Guided Reading 16.2 (Modern Evolutionary Classif.) Name: ______
Date: ______Period ______
1. ______Are Most Important?
2. The use of ______is not simple, however, because there is not just one molecular clock ______. Instead, there are many, each of which "ticks" at a different rate.
3. Think of a ______. If you want to time a brief event, you pay attention to the ______.
4. To time an event that ______, you use the ______or the hour hand.
5. Linnaeus grouped species into ______, such as genus and family, mainly according to ______similarities and differences.
6. Or would you call them ______because they ______and feed their young ______?
7. Biologists now group organisms into ______that represent lines of ______, or phylogeny, not just physical ______.
8. Darwin's ideas about ______have given rise to the study of ______, or evolutionary relationships among organisms.
9. The ______organisms together based on their evolutionary history is called ______.
10. Species within a ______are more closely related to each another than to species in ______.
11. Similarly, all ______in a ______share a ______.
12. The higher the level of the taxon, the ______is the common ancestor of all the ______in the taxon.
13. ______, operating on species in similar ecological ______, has often caused ______evolution..
14. ______showed that the DNA sequences of the ______and the ______were more similar than those of the ______and the ______.
15. A ______also relies on a repeating process to mark time—______.
16. ______that appear in ______parts of a lineage but not in its older members are called ______.
17. ______can be used to construct a ______, a diagram that shows the ______among a group of organisms.
18. One such shared ______is a segmented body. Another is a ______..
19. ______the DNA level in the ______of organisms can be used to help determine ______.
20. But even ______with very different anatomies have ______.
21. Because ______are so similar across all forms of life, these molecules provide an excellent way of ______at their most basic level—their ______.
22. Even the ______such as humans and yeasts show many ______.
23. ______one example of similarities at the ______level—an indicator that humans and yeasts share a ______.
24. The more ______sequences of two species, the more recently they shared a ______, and the more closely they are related in ______
25. Adult barnacles have ______and a body divided into ______. Barnacles periodically ______, their external skeleton.
26. These ______make barnacles more similar to ______than to ______.
27. ______occur all the time, causing slight changes in the ______, as shown in Figure 18-9.
28. Some mutations have a ______on an organism's phenotype. These mutations are under ______pressure from ______.
29. Other mutations have ______on phenotype. These ______mutations accumulate in the DNA of ______at about the ______.
30. Predict how the field of ______has changed since ______time
31. Early ______grouped organisms together based on ______.
32. ______above the level of species are "invented" by researchers who decide how to distinguish between one ______, and another.
18-2 Section Assessment
1. Key Concept -- How is information about evolutionary, or phylogenetic, relationships useful in classification?
2. Key Concept -- How are genes used to help scientists classify organisms?
3. What is the principle behind cladistic analysis?
4. What gene indicates that yeasts and humans share a common ancestor?
5. Describe the relationship between evolutionary time and the similarity of genes in two species.
6. Critical Thinking (Inferring) -- Would a barnacle's DNA be more similar to the DNA of a crab or that of a limpet? Explain.
Thinking Visually
Constructing a Chart -- Draw a cladogram of a manufactured item, such as an automobile or a household appliance, that has changed over the years. Label derived characters that appeared as new models arose. For example, automobiles came to have electronic fuel injection and antilock brakes.
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