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Evolution unit from SB3U1 course

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Evolution Review
Chapter 7

Adaptation and Variation

Adaptation: a structure, behaviour, or physiological process that helps an organism survive and
reproduce in a particular environment.

- Hibernation is an example of physiological adaptation.

Mimicry: a structural adaptation in which a harmless species resembles a harmful species in
coloration or structure.

Variations: differences between individuals which may be structural, functional, or
physiological.

Mutations: a permanent change in the genetic material of an organism; the only source of new
genetic material.

Selective Advantage: a genetic advantage that improves an organism’s chance of survival,
usually in changing environments.

Natural Selection: is the process that results when the characteristics of a population of
organisms change over many generations.

Selective pressure: environmental conditions that select for certain characteristics of
individuals and select against other characteristics.

Fitness: describes the contribution an individual makes to a gene pool of the next generation by
producing offspring that survive long enough to reproduce.

Artificial Selection: selective pressure exerted by humans on populations in order to improve
or modify particular desirable traits.

Biotechnology: the use of technology and organisms to produce useful products.

,Chapter 8

Contributions to the theory of evolution

Aristotle
- Father of ladder of life
- Stated that organisms evolved gradually to more elaborate forms

Buffon
- Believed that the Earth was much older than 6000 years old
- Noticed similarities between humans and apes and suspected they may have a common
ancestor

Hutton
- Members of species vary, and that when the environment changes, those individuals
best adapted to their environment will survive and those who are poorly adapted will
perish

Cuvier
- Father of paleontology
- Found certain layer of rocks had unique species
- Created catastrophism: theory that states that the Earth goes through revolutions
“natural disasters” and unaffected species would re-populate the area.

Lyell
- Rejected Cuvier idea of catastrophism
- Introduced Uniformitarianism: states that the current geological features were created
slow, steady and constant

Lamarck
- Inheritance of acquired characteristics
- Believed that a change of phenotype in an individual can be passed on to the next
generation

Wallace
- Plants and animals evolved to their environment
- Contributed to Darwin’s idea of Survival of the fittest

Darwin
- Survival of the fittest
- He proposed that all life descended from an unknown ancestor

,Sources of evidence for evolution

Fossil record: shows the history of life

Transition fossils: shows intermediate link between now two different species and shared
characteristics common to the separate groups

Biogeography: the study of the past and present geographical distribution of species
population

Anatomies
- Homologous structures
- Analogous structures
- Vestigial structures

Embryology: the study of early development and pre-birth stages.




Chapter 9

Mechanism of Evolution (5 of them)

Mutation
- Mutation randomly introduces new alleles into a population.
- Mutation changes allele frequencies
- Increases variation
- May provide a selective advantage

Gene Flow
- Gene flow occurs between two different interbreeding populations that have different
allele frequencies
- May change the allele frequencies in either or both populations through a flow or
movement of genes
- When two different species interbreed

Non-random mating
● Preferred phenotypes
- Sexual selection: mates are chosen by the presence of a particular phenotype
- Sexual dimorphism: the difference in appearance between males and females

, ● Inbreeding
- Its when closely related individuals mate
- Increases the proportion of homozygous individuals in a population, increasing
the likelihood of harmful recessive traits being expressed.


Genetic Drift
- Change in allele frequency due to chances

● Bottleneck effect
- Occurs when a population quickly reduces in size

● Founder effect
- Occurs when a new colony is started by a few members from the original
population
- Contributes to changes in allele frequencies for the next generation




Natural selection

● Stabilizing selection
- Occurs when the average phenotype has a selective advantage

● Directional selection
- Occurs when an extreme phenotype provides some kind of selective advantage

● Disruptive selection
- Occurs when both extremes of a phenotype have a selective advantage over the
intermediate one.
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