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ap bio : unit 7 cram sheet

Author’s Notes

hello there, and welcome to my unit 7 cram sheet on natural selection !! majority of the info is gathered from my teacher lectures and the AP daily videos :)

  • like this cram sheet? I made more ! check it out at my profile ;))

  • external links to other resources will also be linked to help you better understand this topic !!!!

Other Resources :

:: TBA - mcq progress check﹒﹒already took the mcq? “take it again” in flashcard form with an additional explanation of the answer! (frm urs truly :D )

:: cararra ﹒﹒ 34 min ap bio review video based from the campbell biology 11th edition textbook!

:: khan academy ﹒﹒the entire unit 7 course from khan academy!!

:: fiveable ﹒﹒ reviews unit 7 with articles and quizzes for you to practice your knowledge on!

﹙✦﹚﹒﹒please note that abbreviations will be used throughout this guide (kept at a minimum!)


﹙7.1-7.3, 7.12 - Natural Selection & Diversity﹚

✦﹒natural selection is the process by which organisms, having adaptations suited for a particular environment, have a greater chance of survival and reproduction, thereby passing the adaptations to subsequent generations

  • evolution is the change in genetic makeup of a population over time and is supported by multiple lines of evidence

    • natural selection is a major mechanism of evolution

    • driven by random occurrences, cannot continue without genetic variation

  • influenced by the following—

    • environmental stability of biotic and abiotic environments

      • environments can experience major disruptions and change quickly/slowly overtime

      • more unstablefaster rate of evolution (stable → slow rate)

    • genetic variation, which refers to genetic differences among organisms within a population

      • mutations and sexual reproduction increase variation

      • reduction of this can increase differences between populations of the same species

    • adaptations, which are traits that provide an advantage in a particular environment

      • those with adaptions will have a greater chance of survival

      • opposite of this → deleterious traits reduce the chance of survival

      • whether or not a trait is advantageous or deleterious is determined by selective pressures of the environment

    • fitness, which refers to the ability of an organism to survive and produce fertile offspring

      • reproductive success refers to the production of offspring

        • traits with more of this will become more common in the population

      • heritability is the ability to pass on adaptations to successive generations

  • can result in an increase OR decrease of specific phenotypes within a population over time

✦﹒phenotypic variation increases the probability a population will continue in unstable environments

  • natural selection acts on phenotypic variation by selecting individuals with the most advantageous traits based on certain environmental conditions

    • changes in these conditions can change which individuals in a population will be selected for or selected against

  • any phenotypes that increases an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction will significantly increase an organism’s fitness

✦﹒artificial selection is the process in which humans select which traits would reproduce instead of nature

  • may result in phenotypes that would not exist in nature

  • can lead to more/less genetic diversity

  • convergent evolution is the process in which similar environmental conditions select for similar traits in different populations or different species over time (analogous structures fit this; see 7.6 for info)

✦﹒genetic diversity is very important in populations

  • little genetic diversity risks extinction

  • population with more genetic diversity are more resilient to environmental change

    • more likely to contain individuals who can withstand environmental pressures

✦﹒resistance to chemicals become evident thru natural selection

  • can be resulted from mutations

  • leads to a species’ evolution

  • ex: antibiotic resistance in bacteria

    • antibiotic kills all but the ones that are resistant → resistant bacteria are able to reproduce and take over

      • some bacteria can give their drug resistance to other bacteria (recall from unit 6)

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒7 min video on natural selection, with examples!

﹙✦﹚﹒all of these concepts are important.. watch the videos (even the evolution one linked), maybe take notes to digest this info


﹙7.4 - Population Genetics﹚

✦﹒genetic drift is the random change in the frequency of a particular allele within a population (nonselective)

  • generally occurs in small populations

  • ex: four worms of different colors eventually become all the same color over generations)

  • bottleneck events can contribute to this (bottleneck → large population is reduced to a small population)

✦﹒migration/gene flow is the movement of individuals between populations causing an exchange of alleles between populations

  • introduces new gene info → increases genetic variation

  • continued migrated reduces genetic diversity over time

﹙✦﹚﹒very short, but DONT FORGET THIS! its pretty darn important to know for this unit


