The Language of Evolution
acquired trait: A
phenotypic
characteristic, acquired during growth and development, that is not
genetically based and therefore cannot be passed on to the next
generation (for example, the large muscles of a weightlifter).
adaptation: Any heritable
characteristic of an organism that improves its ability to survive
and reproduce in its environment. Also used to describe the process
of genetic change within a population, as influenced by
natural selection.
adaptive landscape: A graph
of the average fitness of a
population in relation to the frequencies of
genotypes in it. Peaks on
the landscape correspond to genotypic frequencies at which the
average fitness is high, valleys to genotypic frequencies at which
the average fitness is low. Also called a fitness surface.
adaptive logic: A behavior has
adaptive logic if it tends to increase the number of offspring that
an individual contributes to the next and following generations. If
such a behavior is even partly genetically determined, it will tend
to become widespread in the population. Then, even if circumstances
change such that it no longer provides any survival or reproductive
advantage, the behavior will still tend to be exhibited -- unless it
becomes positively disadvantageous in the new environment.
adaptive radiation: The
diversification, over evolutionary time, of a
species or group of species
into several different species or subspecies that are typically
adapted to different ecological
niches (for example, Darwin's finches). The term can also be
applied to larger groups of organisms, as in "the adaptive radiation
of mammals."
adaptive strategies: A mode
of coping with competition or environmental conditions on an
evolutionary time scale.
Species adapt when succeeding generations emphasize beneficial
characteristics.
agnostic: A person who believes that
the existence of a god or creator and the nature of the universe is
unknowable.
algae: An umbrella term for various
simple organisms that contain chlorophyll (and can therefore carry
out photosynthesis)
and live in aquatic
habitats and in moist situations on land. The term has no direct
taxonomic significance.
Algae range from macroscopic seaweeds such as giant kelp, which
frequently exceeds 30 m in length, to microscopic filamentous and
single-celled forms such as Spirogyra and Chlorella.
allele: One of the alternative forms of
a gene. For example, if a gene
determines the seed color of peas, one allele of that gene may
produce green seeds and another allele produce yellow seeds. In a
diploid cell there are
usually two alleles of any one gene (one from each parent). Within a
population there may be many different alleles of a gene; each has a
unique nucleotide
sequence.
allometry: The relation between the
size of an organism and the size of any of its parts. For example,
an allometric relation exists between brain size and body size, such
that (in this case) animals with bigger bodies tend to have bigger
brains. Allometric relations can be studied during the growth of a
single organism, between different organisms within a species, or
between organisms in different species.
allopatric speciation:
Speciation that occurs
when two or more populations of a species are geographically
isolated from one another sufficiently that they do not interbreed.
allopatry: Living in separate places.
Compare with sympatry.
amino acid: The unit molecular
building block of proteins,
which are chains of amino acids in a certain sequence. There are 20
main amino acids in the proteins of living things, and the
properties of a protein are determined by its particular amino acid
sequence.
amino acid sequence: A
series of amino acids, the building blocks of
proteins, usually coded for
by DNA. Exceptions are those
coded for by the RNA of certain
viruses, such as HIV.
ammonoid:
Extinct relatives of
cephalopods (squid, octopi, and chambered nautiluses), these
mollusks had coiled shells
and are found in the fossil
record of the Cretaceous
period.
amniotes: The group of reptiles,
birds, and mammals. These
all develop through an embryo
that is enclosed within a membrane called an amnion. The amnion
surrounds the embryo with a watery substance, and is probably an
adaptation for breeding on land.
amphibians: The class of
vertebrates that
contains the frogs, toads, newts, and salamanders. The amphibians
evolved in the Devonian period (about 370 million years ago) as the
first vertebrates to occupy the land. They have moist scaleless skin
which is used to supplement the lungs in gas exchange. The eggs are
soft and vulnerable to drying, therefore reproduction commonly
occurs in water. Amphibian larvae are aquatic, and have gills for
respiration; they undergo
metamorphosis to the adult form. Most amphibians are found in
damp environments and they occur on all continents except
Antarctica.
analogous structures: Structures in
different species that look alike or perform similar functions
(e.g., the wings of butterflies and the wings of birds) that have
evolved
convergently but do not develop from similar groups of
embryological tissues, and
that have not evolved from similar structures known to be shared by
common ancestors. Contrast with
homologous
structures. Note: The recent discovery of deep genetic
homologies has brought new interest, new information, and discussion
to the classical concepts of analogous and homologous structures.
anatomy: (1) The structure of an
organism or one of its parts. (2) The science that studies those
structures.
ancestral homology:
Homology that evolved
before the common
ancestor of a set of
species, and which is present in other species outside that set
of species. Compare with
derived homology.
anthropoid: A member of the group of
primates made up of monkeys, apes, and humans.
antibacterial: Having the ability
to kill bacteria.
antibiotics: Substances that
destroy or inhibit the growth of microorganisms, particularly
disease-causing bacteria.
antibiotic resistance: A
heritable trait in
microorganisms that enables them to survive in the presence of an
antibiotic.
aperture: Of a camera, the adjustable
opening through which light passes to reach the film. The diameter
of the aperture determines the intensity of light admitted. The
pupil of a human eye is a self-adjusting aperture.
aquatic: Living underwater.
arboreal: Living in trees.
archeology: The study of human
history and prehistory through the excavation of sites and the
analysis of physical remains, such as graves, tools, pottery, and
other artifacts.
archetype: The original form or body
plan from which a group of organisms develops.
artifact: An object made by humans
that has been preserved and can be studied to learn about a
particular time period.
artificial selection: The
process by which humans breed animals and cultivate crops to ensure
that future generations have specific desirable
characteristics. In
artificial selection, breeders select the most desirable variants in
a plant or animal population and selectively breed them with other
desirable individuals. The forms of most domesticated and
agricultural species have been produced by artificial selection; it
is also an important experimental technique for studying evolution.
asexual reproduction: A
type of reproduction involving only one parent that ususally
produces genetically
identical offspring. Asexual reproduction occurs without
fertilization or genetic
recombination, and may occur by budding, by division of a single
cell, or by the breakup of a whole organism into two or more new
individuals.
assortative mating: The
tendency of like to mate with like. Mating can be assortative for a
certain genotype (e.g.,
individuals with genotype AA tend to mate with other individuals of
genotype AA) or phenotype
(e.g., tall individuals mate with other tall individuals).
asteroid: A small rocky or metallic
body orbitting the Sun. About 20,000 have been observed, ranging in
size from several hundred kilometers across down to dust particles.
atheism: The doctrine or belief that
there is no god.
atomistic: (as applied to theory of
inheritance) Inheritance in which the entities controlling
heredity are relatively
distinct, permanent, and capable of independent action.
