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Evolution Review Packet Key Editable

Natural selection and evolution are defined. Natural selection is the process where environmental pressures cause a species to change. Evolution is the slow accumulation of trait-causing mutations in a population over time. The document provides examples of natural selection in peppered moths and Darwin's finches. Changing environments like increased soot led to changes in moth coloration frequencies as darker moths were better camouflaged. Beak size in Darwin's finches varied depending on rainfall, with larger beaks conferring advantages in dry years when food was scarcer.

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67% found this document useful (3 votes)
723 views4 pages

Evolution Review Packet Key Editable

Natural selection and evolution are defined. Natural selection is the process where environmental pressures cause a species to change. Evolution is the slow accumulation of trait-causing mutations in a population over time. The document provides examples of natural selection in peppered moths and Darwin's finches. Changing environments like increased soot led to changes in moth coloration frequencies as darker moths were better camouflaged. Beak size in Darwin's finches varied depending on rainfall, with larger beaks conferring advantages in dry years when food was scarcer.

Uploaded by

Miljoy Delegado
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Name_________KEY______________________________ Period_____ Date_______________

Evolution and Natural Selection Review Packet


First: Define evolution and natural selection
_NATURAL SELECTION_____ is the process in which changes in an environment pressure a species to change.
_EVOLUTION_______________ is the process in which traits caused by mutations slowly accumulate in a population
over time.

I. Evolution Practice Worksheet Directions: Circle the correct answer in questions 1 – 17.
1. The process in which the environment puts pressure on a species to change: (evolution or natural selection)

2. Slow change in a species over time describes Darwin’s theory of (evolution or natural selection).

3. According to Darwin, evolution occurs as a result of (natural selection or artificial selection).

4. The (individual or population) evolves.

5. Giant tortoises are only found on the Galapagos Islands. Each island had a different species of tortoises. This
would suggest that all tortoises evolved from (a common ancestor or different ancestors).

6. The source of variation in a species is (mutations or lack of change) in DNA.

7. Mutations can be harmful or helpful. A helpful mutation will (increase or decrease) the fitness of an
individual in its environment.

8. According to the theory of natural selection, a good mutation will probably (increase or decrease) in
frequency in a population.

9. Members of (different or the same) species share the same group of alleles called a (gene pool or gene frequency).

10. Fossils in the lowest sedimentary rock layers are (older or younger) than fossils found in higher layers of rock.

11. The whale’s flipper and the arms of a human are examples of (vestigial organs or homologous structures)
because they have the same bones but use them for different functions.

12. The hip bones in whales and snakes serve no function, so they are examples of (vestigial organs or
homologous structures).
13. (Vestigial organs or Homologous structures) show that two species evolved from a common ancestor.
14. All vertebrate embryos are (alike or not alike) in that they all have similar patterns of development.
15. An ancestral flock of finches flew from South America to the Galapagos Islands. They spread out and adapted
to all the different environments on the islands. This is an example of (evolution or artificial selection) due to
(behavioral or geographic) isolation.
16. Mountains, volcanic eruptions, and large bodies of water are examples of (geographic or reproductive) barriers
that can isolate populations.
17. Two groups that are geographically isolated for long periods of time tend to become reproductively isolated due
to (choice or mutations).
18. Number (1 to 5) the following sentences in the order in which they occur during speciation.
_2__ As food sources become scarce the population of mice migrates around the sides of a mountain.
_4__ Over thousands of years, mutations slowly start to accumulate in the separated mice populations.
_1__ Gene sharing in a mice population is not interrupted because they have the same habitat gene pool.
_5__ The mice population becomes reproductively isolated and two new species evolve.
_3__ Members of the mice population become geographically isolated on either side of the mountain and members
no longer share a common gene pool.
Read the following review of evidence for evolution, read the documented cases of natural selection and answer
the questions about them, and then do the practice
worksheet that follows.
II. Evidence for Evolution.

Embryology – Study of embryo development

All vertebrate animals look similar to each other early


in development of their embryos (embryologic
development). All have gill slits and a tail (including
humans), although only a few groups go on to fully
develop tails and gills. It can be hypothesized that all
vertebrates contain the genes that develop these
structures, but in some the genes are now inactive.

Homologous Structures – Similar structures in different


species
Similarities in homologous structures in different species are
probably due to deriving from the same common ancestor. Ex:
The forelimbs of various mammals.

