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THIS IS With Your Host... Darling Darwin Pop-popPopulation Genetics Naturally Natural Selection Today’s Special: Speciation Make Mine “Big Changes” Phylogenyschmylogeny 100 100 100 100 100 100 200 200 200 200 200 200 300 300 300 300 300 300 400 400 400 400 400 400 500 500 500 500 500 500 This book published in 1859 set off a controversy still lively today. A 100 What is “The Origin of Species”? A 100 A rival theory that characteristics acquired during a lifetime could be passed on to offspring was proposed by this man. A 200 Who is Lamarck? A 200 This phrase refers to Darwin’s idea that all organisms have descended from a common ancestor. A 300 What is descent with modification? A 300 This term describes the idea that though a bat wing, an elephant foot and a person’s hand look different outside, they look very similar inside and are derived from a common ancestor. A 400 What is homologous? A 400 The evolutionarily left over but unused structures, like the human appendix or leg bones in whales are called this. A 500 What is vestigial? A 500 Change in the genetic makeup of a population. B 100 What is microevolution? B 100 Greater in small populations than large ones, the unpredictable fluctuation in allele frequencies. B 200 What is genetic drift? B 200 The result of a few members of a population surviving a catostrophic change in the environement. B 300 What is the Bottleneck Effect? B 300 The result of a few members of a population becoming isolated from the original population and establishing their own. B 400 What is the TV show Lost? No, really, it’s the Founder Effect B 400 With this (name and formula please) it can be determined whether or not a population is evolving by checking allele frequency. B 500 What is p2 + 2pq + q2 or the Hardy Weinberg theorem? B 500 Given credit for describing evolution as a result of Natural Selection C 100 Who is Charles Darwin? C 100 The condition for traits to have in order for Natural Selection to act on them. C 200 What is heritable? C 200 Economist responsible for the idea that populations place greater demand on resources than environment can supply. C 300 Who is Malthus? C 300 DAILY Place A Wager DOUBLE C 400 Along with Natural Selection and Genetic Drift, one of the 3 major influences bringing about Evolutionary change. C 400 What is Gene Flow? C 400 Along with stabilizing and disruptive, one of the three modes of selection in adaptive evolution. C 500 What is directional? C 500 Evolutionary change at the species level, like the appearance of hair or limbs. D 100 What is macroevolution? D 100 Indicates species breed at different times of day or year and thus prevents them from mating. D 200 What is temporal isolation? D 200 This term refers to a population forming a new species because of geographical isolation from the parent population. D 300 What allopatric speciation? D 300 This term refers to apparent periods of little evolutionary change interrupted periodically by rapid change. D 400 What is punctuated equilibrium? D 400 Sympatric speciation can be accomplished through nondisjunction in meiosis by forming these type of plants. D 500 What is autopolyploid? D 500 Evolutionary changes above the species level. E 100 What is macroevolution? E 100 These structures evolve for one purpose but get co-opted for another. E 200 What are exaptations.? E 200 The “control genes” lay out the general plan for bodies, i.e., put the head here, put the tail there. E 300 What are homeotic or Hox genes? E 300 This field of study combines evolution and developmental biology to show how small genetic changes can turn into large morphological changes. E 400 What is “Evo-Devo”? E 400 Refers to the different growth rates of different body parts, like the jaw versus the skull. E 500 What is allometric growth? E 500 The order of taxonomy between genus and order. F 100 What is family? F 100 Comparing DNA and RNA to infer evolutionary relationships. F 200 What is molecular systematics. F 200 A group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants. F 300 What is a clade? F 300 Each categorization at a level of classification. F 400 What is a taxon? F 400 The idea that the simplest explanation in line with the facts should be the first investigated F 500 What is maximum parsimony? F 500 The Final Jeopardy Category is: Evolution Please record your wager. Click on screen to begin Different organisms develop similarities in structures due to similar environmental challenges, not due to close molecular relationships Click on screen to continue What is convergent evolution? Click on screen to continue Thank You for Playing Evopardy!