Mendelian
inheritance is an atomistic theory because in it, inheritance is
controlled by distinct genes.
australopithecine: A group of
bipedal
hominid
species belonging to the
genus Australopithecus
that lived between 4.2 and 1.4 mya
Australopithecus
afarensis: An early australopithecine
species that was
bipedal; known
fossils date between 3.6 and
2.9 mya (for example, Lucy).
autosome: Any
chromosome other than a
sex chromosome.
avian: Of, relating to, or characteristic
of birds (members of the class
Aves).
bacteria: Tiny, single-celled,
prokaryotic organisms
that can survive in a wide variety of environments. Some cause
serious infectious diseases in humans, other animals, and plants.
base: The
DNA molecule is a chain of
nucleotide units; each
unit consists of a backbone made of a sugar and a phosphate group,
with a nitrogenous base attached. The base in a unit is one of
adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), or thymine (T). In RNA,
uracil (U) is used instead of thymine. A and G belong to the
chemical class called purines;
C, T, and U are pyrimidines.
Batesian mimicry: A kind of
mimicry in which one
non-poisonous species (the
Batesian mimic) mimics another poisonous species.
belemnite: An
extinct marine
invertebrate that was related to squid, octopi, and chambered
nautiluses. We know from the
fossil record that belemnites were common in the Jurassic period
and had bullet-shaped internal skeletons.
big bang theory: The theory
that states that the universe began in a state of compression to
infinite density, and that in one instant all matter and energy
began expanding and have continued expanding ever since.
biodiversity (or biological diversity):
A measure of the variety of life, biodiversity is often described on
three levels. Ecosystem diversity describes the variety of habitats
present; species diversity
is a measure of the number of species and the number of individuals
of each species present; genetic diversity refers to the total
amount of genetic variability present.
bioengineered food: Food
that has been produced through
genetic modification using techniques of genetic engineering.
biogenetic law: Name given by
Haeckel to
recapitulation.
biogeography: The study of
patterns of geographical distribution of plants and animals across
Earth, and the changes in those distributions over time.
biological species concept:
The concept of species,
according to which a species is a set of organisms that can
interbreed among each other. Compare with
cladistic
species concept,
ecological
species concept,
phenetic
species concept, and
recognition
species concept.
biometrics: The quantitative study
of characters of organisms.
biosphere: The part of Earth and its
atmosphere capable of sustaining life.
bipedalism: Of
hominids, walking upright
on two hind legs; more generally, using two legs for locomotion.
bivalve: A
mollusk that has a two-part
hinged shell. Bivalves include clams, oysters, scallops, mussels,
and other shellfish.
Blackmore, Susan: A
psychologist interested in memes
and the theory of memetics, evolutionary theory, consciousness, the
effects of meditation, and why people believe in the paranormal. A
recent book, The Meme Machine, offers an introduction to the
subject of memes.
blending inheritance: The
historically influential but factually erroneous theory that
organisms contain a blend of their parents'
hereditary factors and
pass that blend on to their offspring. Compare with
Mendelian
inheritance.
botanist: A scientist who studies
plants.
brachiopod: Commonly known as "lamp
shells," these marine invertebrates resemble
bivalve
mollusks because of their
hinged shells. Brachiopods were at their greatest abundance during
the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras.
Brodie, Edmund D., III: A
biologist who studies the causes and evolutionary implications of
interactions among traits in predators and their prey. Much of his
work concentrates on the
coevolutionary arms race between newts that posess tetrodotoxin,
one of the most potent known toxins, and the resistant garter snakes
who prey on them.
Brodie, Edmund D., Jr.: A
biologist recognized internationally for his work on the evolution
of mechanisms in amphibians that allow them to avoid predators.
These mechanisms include toxins carried in skin secretions,
coloration, and behavior.
Bruner, Jerome: A psychologist
and professor at Harvard and Oxford Universities, and a prolific
author whose book, The Process of Education, encouraged
curriculum innovation based on theories of cognitive development.
bryozoan: A tiny marine invertebrate
that forms a crust-like colony; colonies of bryozoans may look like
scaly sheets on seaweed.
Burney, David: A biologist whose
research has focused on endangered species, paleoenvironmental
studies, and causes of extinction in North America, Africa,
Madagascar, Hawaii, and the West Indies.
carbon isotope ratio: A
measure of the proportion of the carbon-14
isotope to the carbon-12
isotope. Living material contains carbon-14 and carbon-12 in the
same proportions as exists in the atmosphere. When an organism dies,
however, it no longer takes up carbon from the atmosphere, and the
carbon-14 it contains decays to nitrogen-14 at a constant rate. By
measuring the carbon-14-to-carbon-12 ratio in a fossil or organic
artifact, its age can be determined, a method called radiocarbon
dating. Because most carbon-14 will have decayed after 50,000 years,
the carbon isotope ratio is mainly useful for dating
fossils and artifacts
younger than this. It cannot be used to determine the age of Earth,
for example.
carnivorous: Feeding largely or
exclusively on meat or other animal tissue.