﹙7.5 - Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium﹚

✦﹒Hardy-Weinberg is a model for describing and predicting allele frequencies in a nonevolving population

  • these conditions must be met to be in a Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium

    • large population → no genetic drift

    • absence of migration → no gene flow

    • no mutations → no genes are modified, deleted, or duplicated

    • random mating → no sexual selection

    • no natural selection

  • rarely met, but provides a “ideal” population and null hypothesis regarding the chi-square test

  • disrupted by opposite conditions

  • the equation: p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

    • p2 → frequency of homozygous dominant genotype

    • 2pq → frequency of heterozygous genotype

    • q → frequency of homozygous recessive genotype

    • determines genotype and/or phenotype frequencies of individuals in a population

    • ANOTHER equation: p + q = 1

      • p → frequency of dominant allele

      • q → frequency of recessive allele

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒9 min video talking about the equilibrium with examples and tips upon its usage!

:: bozeman science﹒﹒11 min video on the equilibrium also if amoeba sisters isn’t enough or you prefer bozeman science

﹙✦﹚﹒another math problem.. one big thing is to PRACTICE! there will likely be a mcq regarding this and wanting to know the frequency of an allele or genotype


﹙7.6-7.7, 7.13 - Evolution & Ancestry﹚

✦﹒evolution is supported by many pieces of scientific evidence such as—

  • geographical - based on characteristics of a habitat or land area

  • geological - based on environmental features of earth over time (fossils)

    • fossils can be dated by the rate of decay of isotopes (carbon-14)

  • physical - based on phenotypes of species

  • biochemical - based on chemical composition (ex: biomolecules like DNA and proteins) of organisms

    • more amino acid differences between organisms→ more time that has passed since their divergence

  • mathematical - based on calculations and statistics (chi-square)

✦﹒morphological homologies represent modified traits shared among different species

  • homologous structures are variations in a structure that was present in a common ancestor (ex: bone structure of human arms, cat and horse legs, dolphin fins)

  • vestigial structures are reduced/obsolete features that serve little or no purpose for the organism (ex: human tailbone)

  • analogous structures are in which distantly related/unrelated organisms have similar traits (ex: fish and mammals have traits like fins under a similar aquatic environment)

✦﹒membrane-bound organelles, linear chromosomes, and introns provide evidence of common ancestry of all eukaryotes

✦﹒many pieces of scientific evidence suggest the origins of life

  • chemicals experiments prove that it is possible to form complex organic molecules from inorganic molecules in the absence of life

    • the RNA World Hypothesis proposed that RNA could have been the earliest genetic molecule

  • models for the origin of life indicate that life was extraterrestrial or early Earth atmospheric conditions were ideal for forming monomers for life

    • primitive Earth provided inorganic precursors from which organic molecules could have been synthesized

    • there was a presence of free energy and an absence of atmospheric oxygen (O2)

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒this video is VERY in depth (and less old) about evolution and spans talking topics covered in the natural selection part of this sheet

﹙✦﹚﹒best bet is to know the structures and the evidences regarding the origins of life (RNA hypothesis and absence of O2)


﹙7.9 - Phylogeny﹚

✦﹒phylogentic trees and cladograms are diagrams that show evolutionary relationships among species

  • constructed based off of the morphological similarities from living/fossil species and DNA and protein sequence similarities (more accurate)

  • out-group is the species that is least closely related to the remainder of the organisms

  • node is where the two lines meet, representing the most recent common ancestor

  • root represents the common ancestor of all species

Other Resources :

:: pbs﹒﹒fun game that brings the construction of cladograms in practice! it gets harder the farther you go :)

﹙✦﹚﹒definitely get a good grip of how to create a cladogram/phylogenetic tree based off of DNA via differences and understand how to interpret the model itself


﹙7.10 - Speciation﹚

✦﹒speciation is the creation of new species

  • results in diversity of life forms

  • allopatric speciation is the evolution of a new species due to geographical isolation of the same species (ex: geographical barriers, like a river)

    • no gene flow, and separation may expose populations to different selective pressures

  • sympatric speciation is the evolution of a new species due to reproductive isolation from a surviving ancestral population

    • can result from sexual selective, habitat differentiation, and genetic mutations (polyploidy)

