Evolution Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

what did Dawkins mean by “selfish gene”?

A

The genes that better equip us to survive are the ones that are maintained

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2
Q

sociobiology

A

genes associated with behaviour; the primary units upon which natural selection acts; “selfish genes”

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3
Q

adaptations

A
  • traits associated with highest relative fitness in a given environment
  • Natural selection is the process through which adaptations arise
  • Other forces could give rise to adaptations, including chance
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4
Q

Influence of habitat on guppies

A
  • Different predators between locations -> natural selection would favour different characteristics (location dependent)
  • Differences in habitat creates differences in guppies: colour, number, and size of offspring -> helps them survive predation
  • Also creates different anti-predator behaviours
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5
Q

guppy anti-predator behaviours (and environmental influence on them)

A
  • Shoaling/schooling: swimming in a group, measure of group cohesiveness
    • In high-predator environments: stick together, tighter shoaling, bigger numbers (and vice versa in low)
  • Predator inspection: moving toward a predator to gain important information, then reporting back to the group
    • In high-predator environments: many quick, cautious inspections (and vice versa in low)
  • When guppies transferred environments (high to low predators): initially their behaviour stayed the same, but it changed over time to match low predator behaviour (and vice versa for guppies that naturally went from low to high environments)
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6
Q

what does it mean that naked mole rats display eusociality?

A
  • “reproductive division of labour” - only certain members reproduce
  • Overlapping generations – individuals from a wide range of generations are alive at the same time
  • Communal care of offspring
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7
Q

naked mole rat reproduction vs. non-reproduction

A
  • Live in large groups, but only 1 queen and 1-3 males reproduce (other members are not physiologically able to reproduce)
  • Non-reproductive members: shorter lifespans, cooperative behaviours – defense against predators, tunnel digging, grooming the queen (altruistic behaviours)
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8
Q

altruistic behaviours of non-reproductive naked mole rats

A
  • Altruistic behaviours – helping out the group even though they can’t pass on their genes
  • these behaviours occur only with related individuals (kin selection) and NMR’s are highly related! (between siblings and twins on a scale)
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9
Q

kinship theory

A

genetic relatives share many of the same alleles. Due to genetic similarity between kin, expect more altruistic behaviour

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10
Q

inclusive fitness of non-reproductive naked mole rats

A
  • Sterile colony members accrue reproductive benefits helping their relatives, helping shared genes to be passed down to the next generation
  • however, research has shown that inclusive fitness is not required to explain eusociality
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11
Q

mate choice in humans

A
  • Theory: the sex that invests more in the offspring should be “choosier” in mate selection, opting for mates that provide resources for their offspring
  • Females generally produce large/more expensive gametes (oocytes), show greater parental investment (internal gestation)
  • study showed that cross-culturally, most women put higher value in men’s financial prospects than men put in women’s
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12
Q

phylogenic trees

A

Hypothesis of the evolutionary history of the group under study

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13
Q

info used to generate phylogenic trees

A
  • Behaviour
  • Fossil record
  • Morphological changes
  • Genetic analyses -> most common
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14
Q

parts of phylogenic trees

A
  • Nodes – points at which the tree splits
    • Interior node: common ancestor
    • Evolutionary change along each branch – common ancestor =/= currently living organism
  • Root: common lineage from which all species in the tree are derived
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15
Q

homology vs. homoplasy

A
  • Homology: trait shared by 2+ species due to a shared ancestry
    • Ex. Milk production by mammals (shared a common, milk-producing ancestor)
  • Homoplasy: trait shared by 2+ species due to natural selection, acting independently on each species (not due to common ancestor)
    • Ex. Convergent evolution in wing structure
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