Carroll, Sean: Developmental
geneticist with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and professor at
the University of Wisconsin-Madison. From the large-scale changes
that distinguish major animal groups to the finely detailed color
patterns on butterfly wings, Dr. Carroll's research has centered on
those genes that create the "molecular blueprint" for body pattern
and play major roles in the origin of new features. Coauthor, with
Jennifer Grenier and Scott Weatherbee, of From DNA to Diversity:
Molecular Genetics and the Evolution of Animal Design.
Carson, Rachel: A scientist and
writer fascinated with the workings of nature. Her best-known
publication, Silent Spring, was written over the years 1958
to 1962. The book looks at the effects of insecticides and
pesticides on songbird populations throughout the United States. The
publication helped set off a wave of environmental legislation and
galvanized the emerging ecological movement.
Castle, W.E.: An early experimental
geneticist, his 1901 paper
was the first on
Mendelism in America. His Genetics of Domestic Rabbits,
published in 1930 by Harvard University Press, covers such topics as
the genes involved in
determining the coat colors of rabbits and associated
mutations.
cell: The basic structural and functional
unit of most living organisms. Cell size varies, but most cells are
microscopic. Cells may exist as independent units of life, as in
bacteria and protozoans, or they may form colonies or tissues, as in
all plants and animals. Each cell consists of a mass of protein
material that is differentiated into
cytoplasm and nucleoplasm,
which contains DNA. The cell is enclosed by a cell membrane, which
in the cells of plants, fungi, algae, and bacteria is surrounded by
a cell wall. There are two main types of cell,
prokaryotic and
eukaryotic.
Cenozoic: The era of geologic time
from 65 mya to the present, a time when the modern continents formed
and modern animals and plants evolved.
centromere: A point on a
chromosome that is
involved in separating the copies of the chromosome produced during
cell division. During this division, paired chromosomes look
somewhat like an X, and the centromere is the constriction in the
center.
cephalopod: Cephalopods include
squid, octopi, cuttlefish, and chambered nautiluses. They are
mollusks with tentacles and
move by forcing water through their bodies like a jet.
character: Any recognizable trait,
feature, or property of an organism.
character displacement:
The increased difference between two closely related
species where they live in
the same geographic region (sympatry)
as compared with where they live in different geographic regions (allopatry).
Explained by the relative influences of intra- and inter-specific
competition in sympatry and allopatry.
chloroplast: A structure (or
organelle) found in some
cells of plants; its function is photosynthesis.
cholera: An acute infectious disease of
the small intestine, caused by the
bacterium Vibrio
cholerae which is transmitted in drinking water contaminated by
feces of a patient. After an incubation period of 1-5 days, cholera
causes severe vomiting and diarrhea, which, if untreated, leads to
dehydration that can be fatal.
chordate: A member of the
phylum Chordata, which
includes the tunicates,
lancelets, and vertebrates.
They are animals with a hollow dorsal nerve cord; a rodlike
notochord that forms the
basis of the internal skeleton; and paired gill slits in the wall of
the pharynx behind the head, although in some chordates these are
apparent only in early
embryonic stages. All vertebrates are chordates, but the phylum
also contains simpler types, such as sea-squirts, in which only the
free-swimming larva has a
notochord.
chromosomal inversion:
See inversion.
chromosome: A structure in the cell
nucleus that carries
DNA. At certain times in the
cell cycle, chromosomes are visible as string-like entities.
Chromosomes consist of the DNA with various
proteins, particularly
histones, bound to it.
chronology: The order of events
according to time.
Clack, Jenny: A paleontologist at
Cambridge University in the U.K., Dr. Clack studies the origin,
phylogeny, and
radiation of
early tetrapods and their
relatives among the lobe-finned fish. She is interested in the
timing and sequence of skeletal and other changes which occurred
during the transition, and the origin and relationships of the
diverse tetrapods of the late Paleozoic.
clade: A set of
species descended from a
common ancestral
species. Synonym of
monophyletic group.
cladism:
Phylogenetic
classification. The members of a group in a cladistic classification
share a more recent
common ancestor with one another than with the members of any
other group. A group at any level in the classificatory hierarchy,
such as a family, is formed
by combining a subgroup at the next lowest level (the
genus, in this case) with the
subgroup or subgroups with which it shares its most recent common
ancestor. Compare with
evolutionary classification and
phenetic
classification.
cladistic species concept:
The concept of species, according to which a species is a
lineage of populations
between two phylogenetic branch points (or speciation events).
Compare with
biological species concept,
ecological
species concept,
phenetic
species concept, and
recognition
species concept.
cladists: Evolutionary biologists who
seek to classify Earth's life forms according to their evolutionary
relationships, not just overall similarity.
cladogram: A branching diagram that
illustrates hypotheses about the evolutionary relationships among
groups of organisms. Cladograms can be considered as a special type
of phylogenetic tree that
concentrates on the order in which different groups branched off
from their common ancestors. A cladogram branches like a family
tree, with the most closely related species on adjacent branches.
class: A category of taxonomic
classification between order and phylum, a class comprises members
of similar orders. See taxon.
classification: The arrangement
of organisms into hierarchical groups. Modern biological
classifications are
Linnaean
and classify organisms into species, genus, family, order, class,
phylum, kingdom, and certain intermediate categoric levels.
