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Chapter 8, Processes of Macroevolution

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Chapter 8, Processes of Macroevolution Key Terms metazoa Multicellular animals; a major division of the animal kingdom. chordata The phylum of the animal kingdom that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 8, Processes of Macroevolution


1
Chapter 8, Processes of Macroevolution
  • Key Terms

2
  • metazoaMulticellular animals a major division
    of the animal kingdom.
  • chordataThe phylum of the animal kingdom that
    includes vertebrates.

3
  • vertebratesAnimals with bony backbones includes
    fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.
  • homologies Structures that are shared through
    descent from a common ancestor.

4
  • analogies Structures in organisms that are used
    for the same function, but have developed
    independently and are not the result of common
    descent.
  • homoplasyThe process by which similarities can
    develop in different groups of organisms.

5
  • evolutionary systematicsA traditional approach
    to classification in which presumed ancestors and
    descendents are traced in time by analysis of
    homologous characters.
  • Cladistic taxonomyAn approach to taxonomy that
    groups species according to shared derived
    characteristics.

6
  • ancestral (primitive) Referring to
    characteristics that are inherited by a group of
    organisms from a remote ancestor.
  • derived (modified)Referring to characteristics
    that are modified from the ancestral condition
    and thus are diagnostic of particular
    evolutionary lineages.

7
  • therapodsSmall to medium-sized ground-living
    dinosaurs, dated to approximately 150 m.y.a. and
    thought to be related to birds.
  • phylogenetic treeA chart showing evolutionary
    relationships as determined by phylogenetic
    systematics.

8
  • cladogramA chart showing evolutionary
    relationships as determined by cladistic
    analysis. It is based solely on interpretation of
    shared derived characteristics.
  • biological species conceptA depiction of species
    as groups of individuals capable of fertile
    inbreeding but reproductively isolated from
    other such groups.

9
  • speciationThe process where a new species
    evolves from a prior species.
  • recognition species conceptA depiction of
    species where the key aspect is the ability of
    individuals to identify members of their own
    species for purposes of mating.

10
  • ecological species conceptThe concept that a
    species is a group of organisms exploiting a
    single niche.
  • allopatricA model of speciation that emphasizes
    complete reproductive isolation of divergent
    populations from their ancestral population.

11
  • intraspecificWithin species, refers to variation
    seen within the same species.
  • interspecificBetween species refers to
    variation beyond that seen within the same
    species to include additional aspects between
    two different species.

12
  • PaleospeciesSpecies defined from fossil
    evidence, often covering a long time span.
  • genusA group of closely related species.

13
  • geological time scaleThe organization of earth
    history into eras, periods, and epochs.
  • continental driftThe movement of continents on
    sliding plates of the earths surface.

14
  • ecological nichesThe positions of species within
    their physical and biological environments,
    together making up the ecosystem.
  • epochsCategories of the geological time scale
    subdivisions of periods.

15
  • viviparousGiving birth to live young.
  • HeterodontHaving different kinds of teeth
    characteristic of mammals whose teeth consist of
    incisors, canines, premolars, and molars.

16
  • endothermicAble to maintain internal body
    temperature.
  • large-bodied hominoidsHominoids including the
    great apes and hominids as well as all ancestral
    forms back to the time of divergence from small
    bodied hominoids.

17
  • hominidsColloquial term for members of the
    family Hominidae, which includes all bipedal
    hominoids back to the divergence of the African
    great apes.
  • adaptive radiationThe relatively rapid expansion
    and diversification of life forms into new
    ecological niches.

18
  • punctuated equilibriumThe concept that
    evolutionary change proceeds through long periods
    of stasis punctuated by rapid periods of change.
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