Ecology Sem 1 Practice Questions PDF
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This document details practice questions for an ecology semester. It covers topics like Darwin's theory of evolution, the voyage of the Beagle, and the Galapagos Islands. It also explains the concepts of natural selection and artificial selection.
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**ECOLOGY SEM 1 \| PRACTICE QUESTIONS** **Charles Darwin** Picture 1.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: **Darwin's Theory of Evolution** - Evolution, or change over time, is the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms. - A scientific theory is a well-supported...
**ECOLOGY SEM 1 \| PRACTICE QUESTIONS** **Charles Darwin** Picture 1.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: **Darwin's Theory of Evolution** - Evolution, or change over time, is the process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms. - A scientific theory is a well-supported testable explanation of phenomena that have occurred in the natural world. **Voyage of Beagle** ![ Picture 3.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD:](media/image2.png)C:\\WINDOWS\\Desktop\\bio\_ch15\\bio\_ch15\_4290.jpg Dates: February 12th, 1831 Captain: Charles Darwin Ship: H.M.S. Beagle Destination: Voyage around the world. Findings: evidence to propose a revolutionary hypothesis about how life changes over time **Patterns of Diversity** Darwin visited Argentina and Australia which had similar grassland ecosystems: - very different animals inhabited those grasslands. - neither Argentina nor Australia was home to the sorts of animals that lived in European grasslands. **Living Organisms and Fossils** - Darwin collected the preserved remains of ancient organisms, called fossils. - Some of those fossils resembled organisms that were still alive today. - Others looked completely unlike any creature he had ever seen. **The Galapagos Island** - The smallest, lowest islands were hot, dry, and nearly barren-Hood Island-sparse vegetation - The higher islands had greater rainfall and a different assortment of plants and animals-Isabela- Island had rich vegetation. - Darwin was fascinated in particular by the land tortoises and marine iguanas in the Galápagos. - Giant tortoises varied in predictable ways from one island to another. - The shape of a tortoise\'s shell could be used to identify which island a particular tortoise inhabited. ![ Picture 1.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD:](media/image4.png) **Animals found in the Galapagos** 1. Land Tortoises Picture 1.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: 2. Darwin Finches![ Picture 2.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD:](media/image6.png) 3. Blue-Footed Booby Picture 3.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: 4. Marine Iguanas![ Picture 4.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD:](media/image8.png) **The Journey Home** *Hypothesis: Separate species may have arose from an original ancestor.* Darwin Observed that characteristics of many plants and animals vary greatly among the islands. **Ideas that shaped Darwin's Thinking** Picture 1.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: **James Hutton: *1795 Theory of Geological Change*** - Forces change earth's surface shape - Changes are slow - Earth much older than thousands of years ![ Picture 2.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD:](media/image10.png) **Charles Lyell: *Book: Principles of Geography*** - Geographical features can be built up or torn down - Darwin thought if earth changed over time, what about life? Picture 3.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: **Jean-Baptiste Lamarck: *Theory of Evolution*** - Tendency toward Perfection(Giraffe necks) - Use and Disuse (bird's using forearms) - Inheritance of Acquired Traits ![ Picture 5.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD:](media/image12.png) **Thomas Malthus:** ***Population Growth*** - 19th century English economist - If population grew (more Babies born than die) - Insufficient living space - Food runs out - Darwin applied this theory to animals **Publication of Origin of Species** - **Russel Wallace** wrote an essay summarizing evolutionary change from his field work in Malaysia - Gave Darwin the drive to publish his findings **Natural Selection & Artificial Selection** - **Natural variation** - differences among individuals of a species - **Artificial selection** - nature provides the variation among different organisms, and humans select those variations they find useful. **Evolution by Natural Selection** - **The Struggle for Existence** - members of each species have to compete for food, shelter, other life necessities - **Survival of the Fittest** - Some individuals better suited for the environment *Over time, **natural selection** results in [changes in inherited characteristics of a population]. These changes increase a species fitness in its environment* **Descent** - **Descent with Modification**-Each living organism has descended, with changes from other species over time - **Common Descent**- were derived from common ancestors **Evidence of Evolution** 1. **The Fossil Record** - Layer show change 2. **Geographic Distribution of Living Things** - similar environments have similar types of organisms 3. **Homologous Body Structures** - structures that have different mature forms in different organisms, but develop from the same embryonic tissue ***Vestigial organs***-organs that serve no useful function in an organism (i.e. appendix, miniature legs, arms) 4. **Similarities in Early Development** - Picture 1.png 000A2B16bunsen C167EDBD: **Summary of Darwin's Theory** 1. Individuals in nature differ from one another 2. Organisms in nature produce more offspring than can survive, and many of those who do not survive do not reproduce. 3. Because more organisms are produced than can survive, each species must struggle for resources 4. Each organism is unique, each has advantages and disadvantages in the struggle for existence 5. Individuals best suited for the environment survive and reproduce most successful 6. Species change over time 7. Species alive today descended with modification from species that lived in the past 8. All organisms on earth are united into a single-family tree of life by common descent