Cladism,
evolutionary classification, and
phenetic
classification are three methods of classification.
cline: A geographic gradient in the
frequency of a gene, or in the
average value of a character.
clock: See molecular clock.
clone: A set of genetically identical
organisms
asexually reproduced from one ancestral organism.
coadaptation: Beneficial
interaction between (1) a number of genes at different loci within
an organism, (2) different parts of an organism, or (3) organisms
belonging to different species.
codon: A triplet of
bases (or nucleotides) in the
DNA coding for one
amino acid. The relation
between codons and amino acids is given by the
genetic code. The
triplet of bases that is complementary to a condon is called an
anticodon; conventionally, the triplet in the
mRNA is called the
codon and the triplet in the tRNA is called the anticodon.
coelacanth: Although long thought to
have gone extinct about 65 million years ago, one of these
deep-water, lungless fish was caught in the 1930s. Others have since
been caught and filmed in their natural habitat.
coevolution: Evolution in two or
more species, such as predator and its prey or a
parasite and its host, in
which evolutionary changes in one species influence the evolution of
the other species.
cognitive: Relating to cognition, the
mental processes involved in the gathering, organization, and use of
knowledge, including such aspects as awareness, perception,
reasoning, and judgement. The term refers to any mental "behaviors"
where the underlying characteristics are abstract in nature and
involve insight, expectancy, complex rule use, imagery, use of
symbols, belief, intentionality, problem-solving, and so forth.
common ancestor: The most
recent ancestral form or species from which two different species
evolved.
comparative biology: The
study of patterns among more than one species.
comparative method: The
study of adaptation by
comparing many species.
concerted evolution: The
tendency of the different genes in a
gene family to evolve
in concert; that is, each gene locus in the family comes to have the
same genetic variant.
conodont: A jawless fish that had
tiny, tooth-like phosphate pieces that are abundant in the fossil
record, these were the earliest known
vertebrates.
continental drift: The
process by which the continents move as part of large plates
floating on Earth's mantle. See
plate tectonics.
contrivance: An object or
characteristic used or modified to do something different from its
usual use.
convergence: The process by which a
similar character evolves independently in two species. Also, a
synonym for analogy; that
is, an instance of a convergently evolved character, or a similar
character in two species that was not present in their common
ancestor. Examples include wings (convergent in birds, bats, and
insects) and camera-type eyes (convergent in vertebrates and
cephalopod mollusks).
convergent evolution: The
evolution of species from different taxonomic groups toward a
similar form; the development of similar characteristics by
taxonomically different organisms.
Conway Morris, Simon:
Paleobiologist and professor in the Department of Earth Sciences at
Cambridge University in the U.K. His research centers around the
early evolution of the
metazoans, and he is a leading authority on Cambrian and
Precambrian fossils. Conway Morris established a link between the
Ediacaran fossils, a Burgess Shale fernlike frond Thaumaptilon,
and the modern seapens, colonial animals related to the corals.
Cope's rule: The evolutionary
increase in body size over geological time in a lineage of
populations.
coral (also, rugose coral, tabulate coral):
These tiny animals make calcium carbonate skeletons that are well
known as a key part of tropical reefs. The skeletons of the extinct
rugose and tabulate corals are known from fossils.
cranium: The part of the skull that
protects the brain in vertebrates.
creationism: The religious doctrine
that all living things on Earth were created separately, in more or
less their present form, by a supernatural creator, as stated in the
Bible; the precise beliefs of different creationist groups vary
widely. See separate
creation.
creation science: An
assortment of many different, non-scientific attempts to disprove
evolutionary theory, and efforts to prove that the complexity of
living things can be explained only by the action of an "intelligent
designer."
Cretaceous: The final geological
period of the Mesozoic era that began 144 million years ago and
ended 65 million years ago. The end of this period is defined most
notably by the extinction of the dinosaurs in one of the largest
mass extinctions ever to strike the planet.
crinoid: A marine invertebrate animal
belonging to a class (Crinoidea; about 700 species) of
echinoderms, including
sea lilies and feather stars. They have a small cup-shaped body
covered with hard plates and five radiating pairs of feathery
flexible arms surrounding the mouth at the top. Sea lilies, most of
which are extinct, are fixed to the sea bottom or some other surface
such as a reef by a stalk. Feather stars are free-swimming and are
usually found on rocky bottoms. Crinoids occur mainly in deep waters
and feed on microscopic
plankton and detritus caught by the arms and conveyed to the
mouth. The larvae are sedentary. They arose in the Lower Ordovician
(between 500 and 460 million years ago), and
fossil crinoids are an
important constituent of Palaeozoic limestones.
crossing over: The process during
meiosis in which the
chromosome of a
diploid pair exchange
genetic material, visible in the light microscope. At a genetic
level, it produces
recombination.
crustacean: A group of marine
invertebrates with exoskeletons and several pairs of legs. They
include shrimp, lobsters, crabs, amphipods (commonly known as "sand
fleas"), and many more.
Currie, Cameron: A Canadian
ecologist and recipient of the 2001 Natural Sciences and Engineering
Research Council Doctoral Prize for his research on the complex
symbiotic relationship of fungus-growing ants, the fungi they
cultivate, mutualistic bacteria that the ants carry on their bodies,
and pathogens that attack the fungi.
cytoplasm: The region of a
eukaryotic cell outside
the nucleus.
Daeschler, Ted: Paleontologist
and associate research curator at the Academy of Natural Sciences.
Discoverer of late Devonian limbed fossils Hynerpeton bassetti
and Designathus rowei (tetrapods)
and Sauripterus taylorii and Hyneria (lobed-finned
fishes), all early examples of animals exploiting both land and
water environments. Author of two books on
paleontology for young
people.
Dart, Raymond: Australian-born
South African anatomist and anthropologist (1893-1988). In 1924 he
described a fossil skull collected near Taung in South Africa,
naming it Australopithecus africanus. Dart asserted that the
skull was intermediate between the apes and humans, a controversial
claim at the time, though later work made it clear that the Taung
child, as it came to be known, was indeed a
hominid.
Darwinian evolution:
Evolution by the process of natural selection acting on random
variation.
Darwinism: Darwin's theory that
species originated by evolution from other species and that
evolution is mainly driven by natural selection. Differs from
neo-Darwinism mainly
in that Darwin did not know about
Mendelian
inheritance.
Darwin, Charles: The
19th-century naturalist considered the father of evolution. His
landmark work, On the Origin of Species, published in 1859,
presented a wealth of facts supporting the idea of evolution and
proposed a viable theory for how evolution occurs -- via the
mechanism Darwin called "natural selection." In addition to his
prolific work in biology, Darwin also published important works on
coral reefs and on the geology of the Andes, and a popular
travelogue of his five-year voyage aboard HMS Beagle.