The forearms of a human, cat, dolphin, and bat are used for
entirely different things (grasping, walking, swimming, flying)
and yet they are composed of exactly the same bones, just
arranged differently and with slight alterations.

Vestigial Organs – Structures that may


have been useful in the evolutionary past of
the species. Ex: A hip bone for the
attachment of hind legs; an appendix to
digest plant material. Vestigial organs
indicate an evolutionary relationship of
organisms with them to organisms that still
have a functioning version of the organs.

Other evidence of evolution: The fossil


record and DNA comparisons
(comparisons of amino acid sequences).
III. Documented Examples of Natural Selection at Work – Read these reviews and answer the
questions after each paragraph.

Natural Selection and Peppered Moths


The Industrial Revolution in England in the 1850’s caused mass amounts of soot to be released into the air.
This caused trees in the areas around factories to become dark as their bark absorbed the soot.
This, in turn, affected the peppered moths in the area, which rested on the trees. These moths had two main
varieties: light and dark. Moths that were not camouflaged against the tree trunks were eaten in greater
quantities by predators, such as birds.
19. How did changing the environment in this case change the number of light versus dark peppered moths in
these industrialized areas?
Trees in the environment became darker because of soot, so dark peppered moths became better
camouflaged on the tree trunks, light peppered moths were then eaten more frequently, more dark
peppered moths survived and reproduced, and dark peppered moths became more numerous than light
peppered moths.

Natural Selection and Darwin’s Finches


Darwin’s Finches have been studied by Peter and Rosemary Grant for over 30 years. Since each island of the
Galapagos has different environmental conditions and thus somewhat different food sources, each flock of
birds that moved to a different island had to adapt to whatever food source was present.

On the island called Daphne Major, the average beak size within the population changed depending on how
the climate changed on the island. According to data compiled by the Grants, the average beak size of the
finches on Daphne Major varied in size between about 9.4 mm to about 9.8 mm depending on the amount of
rainfall between 1976 and 1985. The years the average beak size was greatest, around 9.8 mm, were dry
years. 1984 was a wet year, and average beak size was about 9.4 mm.

20. What would happen to beak size in this population of finches if the years after 1984 were dry again?
Why?
The beak sizes would increase again, because in dry years it is apparently a competitive advantage to
have larger beaks, perhaps due to a decrease in the food supply in dry years and larger beaks being
somehow more effective at obtaining and eating the available food.
IV. Questions About Evidence of Evolution and Natural Selection at Work
Natural Selection: Write the letter of the correct definition in the blank space on the left.
21. __A__ adaptation a. inherited characteristic that increases chances of survival
22. __C__ competition b. process in which organisms with traits well suited to their
environment survive and reproduce at a greater rate than less well-
23. __B__ natural selection adapted organisms in the same environment
24. __E__ fitness c. struggle for survival when a growing population causes a scarcity of
resources
25. __D__ variation
d. changes in the DNA of individuals of a population
e. ability to survive and reproduce in a specific environment
Evolutionary Evidence: Write the letter of the correct definition in the blank space on the left.
26. __E__ vestigial structure a. remains of dead organisms
27. __C__ homologous structures b. similarities and differences in amino acid sequences between
organisms
28. __B__ DNA sequence
c. structures in different organisms having the same bone makeup
29. __A__ fossil record
d. study of the early development of fetuses of different organisms;
30. __D__ embryology has documented that in the early stages of development, dogs,
pigs, and humans resemble each other
e. structures that have reduced in size because they no longer serve
an important function
Fill in the blank using the terms in the box. Only six of the terms are used.
variation natural selection adaptation
biodiversity common ancestor isolation
genotype phenotype interbreed

Natural selection could not occur without (31) __VARIATION_____ and acts on a(n) (32) _GENOTYPE___.
A trait that makes a species better suited to survive in its environment is called a(n)
(33) _ADAPTATION_________. A species is a group of organisms that have unique features and cannot
(34) _INTERBREED_________ with other organisms. All the evolutionary evidence including fossils
points to organisms having a(n) (35) _COMMON ANCESTOR_______________. Having a lot of different
species living in a habitat is called (36) _BIODIVERSITY_________________.
What are the four principals of natural selection?

Natural Selection

37. 38. GENETIC 39. STRUGGLE TO 40. SUCCESSFUL


OVERPRODUCTION VARIATION SURVIVE REPRODUCTION

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