Adaptation, Evolution & Classification

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Classification. Organism ID. Anatomy. Evolution. Vocab. Hodgepodge. Adaptation, Evolution & Classification. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 100. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 200. 3 00. 3 00. 3 00. 3 00. 3 00. 3 00. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 400. 5 00. 5 00. 5 00. 5 00. 5 00. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Adaptation, Evolution & ClassificationClassificatio

nOrganism

IDAnatom

yEvolutio

n Vocab Hodgepodge

100 100 100 100 100 100

200 200 200 200 200200

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400 400 400 400 400 400

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List the levels of classification in order

from largest to smallest

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What are the rules for Binomial Nomenclature

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What were Aristotle's groupings

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Are there more families or classes?

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Are there more organisms in families or classes?

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Multicellular, heterotrophic, motile

organisms

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Unicellular, eukaryotic organisms

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Unicellular, prokaryotic organisms

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Multicellular, eukaryotic, autotrophic, non-motile

organisms

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Multicellular, heterotrophic, non-motile

organisms

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This body system absorbs nutrients

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Similar structures, not necessarily the same

function that can be used for comparing

evolutionary pasts

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Tissues that form a structure and perform a

specific function

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This system regulates chemicals and hormones

in the body

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Type of reproduction that results in genetically

identical offspring

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All adaptations are created by:

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Changes in gene frequencies within a

population

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The physical movement of genes from one

population to another

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When a population of single species are in

competition for a resource and adapt

differently to each other

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Theory that evolution happens through slow

changes and intermediate organisms

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Organisms that can manufacture their own

nutrients

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Organisms with a nucleus

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When a random event changes gene frequencies

within a population

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Diminished structures that are no longer needed

but show the evolutionary past of an

organism

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All the genes found within a population

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If two organisms share an order they have to share:

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Structures with a similar function, different structures, and do not

suggest a shared evolutionary past

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When two populations can not reach each other

and evolve separately

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True or False: Dominant traits are always adaptations

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True or False: All mutations become

adaptations