Darwin, Erasmus: The name shared
by Charles Darwin's grandfather and brother, each important in his
life and work. Charles's grandfather Erasmus (1731-1802) was a
glorious polymath -- physician, author, and botanist. His impact is
reflected throughout a wide range of disciplines from the poetry to
the technology of his day. Author of The Loves of the Plants,
a 2,000-line poem detailing their sexual reproduction, and
Zoonomia, or the Theory of Generations, whose themes echo
throughout his grandson's work. Charles's older brother Erasmus
(1805-1881), known as "Ras," used his network of social and
scientific contacts to advance the theories of his shyer, more
retiring sibling.
Dawkins, Richard: An
evolutionary biologist who has taught zoology and is the author of
several books on evolution and science, including The Selfish
Gene (1976) and The Blind Watchmaker (1986). He is known
for his popularization of Darwinian ideas, as well as for original
thinking on evolutionary theory.
Dembski, William: A
mathematician and philosopher who has written on
intelligent design,
attempting to establish the legitimacy and fruitfulness of design
within biology.
Dennett, Daniel: Philosopher and
director of the Center for Cognitive Studies at Tufts University,
whose work unites neuroscience, computer science, and evolutionary
biology. Dennett sees no basic distinction between human and machine
intelligence, advocating a mechanical explanation of consciousness.
He is the author of Brainchildren: Essays on Designing Minds
and Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life,
among many other books and publications.
derived homology:
Homology that first
evolved in the common ancestor of a set of species and is unique to
those species. Compare with
ancestral homology.
de facto: In fact; in reality.
Something which exists or occurs de facto is not the result of a
law, but because of circumstances.
diatom: These single-celled algae are
common among the marine
phytoplankton. Their glassy, two-part shells have intricate
patterns and fit together like the two parts of a shirt box.
diffusion: The process by which
molecules (for example, of oxygen) move passively from a region of
high concentration to a region of low concentration.
dinoflagellate: Possessing two
tail-like extensions called flagella that are used for movement,
these single-celled algae can live freely or in other organisms such
as corals. When many
dinoflagellates suddenly reproduce in great numbers, they create
what are known as "red tides" by making the water appear red.
diploid: Having two sets of
genes and two sets of
chromosomes (one from
the mother, one from the father). Many common species, including
humans, are diploid. Compare with
haploid and
polyploid.
directional selection:
Selection causing a consistent directional change in the form of a
population through time (e.g., selection for larger body size).
disruptive selection:
Selection favoring forms that deviate in either direction from the
population average. Selection favors forms that are larger or
smaller than average, but works against the average forms between
the extremes.
distance: In
taxonomy, referring to the
quantitatively measured difference between the
phenetic
appearance of two groups of individuals, such as populations or
species (phenetic distance), or the difference in their gene
frequencies (genetic distance).
DNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid, the molecule
that controls inheritance.
DNA base sequence: A chain of
repeating units of deoxyribonucleotides (adenine, guanine, cytosice,
thymine) arranged in a particular pattern.
Dobzhansky, Theodosius: A
geneticist and zoologist best known for his research in
population genetics
using the fruit fly. His study of the evolution of races led to the
discovery of genetic diversity within species, and confirmed his
belief that genetic variation leads to better adaptability.
dominance (genetic): An
allele (A) is dominant if
the phenotype of the
heterozygote (Aa) is the same as the
homozygote (AA). The
allele (a) does not influence the heterozygote's phenotype and is
called recessive. An
allele may be partly, rather than fully, dominant; in that case, the
heterozygous phenotype is
nearer to, rather than identical with, the homozygote of the
dominant allele.
drift: Synonym of
genetic drift.
duplication: The occurrence of a
second copy of a particular sequence of DNA. The duplicate sequence
may appear next to the original or be copied elsewhere into the
genome. When the duplicated
sequence is a gene, the event
is called gene duplication.
echinoderm: Echinoderms, whose name
means "spiny skin," are a group of marine invertebrates that
includes starfish, brittlestars, basket stars, sea cucumbers, sand
dollars, sea urchins, and others. They live in environments from
shallow coastal waters to deep-sea trenches, from the tropics to the
poles.
ecological genetics: The
study of evolution in action in nature, by a combination of field
work and laboratory genetics.
ecological species concept:
A concept of species, according to which a species is a set of
organisms adapted to a particular, discrete set of resources (or "niche")
in the environment. Compare with
biological
species concept,
cladistic
species concept,
phenetic
species concept, and
recognition
species concept.
ecosystem: A community of organisms
interacting with a particular environment.
Eldredge, Niles: A
paleontologist and evolutionary biologist with the American Museum
of Natural History, Eldredge, together with
Stephen Jay Gould,
proposed the theory of punctuated equilibria, providing
paleontologists with an explanation for the patterns which they find
in the fossil record. He has written several books for a general
audience, including Time Frames: The Evolution of Punctuated
Equilibria and Life in the Balance: Humanity and the
Biodiversity Crisis.
electrophoresis: The method of
distinguishing entities according to their motility in an electric
field. In evolutionary biology, it has been mainly used to
distinguish different forms of proteins. The electrophoretic
motility of a molecule is influenced by its size and electric
charge.
embryo: An early stage of animal
development that begins after division of the zygote (the earliest
stage, in which joined egg and sperm have not yet divided).
embryonic: Related to an
embryo, or being in the
state of an embryo.
emigration: The movement of
organisms out of an area.
Emlen, Stephen: A world authority
on the social behavior of animals, particularly birds. Emlen's
interests center on evolutionary or adaptive aspects of animal
behavior. The goal of his research is to better understand the
social interactions that occur between individuals, especially
cooperation and conflict.
empirical: Determined by
experimentation.
