Dandelions have bright colouration, this is an adaptation from sexual reproduction
Still produces pollen à vestigial traits that reflect that they evolved from an ancestor that reproduced sexually
Why did the dandelion evolve to reproduce asexually? |
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Definition
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Term
What's stronger and more effective: selection on a population or selection on an individual? |
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Definition
Selection on individuals is always stronger than selection on species. |
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Term
Which type of reproduction would be favoured in a changing environment? Asexual or sexual? |
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Definition
Sexual. The variation of offpsring provides better odds to have the genotype required to survive the change. |
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Term
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Definition
- 'running to stay in the same place'
- co-evolutionary arms race
- new and rare genotypes have high fitness
- when parasites are common, producing new combinations of alleles is advantageous
- worms can do both kinds of sex, but reproduce sexually when there are many parasites
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Term
List one long term and one short term advantage of sexual reproduction. |
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Definition
Long term:
-removes harmful mutations and combines good mutations
Short term:
-Bet hedging in a changing environment, out racing natural enemies
-Ecological explanations are the main reason why sex persists moreso than asexual
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Term
Which one is more efficient, sexual or asexual? |
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Definition
Asexual. Sexual is really costly. |
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Term
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Definition
- Female choice
- choose who has the best displays
- one sex chooses the other
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Term
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Definition
- Large size, appendages etc, decides who gets to mate with the opposite sex
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Term
Can intersexual and intrasexual selection occur at the same time? |
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Definition
Yes. With the Satin bauerbird (bowerbird?) example MacShack did in class, the female bird looks at the bauer the male made and evaluates it for the pretty colour blue (intersexual), but other male birds can come in and place other colours in it or mess it up in general (intrasexual). |
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Term
How do males maximize their fitness? |
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Definition
Spreading their genes to as many women as possible. |
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Term
Which sex has the higher potential fitness? |
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Definition
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Term
Which sex has the higher average fitness? |
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Definition
Neither, they are exactly the same between males and females. |
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Term
Explain why females typically invest more in their offspring than males. |
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Definition
It costs more to make eggs, while sperm are cheaper to produce. |
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Term
Explain a situation in which the male would invest more in the offspring than the female. In this case, who competes more for the opposite sex? |
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Definition
Male seahorses take fertilized eggs from the female and care for them. Because of this, the female seahorses compete for the males that are larger in size. (sex role reversal)
More in parental care= limiting resource |
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Term
What is the Prisoner's Dilemma? What does it have to do with cooperation and reciprocity? |
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Definition
- The prisoner's dilemma refers to the example of, when two people are in prison, they can either look after themselves and out the other person (get out scott free), or they can wait and hope that the other person waits too.
- If both defect to maximize their fitness, they get 8 years.
- If they both wait, they get 0 years.
- If one dude outs the other, the other dude gets 10 years.
- What do you do?
- In terms of cooperation, it's irrational to only look out for yourself (get you 8 years)
- Because of this, species cooperate to make sure their genes are safe
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Term
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Definition
-Someone makes a rational, selfish decision and as a result, the groups suffers
-Ex, everyone shares the pasture that the cows graze in
If you keep adding more cows, the pasture will be overgrazed and no one gets the benifits
-its better to cooperate |
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Term
Would selection favour altruism in big groups, or small ones? |
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Definition
- Small groups. This way individuals interact many times, and acts are more likely to be reciprocated.
- In larger groups, individuals come and go, and it's harder to get the bond needed for altruistic behaviour.
