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Ecology & Evolution Exam 1 Review Questions & Answers

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  • Course
  • Ecology & Evolution
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  • Ecology & Evolution

Hox genes (homeobox) and Homeodomain Polypeptide - ANSWERS-A group of genes that regulate development in multicellular organisms; this includes cell differentiation & morphogenesis. -Hox a gene also acts as a switch that turns on and off. Deme (interbreeding group, or evolutionary population...

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  • October 24, 2024
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  • Ecology & Evolution
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Ecology & Evolution Exam 1 Review
Questions & Answers

Hox genes (homeobox) and Homeodomain Polypeptide - ANSWERS-A group of genes
that regulate development in multicellular organisms; this includes cell differentiation &
morphogenesis.

-Hox a gene also acts as a switch that turns on and off.

Deme (interbreeding group, or evolutionary population) - ANSWERS-Population unit or
panmictic unit (mendelian population)

-A sub-population (a smaller group within the population that can freely interbreed)

Evolution - ANSWERS-Change in a kind of organism over time; the process by which
modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms.

-Genetic change over time

Microevolution - ANSWERS-Evolutionary change within a species or small group of
organisms, especially over a short period. (Change in allele frequencies in a population
over generations.)

-The smallest event in allele frequency.

Macroevolution - ANSWERSLarge-scale evolutionary changes that take place over long
periods of time. Speciation over long periods of time.

Uniformitarianism - ANSWERS(Buffon; Lamark) gradual & natural processes
observable today could not be explained in the development of all geological features.

Homoplasy - ANSWERSA similar (analogous) structure or molecular sequence that has
evolved independently in two species.

Ecology - ANSWERSScientific study of the behavior of individuals, populations
&communities, both abiotic (non-living components) & biotic (living components)

allopolyploidy - ANSWERSA species with multiple sets of chromosomes derived from
different species

Synapomorphy - ANSWERSshared derived character

, Plesiomorphy - ANSWERSancestral (primitive) character state

Autopomorphy - ANSWERSunique, derived character state

Teleology - ANSWERS[the explanation of phenomena by the purpose they serve rather
than by postulated causes.]

Anagenesis - ANSWERSchange within a lineage (change in gene frequency) (entire
population is different from its ancestral population) where one species evolves into
another without any splitting of the phylogenetic tree.

1 species to start, 1 different species at finish

Cladogenesis - ANSWERSPhenomenon of evolution that occurs by the divergence
(branching/splitting) of taxa due to positive selection (when organisms physically
separate &undergo unique changes).

punctuated equilibrium - ANSWERSThe theory that species evolve during short periods
of rapid change

linkage (=Gametic) disequilibrium - ANSWERSWhen a pair of alleles from two loci are
inherited together in the same gamete more/less often than random chance would
expect.

Bio magnification of Pesticides (What ecosystem model explains this? - ANSWERSIt
refers to the increased concentration of a toxic chemical the higher an animal is on the
food chain. The food chain explains this.

molecular clock - ANSWERS[Model that uses DNA comparisons to estimate the length
of time that two species have been evolving independently]

neutral genes - ANSWERS[do not confer differences in fitness and are not affected by
natural selection]

orthalogous genes - ANSWERS-Homologous genes that are found in different
organisms/species but are derived from a single common ancestral gene present in the
common ancestor of those organisms.

-Homologous genes are two or more genes that descend from a common ancestral
DNA sequence.

paralogous genes - ANSWERS-Homologous genes that are found in the same genome
as a result of gene duplication.

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