Endler, John: A zoologist and
professor with interests in evolution and how it affects geographic
variation. His current research focuses on guppies (Poecilia
reticulata) in their natural habitat, and how visual signs and
vision dictate their behavior.
enzyme: A protein that acts as a
catalyst for chemical reactions.
Eocene: The second oldest of the five
major epochs of the Tertiary period, from 54 to 38 mya. It is often
known for the rise of mammals.
epistasis: An interaction between the
genes at two or more
loci, such that the
phenotype differs from at
would be expected if the loci were expressed independently.
Erwin, Douglas: Dr. Erwin is a
paleobiologist with the National Museum of Natural History in the
Smithsonian Institution. His research is concerned with aspects of
major evolutionary novelties, particularly the Metazoan
radiation and
post-mass extinction recoveries. Recent work has involved the
developmental events associated with the Cambrian along with their
environmental context. He also works on the rate, causes and
consequences of the end-Permian mass
extinction.
eugenics: The science or practice of
altering a population, especially of humans, by controlled breeding
for desirable inherited characteristics. The term was coined in 1883
by Francis Galton, who was an advocate of "improving" the human race
by modifying the fertility of different categories of people.
Eugenics fell into disfavour after the perversion of its doctrines
by the Nazis.
eukaryote: Any organism made up of
eukaryotic cells.
Eukaryotes are generally larger and have more DNA than
prokaryotes (whose cells
do not have a nucleus to contain their DNA). Almost all
multicellular organisms are eukaryotes.
eukaryotic cell: A cell with a
distinct nucleus.
evolution: Darwin defined this term
as "descent with modification." It is the change in a lineage of
populations between generations. In general terms, biological
evolution is the process of change by which new species develop from
preexisting species over time; in genetic terms, evolution can be
defined as any change in the frequency of alleles in populations of
organisms from generation to generation.
evolutionary
classification: Method of classification using both
cladistic and
phenetic
classificatory principles. To be exact, it permits
paraphyletic
groups (which are allowed in phenetic but not in cladistic
classification) and
monophyletic groups (which are allowed in both cladistic and
phenetic classification) but excludes
polyphyletic
groups (which are banned from cladistic classification but permitted
in phenetic classification).
Ewald, Paul: Professor of biology at
Amherst College, specializing in hummingbird and flower coevolution
and the evolution of infectious diseases. His research on disease
focuses on the evolutionary effects of various public health
interventions.
exon: The
nucleotide sequences of
some genes consist of parts that code for
amino acids, with other
parts that do not code for amino acids interspersed among them. The
coding parts, which are translated, are called exons; the
interspersed non-coding parts are called
introns.
extinction: The disappearance of a
species or a population.
fact: A natural phenomenon repeatedly
confirmed by observation.
family: The category of taxonomic
classification between order and genus (see
taxon). Organisms within a
family share a close similarity; for example, the cat family,
Felidae, which includes lions and domestic cats.
fauna: Animal life; often used to
distinguish from plant life ("flora").
fermentation: A series of
reactions occurring under anaerobic conditions (lacking oxygen) in
certain microorganisms (particularly yeasts) in which organic
compounds such as glucose are converted into simpler substances with
the release of energy. Fermentation is involved in bread making
where the carbon dioxide produced by the yeast causes dough to rise.
fetus: The
embryo of a mammal that has
reached a stage of development in the uterus in which most of the
adult features are recognizable. Specifically in humans it refers to
the stage of development after the appearance of bone cells, a
process occurring 7 to 8 weeks after fertilization.
fitness: The success of an individual
(or allele or
genotype in a population)
in surviving and reproducing, measured by that individual's (or
allele's or genotype's) genetic contribution to the next generation
and subsequent generations.
FitzRoy, Robert: Captain of the
Beagle, which took Charles Darwin on his famous voyage to
South America and around the world. FitzRoy's chief mission on the
Beagle was to chart the coast of South America. He also
established the first weather warning system while on his journeys,
with the help of the telegraph, and later rose to the rank of
Admiral in the British Navy. He was known as a young man for his
moody temperament, and in his older age for questionable sanity,
FitzRoy's life ended in suicide.
fixation: A gene has achieved fixation
when its frequency has reached 100 percent in the population.
fixed: (1) In
population genetics,
a gene is "fixed" when it has a frequency of 100 percent. (2) In
creationism, species
are described as "fixed" in the sense that they are believed not to
change their form, or appearance, through time.
Flammer, Larry: A retired high
school biology teacher and co-founder of the Santa Clara County
Biotechnology-Education Partnership, which provides teacher training
and lab equipment for local schools. He is a current member and Web
writer for the Evolution and Nature of Science Institute (ENSI).
flora: Plant life; often used to
distinguish from animal life ("fauna").
foraminifera: These invertebrates
are very common in the global ocean, and their distinctive,
chambered shells are common in the fossil record as far back as 550
million years. Although very few today exceed 9 mm in diameter,
fossils have been found that measure 15 cm across.
fossil: Most commonly, an organism, a
physical part of an organism, or an imprint of an organism that has
been preserved from ancient times in rock, amber, or by some other
means. New techniques have also revealed the existence of cellular
and molecular fossils.
founder effect: The loss of
genetic variation when a new colony is formed by a very small number
of individuals from a larger population.
frequency-dependent
selection: Selection in which the
fitness of a
genotype (or
phenotype) depends on its
frequency in the population.
fungi: A group of organisms comprising
the kingdom Fungi, which includes molds and mushrooms. They can
exist either as single cells or make up a multicellular body called
a mycelium. Fungi lack chlorophyll and secrete digestive enzymes
that decompose other biological tissues.
