10491573803 | Phylogeny | Evolutionary history of a species or a group of species. | 0 | |
10491573804 | Taxonomy | How organisms are named and classified. | 1 | |
10491573805 | Order of Classification | Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. | 2 | |
10491573806 | Taxon | Named taxonic unit at any level of hierarchy (ex could be species or classes or families...). | 3 | |
10491573807 | Phylogenetic Tree | Branching diagram explaining the evolutionary history of a group of organisms. | 4 | |
10491573808 | Branch Points | Shows where the divergence of two evolutionary organisms are from a common ancestor. | 5 | |
10491573809 | Sister Taxa | Organisms that share an imidiate common ancestor. | 6 | |
10491573810 | What 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. | 7 | |
10491573811 | Homologies | Similarities due to shared ancestry. Morphological divergence between related species can be great and their genetic divergence small. (Or vice versa). Ex-eyes of bird and bat | 8 | |
10491573812 | Analogy | Similarity due to convergent evolution rather than shared ancestry. (Not related, but have similar features.) Ex. A bird's wing and a Bats wing. | 9 | |
10491573813 | Convergent Evolution | Occurs when similar environmental pressures and Natural selection produce similar (Analogous) adaptation in organisms from different evolutionary divergences. | 10 | |
10491573814 | Homoplasy (Homoplasies) | Another term for analogous structure that arose independently. "The bird's wing and bats wing are analogous. This is an example of Homoplasy." | 11 | |
10491573815 | Molecular Systematics | The Discipline that uses DNA and other molecular data to determine evolutionary history. | 12 | |
10491573816 | Evolutionary Molecular Homologies | If the DNA sequence and length are similar in two species then they are most likely closely related. | 13 | |
10491573817 | Cladistics | The 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. | 14 | |
10491573818 | Monophyletic | All descendants and ancestral species, this is the only way a clade can be equivalent with a taxon. | ![]() | 15 |
10491573819 | Paraphyletic | Consists of an ancestral species and some, but not all of its descendants. | ![]() | 16 |
10491573820 | Polyphyletic | includes taxa with different ancestors. | ![]() | 17 |
10491573821 | Shared Ancestral/Primitive Character | A 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. | 18 | |
10491573822 | Character/Characteristics | Another word for Trait or Traits. | 19 | |
10491573823 | Shared Derived Character | An evolutionary novelty unique to a particular clade. Ex. Mammals have the character of hair which isn't seen in earlier ancestors. | 20 | |
10491573824 | Ingroup | The species or group of species that is known to have emerged after the outgroup. | 21 | |
10491573825 | Outgroup | The 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. | 22 | |
10491573826 | Maximum Parsimony | "Occam's Razor" The method of investigating the simplest explanation that is consistent to the facts. | 23 | |
10491573827 | Maximum Likelihood | States that given certain rules about how DNA changes over time, a tree can be found that reflects the most likely sequence of evolutionary events. | 24 |
AP Biology Chapter 26 Flashcards
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