• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
6.1_EVOLUTION_DARWIN VS LAMARCK
6.1_EVOLUTION_DARWIN VS LAMARCK

... tremendous amounts of scientific evidence. In this lesson, students will be exposed to Natural Selection and an earlier alternate theory—Acquired Inheritance. Both of these theories are founded on the belief that animal species change over time and that offspring inherit traits from their parents. T ...
C. transcription - Partners4results
C. transcription - Partners4results

... more sunlight and are able to produce more offspring than the shorter plants. If these offspring grow in rich soil, they are tall, but if they grow in poor soil, they are short. Which of the following statements best explains why this situation is not an example of evolution by natural selection? A. ...
Physical Fitness
Physical Fitness

... Example: Aerobic exercise (body uses a large amount of oxygen for a sustained period of time) ...
Evolvability of physiological and biochemical traits: evolutionary
Evolvability of physiological and biochemical traits: evolutionary

... environments, but how these adaptations arise. Although mutation usually only modifies existing genes rather than natural selection is clearly sufficient to act on heritable creating new ones, and numerous other mechanisms variation, is this heritable variation sufficient to yield eclipse single-nuc ...
Adaptation
Adaptation

... • In the beginning, an organ may have had the same function as it does now • or it may have had a different function • Adaptations are the best solution possible given these constraints, but they may not be the “optimal” solution ...
RR - Fullfrontalanatomy.com
RR - Fullfrontalanatomy.com

... • Natural selection is a process in which organisms with certain inherited characteristics are more likely to survive and reproduce than are individuals with other characteristics. • As a result of natural selection, a population, a group of individuals of the same species living in the same place a ...
Chapter 16 Evoluti 09 NF
Chapter 16 Evoluti 09 NF

... They may respond to outside forces, but individuals do not pass on their responses as heritable traits. Rather, populations evolve when natural selection acts (indirectly) on genes ...
File - The Science of Payne
File - The Science of Payne

... 11.3 Other Mechanisms of Evolution Sexual selection occurs when certain traits increase mating success. • Sexual selection occurs due to higher cost of reproduction for females. – males produce many sperm continuously – females are more limited in potential offspring each cycle ...
Phylogeny of dogs
Phylogeny of dogs

... – Oil content in corn (Illinois corn oil experiment) – These responses are due to the accumulation of “favorable” alleles at several to many loci in the same individuals and to the occurrence of “favorable” chance mutations during the course of selection ...
Evolution
Evolution

... Explain how adaptations such as camouflage help species survive. How do homologous structures provide evidence for evolution? Why did birds and bats both get wings? A parasite that lives in red blood cells causes the disease called malaria. In recent years, new strains of the parasite have appeared ...
Evolution - MsHandleyBiology
Evolution - MsHandleyBiology

... • Evolution by Natural Selection Natural Selection - The process by which _______________ organisms with favorable variations produce at higher rates because they are better adapted than those lacking increased fitness. Species change over time as new species arise and others disappear. (Survival of ...
Chapter 5 Objectives
Chapter 5 Objectives

... 21. Define sympatric speciation. Describe how polyploidy can cause sympatric speciation. Describe how two fly populations exploiting a new food supply can lead to sympatric speciation. ...
Objectives
Objectives

... Know what artificial selection is, and how it occurs. Know what sexual selection is, and how it occurs. Be able to reproduce Malthus’s graph. Know who came up with the Theory of Natural Selection. Know what a scientific theory is, and how it compares to hypothesis and Law Know what evidence led Darw ...
Natural Selection Webquest
Natural Selection Webquest

... http://faculty.clintoncc.suny.edu/faculty/Michael.Gregory/files/bio%20101/Bio%20101%20Lectures/Natural%2 0Selection/natural.htm Read the first 3 sections (stop when you get to variation). 12. Does natural selection act on individuals or does it act on something else? Explain this. ...
Natural Selection Webquest
Natural Selection Webquest

... http://faculty.clintoncc.suny.edu/faculty/Michael.Gregory/files/bio%20101/Bio%20101%20Lectures/Natural%2 0Selection/natural.htm Read the first 3 sections (stop when you get to variation). 12. Does natural selection act on individuals or does it act on something else? Explain this. ...
Darwin Evolution - Fulton County Schools
Darwin Evolution - Fulton County Schools

... survive and reproduce leads to a gradual change in a population, with favorable characteristics accumulating over ...
Notes Outline: Natural Selection (9
Notes Outline: Natural Selection (9

... numerous other characteristics are all results of evolution by natural selection.” I. ...
Natural selection
Natural selection