Galton, Francis: A cousin of
Charles Darwin, Galton was a British explorer and anthropologist. He
was known for his studies of human intelligence and later for his
work in eugenics (a term he coined), the "science" of improving
human hereditary characteristics. Known for his efforts at various
sorts of measurement (he developed fingerprinting and was a pioneer
in statistics), he was knighted in 1909.
gamete:
Haploid reproductive cells
that combine at fertilization to form the
zygote, called sperm (or
pollen) in males and eggs in females.
gastropod: Meaning "stomach foot,"
this name refers to the class of
mollusks that contains the
most species. Gastropods include snails and slugs that are marine,
freshwater, and terrestrial.
Gehring, Walter J.: Dr.
Gehring and his research group discovered the
homeobox, a DNA
segment characteristic for homeotic genes which is not only present
in arthropods and their ancestors, but also in vertebrates up to
humans. Their work on the "master control gene" for eye development
sheds light on how the mechanism for building eyes may have evolved
long ago in the ancestor of what are now very different types of
organisms.
gene: A sequence of nucleotides coding for
a protein (or, in some cases, part of a protein); a unit of
heredity.
genetic: Related to genes. A gene is a
sequence of nucleotides coding for a protein (or, in some cases,
part of a protein); a unit of heredity.
genetics: The study of genes and their
relationship to characteristics of organisms.
genetic code: The code relating
nucleotide triplets in the
mRNA (or DNA) to amino acids in the proteins.
genetic distance: See
distance.
genetic drift: Changes in the
frequencies of alleles in a
population that occur by chance, rather than because of
natural selection.
genetic engineering:
Removing genes from the DNA of one species and splicing them into
the DNA of another species using the techniques of molecular
biology.
genetic load: A reduction in the
average fitness of the members of a population because of the
deleterious genes, or gene combinations, in the population. It has
many particular forms, such as "mutational load," "segregational
load," and "recombinational load."
genetic locus: See
locus.
gene duplication: See
duplication.
gene family: A set of related genes
occupying various loci in the
DNA, almost certainly formed by
duplication of an
ancestral gene and having a recognizably similar sequence. Members
of a gene family may be functionally very similar or differ widely.
The globin gene family is an example.
gene flow: The movement of genes into
or through a population by interbreeding or by migration and
interbreeding.
gene frequency: The frequency in
the population of a particular gene relative to other genes at its
locus. Expressed as a
proportion (between 0 and 1) or percentage (between 0 and 100
percent).
gene pool: All the genes in a
population at a particular time.
genome: The full set of
DNA in a cell or organism.
genomics: The study that characterizes
genes and the traits they
encode.
genotype: The set of two genes
possessed by an individual at a given
locus. More generally, the
genetic profile of an individual.
genus (plural genera): The
second-to-lowest category in taxonomic classification. The phrase
"species name" generally refers to the genus and species together,
as in the Latin name for humans, Homo sapiens. See taxon.
geographic isolation: See
reproductive
isolation.
geographic speciation:
See allopatric
speciation.
geologic time: The time scale
used to describe events in the history of Earth.
germination: The initial stages in
the growth of a seed to form a seedling. The embryonic shoot (plumule)
and embryonic root (radicle) emerge and grow upward and downward,
respectively. Food reserves for germination come from tissue within
the seed and/or from the seed leaves (cotyledons).
germ plasm: The reproductive cells
in an organism, or the cells that produce the
gametes. All cells in an
organism can be divided into the soma (the cells that ultimately
die) and the germ cells (the cells that are perpetuated by
reproduction).
gestation: The period in animals
bearing live young (especially mammals) from the fertilization of
the egg and its implantation into the wall of the uterus until the
birth of the young (parturition), during which the young develops in
the uterus. In humans gestation is known as pregnancy and takes
about nine months (40 weeks).
Gingerich, Philip: Gingerich
is interested in evolutionary change documented in the fossil record
and how this relates to the kinds of changes observable in the field
or laboratory on the scale of a few generations. His ongoing
fieldwork in Wyoming, Egypt, and Pakistan is concerned with the
origin of modern orders of mammals, especially primates and whales.
glaciation: The formation of large
sheets of ice across land. Glaciation of the continents marks the
beginning of ice ages, when the makeup of Earth and organisms on it
changes dramatically.
Goldfarb, Alex: A Russian-born
microbiologist now at the Public Health Research Institute in New
York City, Dr. Goldfarb is piloting a program in the Russian prison
system to combat the further evolution of drug-resistant strains of
tuberculosis, which have infected at least 30,000 inmates.
Gould, Stephen Jay: A
professor of geology and zoology at Harvard University since 1967. A
paleontologist and an evolutionary biologist, he teaches geology and
the history of science, as well. With others, he has advanced the
concept that major evolutionary changes can occur in sudden bursts
rather than through the slow, gradual process proposed by the
traditional view of evolution. In addition to his scholarly works,
Gould has published numerous popular books on paleoanthropology,
Darwinian theory, and evolutionary biology.
Grant, Peter and Rosemary:
Biologists whose long-term research focuses on finches in the
Galapagos Islands, and the evolutionary impact of climatic and
environmental changes on their populations. They live part of the
year in the Islands, and have received honors for their work since
they began in 1973.
graptolite: A small, colonial, often
planktonic marine animal
that was very abundant in the oceans 300 to 500 million years ago;
now extinct.
Greene, Mott: A historian of
science who has written extensively about the development of
geological thought during the 19th and early 20th centuries,
including the development of the theory of continental drift.
greenhouse gases: Gases that
absorb and reradiate infrared radiation. When present in the
atmosphere, these gases contribute to the greenhouse effect,
trapping heat near the surface of the planet. On Earth, the main
greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide, water vapor, methane, nitrous
oxide, ozone, and some halocarbon compounds.
group selection: The selection
operating between groups of individuals rather than between
individuals. It would produce attributes beneficial to a group in
competition with other groups rather than attributes beneficial to
individuals.
Haeckel, Ernst: A German
biologist who lived from 1834-1919, Haeckel was the first to divide
animals into protozoan (unicellular) and metazoan (multicellular)
forms. His notion of
recapitulation is no longer accepted.