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Term
Random thing to know:
Whenever there is divergence in interest, there is potential for conflict. |
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Definition
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Term
Describe the graph of the morphological species concept, if trait x is on the x axis, and trait y is on the y axis. |
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Definition
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Term
What's the most commonly applied species concept for vertebrate animals? |
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Definition
- The Biological Species Concept
- just because individuals may look alike does not mean they will produce viable offspring
- must freely produce offspring with fitness
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Term
Name the situations in which the biological species concept would not be applicable (there are three) |
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Definition
1. Cannot use it on bacteria or other unicellular organisms that reproduce asexually
2. Extinct species
3. Allopatric populations that aren't in the same geographical area |
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Term
True or False? The BSC is based on populations being isolated. |
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Definition
True. A lot of species like to reproduce together, although they're of two different species. |
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Term
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Definition
A population becomes isolated and gene flow stops because there is a physical barrier in the way
(river, earthquake, big drift)
This results in : 1. Isolation
2. Divergence
3. Drift |
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Term
Peripatric Speciation
(subset of allopatric) |
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Definition
Still a physical barrier, but instead of both populations changing, only one does. (Not a large enough group isolated to change bigger population) |
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Term
Why are islands 'hotbeds for speciation'? |
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Definition
-population sizes are small
-genetic drift happens very quickly
-different selection pressures on island compared to the mainland |
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Term
If two species come back into contact after being isolated, will they always create hybrids? |
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Definition
No, it depends on how diverged they are. If they're not far diverged, they can resume interbreeding. |
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Term
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Definition
-one male and one female raise offspring
-males compete against males
-females compete against females
-does not mean you reproduce with that one mate forever
-on the side seek out short term mating opportunities while keeping your long term mating opportunities |
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Term
What do females generally look for in a long term mate? |
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Definition
-resource holding potential (wealth and financial stability)
-kindness to children |
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Term
What do females look for in a short term mate? |
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Definition
-physical attractiveness
-athletic ability
-cues indicating health |
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Term
What do males look for in a long term mate? |
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Definition
-physical attractiveness
-youth
-health
-fertility
-child bearing years
-small waist in proportion to hips
-facial features indicating a lot of estrogen |
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Term
What do males look for in a short term mate? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some features that both sexes look for in a long term mate? |
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Definition
-facial and bodily symmetry
-symmetry is wanted across all cultures, because it indicates disease resistance |
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Term
Why do animals often live in groups? |
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Definition
-they have each other's backs
-bring down prey together
-help raise young
-division of labour
(all examples of cooperation) |
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Term
Is parental care considered altruism? |
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Definition
No. The parents are not reducing their fitness for their offspring, they benifit from its survival. |
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Term
What's the difference between fitness and indirect fitness? |
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Definition
Fitness has to do with the individual's reproductive success while indirect fitness has to do with the reproductive success of relatives. ie if your relative carries on your genes then you are successful too. |
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Term
What's another word for total fitness? |
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Definition
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Term
Parent-offspring conflict |
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Definition
The offspring is going to want more than the parent is willing to invest. At a point the parent must stop investing in the offspring and reproduce more. The offspring doesn't want too much investment because then they won't get siblings, however, they are more related to themselves than they are to their future siblings. |
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Term
When does the parent-offspring conflict begin? |
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Definition
Before birth. The fetus begins taking nutrients from the mother to better benefit itself. The placenta secretes hormones to manipulate blood sugar, but this could cause diabetes to both parties (must cut off resources at some point). |
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Term
What does kin selection favour? |
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Definition
Traits that increase indirect fitness. |
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Term
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Definition
Both members of the relationship benefit, no fitness lost |
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Term
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Definition
Two or more species compete against one another, and both suffer. (access to water, access to sunlight) Also occurs between members of the same species, although it's not as strong. |
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Term
Antagonistic Relationship |
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Definition
When an individual of one species uses individuals of another species. Fitness is always lost, although death does not always occur (herbavore plant example). |
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Term
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Definition
The predator is chasing the prey for dinner, but the prey is running to save its life. Evolution would favour the prey that can run faster, because they're the ones that have survived. Why bunnies run faster than the fox. |
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Term
If a member of a species creates an adaptation, is it more likely to win the evolutionary arms race? |
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Definition
Not if the members of the other species have their own counter and reciprocal adaptations as well. If the lion gets faster than its prey will too as a result of the selection pressures put upon it. |
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Term
Prudent-Parasite Hypothesis |
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Definition
A parasite that kills its host too soon, before infecting a new host, is doomed. |
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Term
What aren't all pathogens benign? |
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Definition
If they don't need the survive, they won't wait around to be highly virulent.
If the pathogen is very young in evolutionary time, it hasn't had enough time to find the right balance of being harmful.
