jueves 7 de julio de 2011

Science # 2

1.       Analogous structure: Body parts that once differed in evolutionarily distant lineages but converged in structure and function as responses to similar environmental pressures.

2.       Asteroid: Rockymetallic body, a few to 1,000 kilometers across, hurtling through space.

3.       Comparative morphology: Scientific study of comparable body parts of adults or embryonic stages of major lineages.
4.       Derived trait: A novel feature that evolved but once and is shared only by the descendants of the ancestral species in which it evolved.
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5.      
      Fossil: Recognizable, physical evidence of an organism that lived in the distant past.
6.       Fossilization: How fossils form. An organism or evidence of it gets buried in sediments or volcanic ash; water and dissolved inorganic compounds infiltrate it.

7.       Geologic time scale: Time scale for the Earth's history with major subdivisions corresponding to mass extinctions. Now radiometrically dated.
8.       Gondwana: Paleozoic supercontinent; with other land masses, it formed Pangea.
9.       Half-life: The time it takes for half of a given quantity of any radioisotope to decay into a different, and less unstable, daughter isotope.
10.   Homologous structure: comparable body parts that show underlying similarity even when they may differ in size, shape, or function; outcome of morphological divergence from a shared ancestor.
11.   lineage: Line of descent.
12.   Morphological convergence:  . In response to similar environmental pressures over time, evolutionarily distant lineages evolve in similar ways and end up being alike in appearance, functions, or both.
13.   Morphological divergence: Macro evolutionary pattern; genetically diverging lineages undergo change from body form of a common ancestor.
14.   Pangea: Paleozoic supercontinent upon which the first terrestrial plants and animals evolved.
15.   Plate tectonics theory: Theory that great slabs (plates) of the Earth's outer layer float on a hot,
plastic mantle.

16.   Stratification: Stacked layers of sedimentary rock, built up by gradual deposition of volcanic ash, silt, and other materials over time.
17.   Theory of uniformity: Early theory that the earth's surface changes in gradual, uniformly repetitive ways (major floods, earthquakes, and other infrequent catastrophes also occur every year and were not considered unusual).

18.   Adaptive radiation: Macroevolutionary pattern; burst of genetic divergences from a lineage that gives rise to many species, each using a novel resource or a new (or newly vacated) habitat.
19.   Adaptive zone: Minimum amount of energy required to get a specific reaction going, with or without the help of an enzyme.






    Allopathic speciation: Speciation model. A physical barrier arises, separates populations or subpopulations of a species, ends gene flow, and favors divergences that end in speciation.
      Anagenesis: Speciation pattern; changes in allele frequencies and morphology accumulate within an unbranched line of descent.

             
    Archipelago: Island chain some distance away from a continent.
   Biological species concept: Defines a species as one or more populations of individuals that are interbreeding under natural conditions, producing fertile offspring, and are isolated reproductively from other such populations.


   Cladogenesis: Speciation pattern in which a lineage splits and isolated populations undergo genetic divergence.
    Dosage compensation: Any mechanism that balances gene expression between the sexes during critical early stages of development.
    Evolutionary tree: Treelike diagram; a branch point means divergence from a shared ancestor and branches signify separate lines of descent.
    Extinction: Irrevocable loss of a species
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   Gene flow: Micro evolutionary process; alleles enter and leave a population as an outcome of immigration and emigration, respectively.
      Genetic divergence: Gradual accumulation of differences in gene pools of populations or subpopulations of a species after a geographic barrier arises and separates them; thereafter, microevolution occurs independently in each.
    Gradual model of speciation: Idea that species arise by many small morphological changes that accumulate over great spans of time.
   Hybrid zone: Where adjoining populations are interbreeding and producing hybrid offspring.
    Mass extinction: Catastrophic event or phase in geologic time when entire families or other major groups are irrevocably lost.
   Parapatric speciation: Idea that neighboring populations can become distinct species while maintaining contact along a common border.
  
    Punctuation model of speciation: Idea that most morphological changes occur in a brief span when populations start to diverge; speciation is rapid, and the daughter species change little for the next 2-6 million years or so.
     Reproductive isolating mechanism: Heritable feature of body form, functioning, or behavior that prevents interbreeding between two or more genetically divergent populations.
    Speciation: The formation of a daughter species from a population or subpopulation of a parent species by way of microevolutionary processes.
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    Species: One kind of organism. one or more natural populations in which individuals are interbreeding and are reproductively isolated from other such groups.
    Sympatric speciation: A speciation event within the home range of an existing species, in the absence of a physical barrier. Such species may form instantaneously, as by polyploidy.

Vocabulary# 3

 angiosperm       Flowering plant.

2.       archaebacterium            Member of the prokaryotic domain Archaebacteria
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3.       Archean eon     Eon in which life arose
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4.     









  big bang              Model for origin of universe.
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5.      



 Cenozoic era     The present era (65 mya to present).
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6.       crust, of Earth   Outer zone of low-density rocks resting on the Earth's mantle.
7.       dinosaur             One of a fabulous group of reptiles that originated in the Triassic and became the dominant land vertebrates for 125 million years.
8.       Ediacaran            One of the species with a highly flattened body that arose in the precambrian.
9.       endosymbiosis theory  Continuing physical contact between two species, one of which lives and reproduces inside the other's body.
10.   eubacterium     Prokaryotic cell; has a nucleoid, but no nucleus, cytoplasm, or cell membrane; most have a cell wall, some encapsulated.
11.   eukaryotic cell  Cell having a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles.
12.   global broiling hypothesis           Theory that an asteroid impact caused the K-T mass extinction by creating a colossal fireball.

13.   gymnosperm    Type of vascular plant in which seeds form on exposed surfaces of reproductive structures (e.g., on cone scales).
14.   K-T asteroid impact theory         A huge asteroid hit Earth at the K-T boundary; last dinosaurs perished during the mass extinction.
15.   mantle Of mollusks, a tissue draped over the visceral mass. Of Earth, a zone of intermediatedensity rocks beneath the crust.
16.   Mesozoic era    An era (240-65 mya) of spectacular expansion in the range of global diversity.
17.   Paleozoic era    Era from Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous, through the Permian (544 to 248 mya).
18.   prokaryotic cell                Archaebacterium or eubacterium; single-celled organism, most often walled;
.
19.   Proterozoic eon              Period from 2.5 billion to 570 million years ago; period during which eukaryotic cells arose.
20.   protistan     Has a nucleus, larger ribosomes, mitochondria, ER, Golgi bodies, chromosomes with numerous proteins, and cytoskeletal microtubules. Range in size from microscopic algae to giant kelps.
21.   proto-cell           Hypothetic cell-like stage between chemical evolution and the first living cell.
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22.   RNA world         One model for prebiotic evolution in which RNA was the template for protein synthesis before the evolution of DNA.
23.   stromatolite      Fossilized mats of shallow-water microbial communities, mainly cyanobacteria, from Archean to precambrian.