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Chapter 8 Biological Evolution
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Biodiversity The variation among organisms in an ecosystem Kinds of Biodiversity Ecosystem diversity – variety of ecosystems available Species diversity – the number of different species of organisms Genetic diversity – distinguishes among individuals within a species.
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Genetic Diversity Evolution – when new species evolve from preexisting species over long periods of time. Adaptation – a change in structure of function that allows an organism to be more successful. Extinction – the condition where there are no living representatives of an organism.
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Eubacteria Archaebacteria Fungi Plantae
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The Fossil Record Fossil – the remains or body impressions of an organism that lived in the past. Fossil record – all the fossils that have been found since the study of fossils began. Index fossils – fossils recognized as unique to certain time periods.
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How old is a fossil? Carbon dating – type of dating which uses the rate of radioactive decay of isotopes (Carbon-14) to determine that age of rocks and fossils.
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Origin of the Species 2 Theories Special Creation or Intelligent Design – the belief that every organism is created by God. Evolution – the belief that organisms go through a process of change over time and develop new species from preexisting species.
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Charles Darwin Theory of Natural Selection – organisms best suited to the environment are the ones most likely to survive and reproduce.
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Mechanisms of Evolution 1. Environment and Variations 2. Mutations 3. Gene Flow 4. Genetic Drift
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Environment and Variation Natural variation within a population allows for some individuals to survive over other individuals in a changing environment. This natural variation can lead to the formation of new species, which is called speciation.
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Mutations Mutations are random changes in DNA that act as another mechanism for evolution.
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Gene Flow Gene Flow is the change in the occurence of genes in a population. Immigration – can bring new genes into a population Emmigration – can take genes out of a population and can lead to the formation of new species.
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Genetic Drift Genetic drift provides random changes in the occurrence of genes through chance events. When a few individuals of a population break off from the original group and start their own population is called th founder effect. Bottlenecking occurs when a large number of the population is killed because of disease, starvation, change in natural environment, or a natural disaster. Inbreeding between few individuals leads to populations that have very few genetic differences which make them more susceptible to disease.
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Patterns of Evolution 1. Convergent evolution 2. Divergent evolution 3. Adaptive radiation 4. Co-evolution 5. speciation
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Convergent Evolution Convergent evolution occurs when unrelated species can develop similar characteristics. Ex: Shark and Porpoise
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Divergent Evolution Divergent evolution occurs when many species develop from a common ancestor
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Adaptive Radiation Adaptive radiation occurs when many species evolve from a single ancestral species after entering a new environment.
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Co-evolution Co-evolution occurs when two or more organisms in an ecosystem evolve in response to each other.
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Speciation Speciation is the development of a new species. Allopatric speciation occurs when a population becomes geographically divided. Sympatric speciation exists when differences in habitat, sexual production, or heredity isolate members of a population from one another.
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