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Term
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Definition
There's a cost and a risk of parsites being too harmful
However, there are benefits to high virulence
If highly virulent, it's much easier to transmit the virions
Depends on how easily the virus, or parasite, can colonize itself within the host |
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Term
What are the two ways a parasite is transmitted? How would virulence change with these two types of transmission? |
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Definition
Direct Contact --> need the host to be alive and moving around, so the virulence will be fairly low
Indirect Contact --> surivorship of host doesn't matter (infected water, insects) so the virulence will be fairly high |
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Term
What would happen if the density of the host population increased, in terms of the virulence of a parasite? |
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Definition
It would likely become more virulent, because it would be easier to transmit the parasite. |
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Term
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Definition
This is a result of the modern day environment being different from the environment we are adapted to because of our ancestors.
Ex: -myopia because ancestors didnt need to close up as much as far away
-diabetes because ancestors weren't exposed to as many sugar rich foods
-auto immune disorders because ancestors lived in dirtier conditions |
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Term
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Definition
Says that autoimmune disorders are more common now because we are used to dirtier environments. |
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Term
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Definition
One gene has multiple effects.
Selection maintains a harmful trait because it benefits fitness in another context. |
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Term
Why would a trait be selected to favour you while you're young, but not when you're older? |
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Definition
Everyone makes it to early life, but not older life. It's most important to get through early life and reproduce. Selection on young people is much stronger than selection on older people. |
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Term
Why do we still get sick? |
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Definition
As the Red Queen Principle says, even if we adapt to parasites, the parasites will adapt with us. Arms race. |
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Term
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Definition
An attempt to reconstruct the pattern of ancestor regulation of life on earth. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Convergence (form of Homoplasy) |
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Definition
misleading similarity --> similar but no recent common ancestor |
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Term
Divergence (form of Homoplasy) |
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Definition
misleading dissimilarity --> look different but common ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
Traits shared by two or more groups, both inherited by a common ancestor |
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Term
Derived Traits (form of synapomorphy) |
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Definition
Recent evolutionary origin (not present in the outgroup) |
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Term
Ancestorial Traits (form of synapomorphy) |
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Definition
Present in the outgroup or common ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
phylogeny requiring fewest evolutionary steps --> assumes similarity due to convergence (many steps) is rarer than similarity due to a common ancestor (fewer steps) |
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Term
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Definition
includes all descendants of most common ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
Doesn't include all descendants of most common ancestor |
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Term
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Definition
A system of classification based on phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary history of groups or organisms |
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Term
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Definition
Interactions between organisms (abiotic and biotic) |
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Term
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Definition
extreme speciation over a short period of time |
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Term
List some prezygotic isolations (4) |
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Definition
-temporal
-ecological (different habitat)
-behavioural (not attracted to each other's behaviour)
-mechanical (prevents the physical transfer of sperm) |
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Term
List some postzygotic isolations (3) |
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Definition
-hybrid inviability: hybrid is born dead
-hybrid sterility: hybrid cannot produce young
-hybrid breakdown: first generation of hybrids are viable and fertile but further hybrid generations are sterile |
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Term
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Definition
pressure put on females because they run the risk of producing hybrids
favours prezygotic isolation
anything that allows females to discriminate between populations is favoured
speeds up speciation |
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Term
In sympatric speciation, are the two populations in the same geographical zones, or different ones? |
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Definition
The two populations are in the same geographical zones, making it a much more rare type of speciation. Plants use polyploidy as a chromosomal sympatric form of speciation, creating tetraploids. This is known as 'instant speciation'. |
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Term
Ecological Sympatric Speciation |
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Definition
Two extreme phenotypes, each with high fitness, mate with each other but not with the intermediate phenotype.
--> formation of two separate species |
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Term
Do homologous traits support or mislead phylogenies? |
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Definition
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Term
Synapomorphies have to be shared by ... a) 2 or more groups b) 3 or more groups c) 4 or more groups d) not enough information (f'in zinke) |
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Definition
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Term
Is a trait derived or ancestral if the outgroup has the trait and the ingroup has the trait? |
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Definition
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Term
Is a trait derived or ancestral if the outgroup has the trait and some of the ingroup has the trait? |
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Definition
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Term
Is a trait derived or ancestral if the outgroup doesn't have the trait and some of the ingroup has the trait? |
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Definition
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Term
Is a trait derived or ancestral if the outgroup has the trait and the outgroup does not? |
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Definition
2 equally likely explanations
-common ancestor didnt have it, it came in lineage
-common ancestor had it, and it was lost in lineage |
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Term
Is a trait derived or ancestral if the outgroup does not have the trait but the ingroup does? |
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Definition
two equally likely explanations
-common ancestor had the trait and it was lost
-common ancestor didn't have the trait and it appeared |
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Term
A population of pigs has 3 different alleles: B, W and R. How many different genotypes are possible?
