Get out Your Egg Drop Calculations

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Presentation transcript:

Get out Your Egg Drop Calculations Spiral Pen or Pencil non-random mating Mutation Genetic flow Genetic drift Artificial Selection Reproductive isolation Recombination (meiosis)

Data Table (including distance, mass, time, weight) Purpose Your Lab Write Up Rough Draft will go in your Spiral (Due Today) Final Copy Due Wednesday Title Data Table (including distance, mass, time, weight) Purpose Procedure (numbered list) Calculations (including equations used) Materials (bulleted list) Conclusion (See Rubric) Sketch/Picture of Apparatus non-random mating Mutation Genetic flow Genetic drift Artificial Selection Reproductive isolation Recombination (meiosis)

Get out the following Items & Prepare your spiral for a spiral check! Graphing worksheet (Snakes) Proof & Evidence of Evolution Packet non-random mating Mutation Genetic flow Genetic drift Artificial Selection Reproductive isolation Recombination (meiosis)

Draw, and match the following mechanisms of evolution examples to the appropriate term. (Use Color) It is thought that Peahens (female) choose to mate with males that have brighter coloration patterns. One wild mustard plant produces broccoli, kale, cabbage, Brussel sprouts, and cauliflower. Farmers whom wanted to grow broccoli cross pollinated mustard plants that produced larger and more flower buds than the other plants. The source of a new allele on a chromosome that has never existed before Two species of Cacti separately grow on either side of a mountain. Because of predation a rabbit population decides to cross to the other side of the mountain, bringing some the pollen from the cacti’s flower with it. A male firefly tries to mate with a female firefly, but she does not recognize his ritual mating dance and is not interested. A male cheetah with large, wide ears mates with a female cheetah with small, narrow ears. They produce 4 offspring, one with large wide ears, one with small narrow ears, one with large narrow ears, and one with small wide ears. A population of Starling birds where perched on various branches of a tree, on the side of a mountain. A loose boulder fell and snapped off several branches of the tree, killing several Starlings with it. non-random mating Mutation Genetic flow Genetic drift Artificial Selection Reproductive isolation Recombination (meiosis)