... 1) All living things have variety within species. 2) Traits are inherited from parents to offspring. 3) Species compete with one another for limited resources (food, shelter, water, nutrients etc.). 4) Those individuals that inherit an advantageous trait from their parents will be more fit to surviv ...
Benchmarks for Scientific Literacy
Benchmarks for Scientific Literacy

... Small differences between parents and offspring can accumulate (through selective breeding) in successive generations so that descendants are very different from their ancestors. ...
Unit 10: Natural Selection Study Guide
Unit 10: Natural Selection Study Guide

... 13. Antibiotic resistance results in stronger bacteria that do not respond to antibiotic treatment. Why does this happen? a. Antibiotic resistance occurs because the antibiotic, leaving behind strong resistant bacteria, kills the weaker bacteria. The resistant bacteria in turn survive and are able t ...
Questions - Vanier College
Questions - Vanier College

... b) a population-level change in the frequency of a behavioral trait. c) a population-level change in allele frequency. d) Only b) and c) are correct. e) a), b), and c) are all correct. 11. In a fish population in a shallow stream, the genotypic frequency of yellowish-brown fish and greenish-brown fi ...
PowerPoint file
PowerPoint file

...  domesticated plants and animals can be bred to favor certain characteristics  ONLY individuals with desired characteristics are allowed to breed  descendant populations of plants and animals are dominated by characteristics that are desired by breeders… …and thus favored their survival ...
Standard 2B: Evolutionary Processes Explain how biological
Standard 2B: Evolutionary Processes Explain how biological

... (3) The turtles with the thick shells are less likely to be eaten by predators, while the thinner shelled turtles can easily be eaten by alligators. (4) Each generation of turtles will have more thick shelled turtles because they are the ones that are more likely to survive and reproduce. ...
LE29-Natural Selection - Manhasset Public Schools
LE29-Natural Selection - Manhasset Public Schools

... General Idea: He said that organisms, even of the same  species, are all different and that those  which happen to have variations that help  them to survive in their environments survive  and have more offspring. The offspring are  born with their parents' helpful traits, and  as they reproduce, in ...
More details about Darwin`s ideas
More details about Darwin`s ideas

... Natural Selection: The principle mechanism of Darwinian evolutionary change, by which the individuals best adapted to the environment contributed more offspring to succeeding generations than others do. . . ...
< 1 ... 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ... 134 >

Inclusive fitness

In evolutionary biology inclusive fitness theory is a model for the evolution of social behaviors (traits), first set forward by W. D. Hamilton in 1963 and 1964. Instead of a trait's frequency increase being thought of only via its average effects on an organism's direct reproduction, Hamilton argued that its average effects on indirect reproduction, via identical copies of the trait in other individuals, also need to be taken into account. Hamilton's theory, alongside reciprocal altruism, is considered one of the two primary mechanisms for the evolution of social behaviors in natural species.From the gene's point of view, evolutionary success ultimately depends on leaving behind the maximum number of copies of itself in the population. Until 1964, it was generally believed that genes only achieved this by causing the individual to leave the maximum number of viable direct offspring. However, in 1964 W. D. Hamilton showed mathematically that, because other members of a population may share identical genes, a gene can also increase its evolutionary success by indirectly promoting the reproduction and survival of such individuals. The most obvious category of such individuals is close genetic relatives, and where these are concerned, the application of inclusive fitness theory is often more straightforwardly treated via the narrower kin selection theory.Belding's ground squirrel provides an example. The ground squirrel gives an alarm call to warn its local group of the presence of a predator. By emitting the alarm, it gives its own location away, putting itself in more danger. In the process, however, the squirrel may protect its relatives within the local group (along with the rest of the group). Therefore, if the effect of the trait influencing the alarm call typically protects the other squirrels in the immediate area, it will lead to the passing on of more of copies of the alarm call trait in the next generation than the squirrel could leave by reproducing on its own. In such a case natural selection will increase the trait that influences giving the alarm call, provided that a sufficient fraction of the shared genes include the gene(s) predisposing to the alarm call.Synalpheus regalis, a eusocial shrimp, also is an example of an organism whose social traits meet the inclusive fitness criterion. The larger defenders protect the young juveniles in the colony from outsiders. By ensuring the young's survival, the genes will continue to be passed on to future generations.Inclusive fitness is more generalized than strict kin selection, which requires that the shared genes are identical by descent. Inclusive fitness is not limited to cases where ""kin"" ('close genetic relatives') are involved.
  • studyres.com © 2026
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report