3
6
8
9 |
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Definition
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Term
How does selection influence the amount of genetic variation in a population? (eg, number of alleles maintained at a locus?)
a) no effect
b) reduces variation by weeding out harmful alleles
c) increases variation, by enhancing production and spread of beneficial alleles
d) depends on which genotypes/phenotypes are favoured and under what conditions |
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Definition
d) depends on which genotypes/phenotypes are favoured and under what conditions |
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Term
What determines the speed of selection of alleles? |
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Definition
The fitness of the genotypes |
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Term
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Definition
the number of surviving offspring produced over an individual's lifespan |
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Term
A population of birds colonizes an area in which the insects upon which they feed live inside trees. Which of the following events accounts for an observed increase in average beak size in the bird population over time?
a) increased fitness of large-beaked birds, leading to natural selection
b) increased fitness of the large-beaked birds, creating a new species
c) decreased fitness of small-beaked birds, creating a new species
d) decreased fitness of the insects, allowing the birds to catch them more easily |
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Definition
a) increased fitness of large-beaked birds, leading to natural selection |
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Term
Cladograms (a type of phylogenetic tree) constructed from evidence from physical characteristics are based on similarities in
a) mutations to homologous genes
b) the pattern of embryological development
c) biochemical pathways
d) morphology |
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Definition
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Term
Which of these conditions should completely prevent the occurrence of natural selection in a population over a period of time?
a) the population lives in a habitat where there are no competing species present
b) the population size is large
c) the environment is changing at a relatively slow rate
d) all variation between individuals is due only to environmental factors |
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Definition
d) all variation between individuals is due only to environmental factors |
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Term
Adaptive radiation is thought to be the process by which the diversification of mammals occurs, such as at the end of the Cretaceous Period, when dinosaurs became extinct and mammals become more prevalent. Rates of adaptive radiation typically are at their highest in which of the following situations?
a) in very large, randomly mating populations that are isolated
b) when new niches become available
c) when many species are competing for the same resource |
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Definition
b) when new niches become available |
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Term
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Definition
I have no idea, I was hoping someone would know.. |
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Term
A cell with a diploid number of 12 chromosomes undergoes meiosis. What will be the product at the end of meiosis?
a) 2 cells each with 12 chromosomes
b) 4 cells each with 6 chromosomes
c) 2 cells each with 6 chromosomes
d) 4 cells each with 12 chromosomes |
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Definition
b) 4 cells each with 6 chromosomes |
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Term
In humans, the gene for polydactyly (extra fingers and toes) is dominant over the gene for the normal number of digits. If two parents that are both heterozygous for polydactyly produce four children, what is the probability that they could have a child with a normal number of fingers and toes?
a) 3/4
b) 1/2
c) 1/4
d) 4/4 |
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Definition
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Term
The allee for red flower colour (R) in a certain plant is co-dominant with the allele for white flowers (R'). Thus a plant with the genotype RR' has pink flowers. Tall (D) is dominant to dwarf (d). What would be the expected phenotypic ratio from a cross of RR'dd plants with R'R'Dd plants?
a) 9:3:3:1
b) 50% pink, 50% white, and all tall
c) 1:1:1:1, in which 50% are tall, 50% dwarf, 50% pink and 50% white
d) 3:1 |
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Definition
c) 1:1:1:1, in which 50% are tall, 50% dwarf, 50% pink and 50% white |
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Term
Of the mutation types below, which one is least likely to affect the function of the protein corresponding to to the gene where the mutation occurs?
a) deletion of a single base
b) base-pair substitution
c) insertion of a single base
d) nonsense mutation |
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Definition
b) base pair substitution |
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Term
A cell in the testis (LOLZ) of a male chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) contains 48 chromosomes. It is about to undergo meiosis. How many molecules of DNA will be present in the nucleus of the sperm cells just after the second meiotic division?
a) 96
b) 48
c) 24
d) 12 |
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Definition
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