  • divergent evolution occurs when adaptations to new habitats result in phenotypic diversification, with the possibility of rapid speciation rates

✦﹒reproductive isolation prevents gene flow between populations

  • PREzygotic barriers prevent production of a fertilized egg

    • habitat isolation is where species occupy different habitats and rarely come in contact

    • temporal isolation is where species breed during different times of day, seasons or years

    • behavioral isolation is where species have different courtship behaviors/mate preferences

    • mechanical isolation is where reproductive structural differences prevent successful mating and reproduction

    • gamete isolation is where sperm of one species may not be able to fertilize the eggs of another species

  • POSTzygotic barriers prevent a zygote from developing into a viable, fertile offspring

✦﹒there are two models that represent the rate of evolution—

  • punctuated equilibrium, is evolution that occurs rapidly after a long period of stasis

    • stasis is periods of little to no change

    • changing ecological conditions are the stimulus for evolution

  • gradualism is evolution that occurs slowly over a LONG TIME

    • ecological conditions change gradually too

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒speciation covered by the one and only, amoeba sisters! its 7 minutes.

﹙✦﹚﹒all these are a must know! lots of memorizing :,,)


﹙7.11 - Extinction﹚

✦﹒extinction refers to the disappearance of a species

  • can occur on a large scale at one time

    • caused by catastrophic changes to a ecosystem (ex: solar flares, sea levels, etc.)

    • species diversity decreases severely

    • Earth can recover from these events

  • human activity can drive changes that cause extinctions (climate change, poaching, habitat loss, etc.)

  • an ecosystem’s diversity can be determined by extinction and speciation rates

    • high species biodiversity → high speciation levels, low extinction levels

✦﹒extinction provides newly available niches

  • niche describes the role an organism plays within its environment

    • roles include producer, decomposer, scavenger, consumer, etc.

  • extinction leaves an open niche for another species to occupy

    • leads to rapid speciation rates and adaptive radiation

﹙✦﹚﹒this is like the only section that talks about niches but trust its gonna come back so understand niches and also generally what extinction is and what it does


L

ap bio : unit 7 cram sheet

Author’s Notes

hello there, and welcome to my unit 7 cram sheet on natural selection !! majority of the info is gathered from my teacher lectures and the AP daily videos :)

  • like this cram sheet? I made more ! check it out at my profile ;))

  • external links to other resources will also be linked to help you better understand this topic !!!!

Other Resources :

:: TBA - mcq progress check﹒﹒already took the mcq? “take it again” in flashcard form with an additional explanation of the answer! (frm urs truly :D )

:: cararra ﹒﹒ 34 min ap bio review video based from the campbell biology 11th edition textbook!

:: khan academy ﹒﹒the entire unit 7 course from khan academy!!

:: fiveable ﹒﹒ reviews unit 7 with articles and quizzes for you to practice your knowledge on!

﹙✦﹚﹒﹒please note that abbreviations will be used throughout this guide (kept at a minimum!)


﹙7.1-7.3, 7.12 - Natural Selection & Diversity﹚

✦﹒natural selection is the process by which organisms, having adaptations suited for a particular environment, have a greater chance of survival and reproduction, thereby passing the adaptations to subsequent generations

  • evolution is the change in genetic makeup of a population over time and is supported by multiple lines of evidence

    • natural selection is a major mechanism of evolution

    • driven by random occurrences, cannot continue without genetic variation

  • influenced by the following—

    • environmental stability of biotic and abiotic environments

      • environments can experience major disruptions and change quickly/slowly overtime

      • more unstablefaster rate of evolution (stable → slow rate)

    • genetic variation, which refers to genetic differences among organisms within a population

      • mutations and sexual reproduction increase variation

      • reduction of this can increase differences between populations of the same species

    • adaptations, which are traits that provide an advantage in a particular environment

      • those with adaptions will have a greater chance of survival

      • opposite of this → deleterious traits reduce the chance of survival

      • whether or not a trait is advantageous or deleterious is determined by selective pressures of the environment

    • fitness, which refers to the ability of an organism to survive and produce fertile offspring

