| back 1 - Biology is the study of life and living organisms.
- All
living things share five fundamental traits:
- Cells: All
organisms are made of membrane-bound cells.
-
Replication: All organisms reproduce.
- Evolution:
Populations evolve over time.
- Information: Genetic
information is encoded in DNA.
- Energy: Organisms
acquire and use energy.
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| back 2 - Developed by Schleiden, Schwann, and Virchow.
- Two main
tenets:
- All organisms are made of cells.
- All
cells come from preexisting cells.
- Implies
a common ancestry among all life forms.
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front 3 Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection | back 3 - Proposed by Darwin and Wallace.
- Two components:
- Pattern: Species change over time and share common
ancestry.
- Process: Natural selection causes
evolution.
- Natural selection requires:
- Variation in traits.
- Heritability of traits.
- Differential reproductive success.
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front 4 Chromosome Theory of Inheritance | back 4 - Genes are located on chromosomes.
- DNA is the molecule
of heredity.
- Central Dogma: DNA → RNA → Protein.
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| back 5 - Phylogenetic tree shows evolutionary relationships.
- Three domains:
- Based on ribosomal RNA
sequences.
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| back 6 - Steps: Observation → Hypothesis → Experiment → Analysis →
Conclusion.
- Hypotheses must be testable and falsifiable.
- Controlled experiments isolate variables.
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front 7 Darwin & Wallace’s Contributions | back 7 - Proposed that species change over time and share common
ancestry.
- Introduced population thinking: variation among
individuals is key.
- Evolution is a scientific
theory—testable and supported by evidence.
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| back 8 - Plato: Typological thinking—species are fixed and perfect.
- Aristotle: Scale of Nature—species arranged by complexity.
- Lamarck: Species evolve by moving up the scale; traits acquired
during life are inherited
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| back 9 - Fossil Record: Shows changes over time and transitional
forms.
- Law of Succession: Extinct species resemble living
species in the same area.
- Transitional Features: Traits in
fossils that are intermediate between ancestral and derived
forms.
- Vestigial Traits: Reduced or nonfunctional traits
inherited from ancestors.
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| back 10 - Homology: Similar traits due to shared ancestry.
-
Genetic homology: Similar DNA sequences.
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Developmental homology: Similar embryonic development.
- Structural homology: Similar body structures.
- Artificial selection demonstrates how traits can change
under selective pressure
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front 11 Mechanism of Natural Selection | back 11 - Individuals with advantageous traits reproduce more.
- Over generations, these traits become more common.
- Evolution occurs in populations, not individuals.
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| back 12 - Evolution is not goal-directed.
- Individuals do not
evolve—populations do.
- Natural selection does not give
organisms what they “need.
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