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Diff. Biology Study Guide: Evolution Key Terms 1. Biological evolution 2. Jean Baptist de Lamarck 3. inheritance of acquired characteristics 4. James Hutton 5. catastrophism 6. uniformitarianism 7. Charles Lyell 8. Alfred Russell Wallace 9. Charles Darwin 10. natural selection 11. survival of the fittest 12. Thomas Malthus 13. variation 14. excessive reproduction 15. evidence for evolution 16. Geologic 17. Radioactive decay 18. Fossils 19. Paleontology 20. Biogeography 21. Comparative anatomy 22. homologous 23. analogous 24. vestigial 25. Domestication 26. Embryology 27. Biochemistry 28. Molecular Genetics 29. Modern Synthesis 30. species 31. gene pool 32. allelic frequency 33. genetic equilibrium 34. genotype frequencies 35. Hardy-Weinberg Law 36. genetic drift 37. neutral selection 38. mutation pressure 39. gene flow 40. bottleneck effect 41. founder effect 42. selection pressure 43. polymorphism 44. heterozygote advantage 45. directional selection 46. disruptive selection 47. stabilizing selection 48. balanced polymorphism 49. adaptation 50. fitness 51. sexual selection 52. species 53. subspecies 54. anagenesis 55. cladogenesis 56. cline 57. subspecies 58. races 59. speciation 60. microevolution 61. macroevolution 62. phylogeny 63. prezygotic isolating mechanisms 64. geographic isolation 65. ecological(habitat) isolation 66. temporal(seasonal) isolation 67. behavioral isolation 68. mechanical isolation 69. gametic isolation 70. postzygotic isolating mechanisms 71. developmental isolation 72. hybrid inviability 73. hybrid sterility 74. allopatric speciation 75. sympatric speciation 76. polyploidy 77. evolutionary bottleneck 78. punctuated equilibrium 79. gradualism 80. Geologic time chart 81. index fossils 82. radioactive dating 83. phylogeny 84. systematics 85. convergent evolution 86. DNA hybridization 87. molecular clocks Questions 1. Explain Charles Darwin's contributions to evolutionary ideas. Give the basic assumptions upon which Darwin's theory rests. Indicate the types of evidence that Darwin used in formulating his theory. 2. List the processes that can lead to genetic variation. 3. Explain why changes in somatic cells cannot bring about evolution. 4. Briefly contrast Lamarck's theory of inheritance of acquired characteristics with Darwin's theory of natural selection. 5. Explain the concept of the gene pool. Given the frequencies of two alleles, be able calculate the ratios of the genotypes produced by them, using a Punnett square or algebraic method. 6. State the Hardy-Weinberg Law, and discuss its four conditions for maintenance of genetic equilibrium. Why are these conditions rarely met in nature? 7. Explain how natural selection in one generation can affect the genotype of the next generation. 8. Using diagrams contrast directional selection, stabilizing selection and disruptive selection. 9. Describe heterozygote superiority, explain how this process helps maintain deleterious recessive genes. (Note sickle cell anemia) 10. Give a biological definition of species. 11. Explain the geographic isolation model of speciation, in doing so take into account the roles of mutation, natural selection, and the gene pool. Distinguish between extrinsic and intrinsic isolating mechanisms. 12. Explain what is meant by adaptive radiation, and discuss the evidence for this phenomenon. 13. Compare the hypotheses of gradualism and punctuated equilibrium, and give an example supporting each hypothesis.