      • reproductive success refers to the production of offspring

        • traits with more of this will become more common in the population

      • heritability is the ability to pass on adaptations to successive generations

  • can result in an increase OR decrease of specific phenotypes within a population over time

✦﹒phenotypic variation increases the probability a population will continue in unstable environments

  • natural selection acts on phenotypic variation by selecting individuals with the most advantageous traits based on certain environmental conditions

    • changes in these conditions can change which individuals in a population will be selected for or selected against

  • any phenotypes that increases an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction will significantly increase an organism’s fitness

✦﹒artificial selection is the process in which humans select which traits would reproduce instead of nature

  • may result in phenotypes that would not exist in nature

  • can lead to more/less genetic diversity

  • convergent evolution is the process in which similar environmental conditions select for similar traits in different populations or different species over time (analogous structures fit this; see 7.6 for info)

✦﹒genetic diversity is very important in populations

  • little genetic diversity risks extinction

  • population with more genetic diversity are more resilient to environmental change

    • more likely to contain individuals who can withstand environmental pressures

✦﹒resistance to chemicals become evident thru natural selection

  • can be resulted from mutations

  • leads to a species’ evolution

  • ex: antibiotic resistance in bacteria

    • antibiotic kills all but the ones that are resistant → resistant bacteria are able to reproduce and take over

      • some bacteria can give their drug resistance to other bacteria (recall from unit 6)

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒7 min video on natural selection, with examples!

﹙✦﹚﹒all of these concepts are important.. watch the videos (even the evolution one linked), maybe take notes to digest this info


﹙7.4 - Population Genetics﹚

✦﹒genetic drift is the random change in the frequency of a particular allele within a population (nonselective)

  • generally occurs in small populations

  • ex: four worms of different colors eventually become all the same color over generations)

  • bottleneck events can contribute to this (bottleneck → large population is reduced to a small population)

✦﹒migration/gene flow is the movement of individuals between populations causing an exchange of alleles between populations

  • introduces new gene info → increases genetic variation

  • continued migrated reduces genetic diversity over time

﹙✦﹚﹒very short, but DONT FORGET THIS! its pretty darn important to know for this unit


﹙7.5 - Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium﹚

✦﹒Hardy-Weinberg is a model for describing and predicting allele frequencies in a nonevolving population

  • these conditions must be met to be in a Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium

    • large population → no genetic drift

    • absence of migration → no gene flow

    • no mutations → no genes are modified, deleted, or duplicated

    • random mating → no sexual selection

    • no natural selection

  • rarely met, but provides a “ideal” population and null hypothesis regarding the chi-square test

  • disrupted by opposite conditions

  • the equation: p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

    • p2 → frequency of homozygous dominant genotype

    • 2pq → frequency of heterozygous genotype

    • q → frequency of homozygous recessive genotype

    • determines genotype and/or phenotype frequencies of individuals in a population

    • ANOTHER equation: p + q = 1

      • p → frequency of dominant allele

      • q → frequency of recessive allele

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒9 min video talking about the equilibrium with examples and tips upon its usage!

:: bozeman science﹒﹒11 min video on the equilibrium also if amoeba sisters isn’t enough or you prefer bozeman science

﹙✦﹚﹒another math problem.. one big thing is to PRACTICE! there will likely be a mcq regarding this and wanting to know the frequency of an allele or genotype


﹙7.6-7.7, 7.13 - Evolution & Ancestry﹚

✦﹒evolution is supported by many pieces of scientific evidence such as—

  • geographical - based on characteristics of a habitat or land area

  • geological - based on environmental features of earth over time (fossils)

    • fossils can be dated by the rate of decay of isotopes (carbon-14)

  • physical - based on phenotypes of species

  • biochemical - based on chemical composition (ex: biomolecules like DNA and proteins) of organisms

    • more amino acid differences between organisms→ more time that has passed since their divergence

  • mathematical - based on calculations and statistics (chi-square)

✦﹒morphological homologies represent modified traits shared among different species

  • homologous structures are variations in a structure that was present in a common ancestor (ex: bone structure of human arms, cat and horse legs, dolphin fins)

  • vestigial structures are reduced/obsolete features that serve little or no purpose for the organism (ex: human tailbone)

  • analogous structures are in which distantly related/unrelated organisms have similar traits (ex: fish and mammals have traits like fins under a similar aquatic environment)

