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(AP Biology) Chapter 26 Flashcards

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5131432802PhylogenyEvolutionary history of a species or a group of species.0
5131432803SystematicsFocused on classifying organisms and determining their evolutionary relationship.1
5131432804TaxonomyHow organisms are named and classified.2
5131432805BinomialGenus + specific epithet(unique for each species in a genus).3
5131432806Order of ClassificationDomain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species.4
5131432807TaxonNamed taxonic unit at any level of hierarchy.5
5131432808Phylogenetic TreeBranching diagram explaining the evolutionary history of a group of organisms.6
5131432809PhylocodeClassification based solely on evolutionary history, which only name groups that include a common ancestor and its descendants.7
5131432810Branch PointsShows where the divergence of two evolutionary organisms are from a common ancestor.8
5131432811Sister TaxaOrganisms that share an imidiate common ancestor.9
5131432812RootedThe common ancestor to the farthest left that was the common ancestor to all the taxa after it.10
5131432813PolytomyThe branch point where more than two descendent groups emerge, though indicates data on decedent taxa not yet clear.11
5131432814What can we learn from the phylogenetic trees and what can't we learn?Only what common ancestor lived first, though not the time of evolvement. Can not answer what evolved from what, only that they share a common ancestor.12
5131432815HomologiesSimilarities due to shared ancestry. Morphological divergence between related species can be great and their genetic divergence small. (Or vice versa).13
5131432816AnalogySimilarity due to convergent evolution rather than shared ancestry. (Not related, but have similar features.) Ex. A bird's wing and a Bats wing.14
5131432817Convergent EvolutionOccurs when similar environmental pressures and Natural selection produce similar (Analogous) adaptation in organisms from different evolutionary divergences.15
5131432818Homoplasy (Homoplasies)The analogous structure that arose independently. "The bird's wing and bats wing are analogous. This is an example of Homoplasy."16
5131432819Molecular SystematicsThe Discipline that uses DNA and other molecular data to determine evolutionary history.17
5131432820Evolutionary Molecular HomologiesIf the DNA sequence and length are similar in two species then they are most likely closely related.18
5131432821CladisticsThe common ancestry is the primary criterion used to classify organisms. Scientists group species in Clades: each of which includes an ancestral species and all of its transcendence.19
5131432822MonophyleticAll descendants and ancestral species, this is the only way a clade can be equivalent with a taxon.20
5131432823ParaphyleticConsists of an ancestral species and some, but not all of its descendants.21
5131432824Polyphyleticincludes taxa with different ancestors.22
5131432825Decent with ModificationOrganisms both share characteristics from ancestors but also differ from them.23
5131432826Shared Ancesteral CharacterA character that originated in an ancestor of the taxon. Ex. All mammals have backbones, but the presence of a backbone doesn't make it a mammal as all vertebrates have backbones.24
5131432827Character/CharacteristicsAnother word for Trait or Traits.25
5131432828Shared Derived CharacterAn evolutionary novelty unique to a particular clade. Ex. Mammals have the character of hair which isn't seen in earlier ancestors.26
5131432829IngroupThe species or group of species that is known to have emerged after the outgroup.27
5131432830OutgroupThe species or group of species from an evolutionary lineage that is known to have diverged before the lineage that includes the species that is being studied.28
5131432831Maximum Parsimony"Occars Razor" The method of investigating the simplest explanation that is consistent to the facts.29
5131432832Maximum LikelihoodStates that given certain rules about how DNA changes over time, a tree can be found that reflects the most likely sequence of evolutionary events.30

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