AP Biology Evolution Vocab

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The key takeaways are about important evolutionary concepts like adaptation, natural selection, the fossil record, and speciation.

Microevolution refers to evolutionary changes below the species level, while macroevolution refers to changes above the species level like the origin of new taxonomic groups.

The different types of natural selection are directional selection, disruptive selection, and stabilizing selection.

AP Biology Evolution Vocabulary

Adaptation- a change or the process of change by which an organism or species becomes better suited to its
environment.
natural selection- A process in which individuals that have certain inherited traits tend to survive and
reproduce at higher rates than other individuals because of those traits.
artificial selection- The selective breeding of domesticated plants and animals to encourage the
occurrence of desirable traits.
Fossil record - A collection of preserved remnants or impressions of an organism that lived in the past.
vestigial structure- A feature of an organism that is a historical remnant of a structure that served a
function in the organism's ancestors.
evolutionary tree- A branching diagram that reflects a hypothesis about evolutionary relationships among
groups of organisms.
convergent evolution-The evolution of similar features in independent evolutionary lineages.
Analogous structures - Structures of different species having similar or corresponding function but not
from the same evolutionary origin
Continental drift - the gradual movement of the continents across the earth's surface through geological
time.
Microevolution- Evolutionary change below the species level; change in the allele frequencies in a
population over generations.
relative fitness- The contribution an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation, relative to the
contributions of other individuals in the population.
directional selection- Natural selection in which individuals at one end of the phenotypic range survive or
reproduce more successfully than do other individuals.
disruptive selection- Natural selection in which individuals on both extremes of a phenotypic range
survive or reproduce more successfully than do individuals with intermediate phenotypes.
Stabilizing selection- Natural selection in which intermediate phenotypes survive or reproduce more
successfully than do extreme phenotypes.
Speciation- An evolutionary process in which one species splits into two or more species.
Macroevolution- Evolutionary change above the species level. Examples of macroevolutionary change
include the origin of a new group of organisms through a series of speciation events and the impact of mass
extinctions on the diversity of life and its subsequent recovery.
reproductive isolation- The existence of biological factors (barriers) that impede members of two species
from producing viable, fertile offspring.
allopatric speciation- The formation of new species in populations that are geographically isolated from
one another.
sympatric speciation- The formation of new species in populations that live in the same geographic area.
punctuated equilibria- In the fossil record, long periods of apparent stasis, in which a species undergoes
little or no morphological change, interrupted by relatively brief periods of sudden change.
adaptive radiation-Period of evolutionary change in which groups of organisms form many new species
whose adaptations allow them to fill different ecological roles in their communities.
Phylogeny- The evolutionary history of a species or group of related species.
Systematic- A scientific discipline focused on classifying organisms and determining their evolutionary
relationships.
Cladistics- An approach to systematics in which organisms are placed into groups called clades based
primarily on common descent.
Clade- A group of species that includes an ancestral species and all of its descendants.
Taxon- A named taxonomic unit at any given level of classification.
Species (plural, species), a group of organisms that resemble each other closely in structure and
function, and whose characteristics remain fairly constant through many generations.
Genus (plural, genera) is a group of related species which consists of similar groups, but members of
different groups usually cannot breed with one another.
Family is a group of related genera which is made up of groups even more alike than those in an order.
Order is a group of related families which consists of groups that are more alike than those in a class.
Class, a group of related orders. Class members have more characteristics in common than do members
of a division or phylum.
Phylum (plural, phyla), or Division (in the case of plants and fungi), a group of related classes. It is the
third highest taxon.
Kingdom is a group of related phyla which was formerly ranked as the highest level taxon in biological
classification..

Binomial nomenclature -the system of nomenclature in which two terms are used to denote a species of
living organism, the first one indicating the genus and the second the specific epithet.
Domains- (1) A taxonomic category above the kingdom level. The three domains are Archaea, Bacteria, and
Eukarya.
Hierarchical classification- a method of grouping in which terms are arranged from
general to specific; that is, in which the structure is initially arranged in broad groups that are
then successively subdivided into narrower groups.

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