✦﹒membrane-bound organelles, linear chromosomes, and introns provide evidence of common ancestry of all eukaryotes

✦﹒many pieces of scientific evidence suggest the origins of life

  • chemicals experiments prove that it is possible to form complex organic molecules from inorganic molecules in the absence of life

    • the RNA World Hypothesis proposed that RNA could have been the earliest genetic molecule

  • models for the origin of life indicate that life was extraterrestrial or early Earth atmospheric conditions were ideal for forming monomers for life

    • primitive Earth provided inorganic precursors from which organic molecules could have been synthesized

    • there was a presence of free energy and an absence of atmospheric oxygen (O2)

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒this video is VERY in depth (and less old) about evolution and spans talking topics covered in the natural selection part of this sheet

﹙✦﹚﹒best bet is to know the structures and the evidences regarding the origins of life (RNA hypothesis and absence of O2)


﹙7.9 - Phylogeny﹚

✦﹒phylogentic trees and cladograms are diagrams that show evolutionary relationships among species

  • constructed based off of the morphological similarities from living/fossil species and DNA and protein sequence similarities (more accurate)

  • out-group is the species that is least closely related to the remainder of the organisms

  • node is where the two lines meet, representing the most recent common ancestor

  • root represents the common ancestor of all species

Other Resources :

:: pbs﹒﹒fun game that brings the construction of cladograms in practice! it gets harder the farther you go :)

﹙✦﹚﹒definitely get a good grip of how to create a cladogram/phylogenetic tree based off of DNA via differences and understand how to interpret the model itself


﹙7.10 - Speciation﹚

✦﹒speciation is the creation of new species

  • results in diversity of life forms

  • allopatric speciation is the evolution of a new species due to geographical isolation of the same species (ex: geographical barriers, like a river)

    • no gene flow, and separation may expose populations to different selective pressures

  • sympatric speciation is the evolution of a new species due to reproductive isolation from a surviving ancestral population

    • can result from sexual selective, habitat differentiation, and genetic mutations (polyploidy)

  • divergent evolution occurs when adaptations to new habitats result in phenotypic diversification, with the possibility of rapid speciation rates

✦﹒reproductive isolation prevents gene flow between populations

  • PREzygotic barriers prevent production of a fertilized egg

    • habitat isolation is where species occupy different habitats and rarely come in contact

    • temporal isolation is where species breed during different times of day, seasons or years

    • behavioral isolation is where species have different courtship behaviors/mate preferences

    • mechanical isolation is where reproductive structural differences prevent successful mating and reproduction

    • gamete isolation is where sperm of one species may not be able to fertilize the eggs of another species

  • POSTzygotic barriers prevent a zygote from developing into a viable, fertile offspring

✦﹒there are two models that represent the rate of evolution—

  • punctuated equilibrium, is evolution that occurs rapidly after a long period of stasis

    • stasis is periods of little to no change

    • changing ecological conditions are the stimulus for evolution

  • gradualism is evolution that occurs slowly over a LONG TIME

    • ecological conditions change gradually too

Other Resources :

:: amoeba sisters﹒﹒speciation covered by the one and only, amoeba sisters! its 7 minutes.

﹙✦﹚﹒all these are a must know! lots of memorizing :,,)


﹙7.11 - Extinction﹚

✦﹒extinction refers to the disappearance of a species

  • can occur on a large scale at one time

    • caused by catastrophic changes to a ecosystem (ex: solar flares, sea levels, etc.)

    • species diversity decreases severely

    • Earth can recover from these events

  • human activity can drive changes that cause extinctions (climate change, poaching, habitat loss, etc.)

  • an ecosystem’s diversity can be determined by extinction and speciation rates

    • high species biodiversity → high speciation levels, low extinction levels

✦﹒extinction provides newly available niches

  • niche describes the role an organism plays within its environment

    • roles include producer, decomposer, scavenger, consumer, etc.

  • extinction leaves an open niche for another species to occupy

    • leads to rapid speciation rates and adaptive radiation

﹙✦﹚﹒this is like the only section that talks about niches but trust its gonna come back so understand niches and also generally what extinction is and what it does