Haile Selassie, Yohannes:
A paleoanthropologist who, while doing field work in Ethiopia for
his doctoral dissertation at the University of California, Berkeley,
discovered Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba, a bipedal hominid
dated at 5.2 million years old.
half-life: The amount of time it
takes for one-half of the atoms of a radioactive material to decay
to a stable form. For example, the half-life of carbon-14 is 5,568
years.
Hamilton, W.D.: A naturalist,
explorer, and zoologist who worked in the world of mathematical
models, including "Hamilton's Rule," about the spread through a
population of a gene for altruistic self sacrifice. He was also
interested in the evolutionary impact of
parasites as the key to
many outstanding problems left by Darwin, including the baffling
riddle of the evolution of sex. This led him to extensive work in
computer simulations.
haploid: The condition of having only
one set of genes or chromosomes. In normally diploid organisms such
as humans, only the gametes are haploid.
haplotype: A set of genes at more
than one locus inherited by
an individual from one of its parents. It is the multi-locus analog
of an allele.
Hardy-Weinberg principle:
In population genetics, the idea that if a population experienced no
selection, no mutation, no
migration, no genetic
drift, and random mating, then the frequency of each
allele and the frequencies
of genotype in the
population would remain the same from one generation to the next.
Hardy-Weinberg ratio: The
ratio of genotype frequencies that evolve when mating is random and
neither selection nor drift are operating. For two alleles (A and a)
with frequencies p and q, there are three genotypes: AA, Aa, and aa.
The Hardy-Weinberg ratio for the three is: p2AA : 2pqAa :
q2aa. It is the starting point for much of the theory of
population genetics.
Harvey, Ralph: A geologist whose
work includes the study of geological processes at a range of
scales, from the smallest nanometer to broader-scale interpretations
of the history experienced by geological materials.
heavy metals: Metals with a high
relative atomic mass, such as lead, copper, zinc and mercury. Many
of them are toxic.
hemoglobin: A protein that carries
oxygen from the lungs throughout the body.
heredity: The process by which
characteristics are passed from one generation to the next.
heritability: Broadly, the
proportion of variation (more strictly, variance) in a phenotypic
character in a population that is due to individual differences in
genotypes. Narrowly, it is
defined as the proportion of variation (more strictly, variance) in
a phenotypic
character in a population that is due to individual genetic
differences that will be inherited in the offspring.
heritable: Partly or wholly
determined by genes; capable of being passed from an individual to
its offspring.
Herrnstein, Richard J.: A
professor of psychology and an author of notable books on
intelligence and crime. He has primarily done research on human and
animal motivational and learning processes. His books include
Psychology and I. Q. in the Meritocracy, and he coauthored (with
Charles Murray) The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure
in American Life (1994).
heterogametic: The sex with two
different sex chromosomes
(males in mammals, because they are XY). Compare with
homogametic.
heterozygosity: (for most
purposes) The proportion of individuals in a population that are
heterozygotes.
heterozygote: An individual having
two different alleles at a
genetic locus. Compare with
homozygote.
heterozygote advantage:
A condition in which the
fitness of a
heterozygote is higher than the fitness of either
homozygote.
heterozygous: Having two different
alleles for a particular trait. See also
heterozygote.
Hill, Andrew: A paleontologist and
professor at Yale University. His work with Mary Leakey's team at
Laeotoli, Tanzania, in the 1970s helped lead to the discovery of the
fossilized footprints of early
hominids and other mammals. His current research interests
include hominid evolution, paleoecology and taphonomy.
HIV: Human Immunodeficiency Virus. The
virus causes AIDS by inactivating the T cells of the immune system.
homeobox: Homeoboxes are relatively
short, very similar or identical sequences of
DNA, characteristic of homeotic
genes (which play a central role in controlling body development)
and shared by almost all
eukaryotic species. Homeoboxes encode a
protein "homeodomain", a
protein domain that binds to DNA. The DNA-binding homeodomain
consists of approximately 60
amino acids, and these homeodomain motifs are involved in
orchestrating the development of a wide range of organisms.
homeobox genes: A set of
genes that are important in
developmental patterns. These establish segments in an
embryo that may become
specific organs or tissue types. In general, "homeotic" genes are
genes that control the development of organisms, and "homeogenes" or
"homeobox genes" are the subset of homeotic genes that contain "homeoboxes".
"Hox" genes are a subset of homeogenes that determine positional
cell differentiation and development.
Mutations in Hox genes
result in the conversion of one body part into another: for example,
in the fruit fly Drosophila, a specific Hox mutation results
in a leg developing where an antenna would normally be.
homeostasis (developmental): A
self-regulating process in development, such that the organism grows
up to have much the same form independent of the external influences
it experiences while growing up.
homeotic mutation: A
mutation causing one
structure of an organism to grow in the place appropriate to
another. For example, in the mutation called "antennapedia" in the
fruit fly, a foot grows in the antennal socket.
hominids: Members of the family
Hominidae, which includes only modern humans and their ancestors
since the human lineage split from the apes.
homogametic: The sex with two of
the same kind of chromosomes
(females in mammals, because they are XX). Compare with
heterogametic.
homologous structures:
The structures shared by a set of related species because they have
been inherited, with or without modification, from their common
ancestor. For example, the bones that support a bat's wing are
similar to those of a human arm.
homology: A
character shared by a set
of species and present in their common ancestor. Compare with
analogy. (Some molecular biologists, when comparing two sequences,
call the corresponding sites "homologous" if they have the same
nucleotide, regardless of whether the similarity is evolutionarily
shared from a common ancestor or convergent. They likewise talk
about percent homology between the two sequences. Homology in this
context simply means similarity. This usage is frowned upon by many
evolutionary biologists, but is established in much of the molecular
literature.)
homozygote: An individual having two
copies of the same allele at
a genetic locus. Also
sometimes applied to larger genetic entities, such as a whole
chromosome; a homozygote is then an individual having two copies of
the same chromosome.
homozygous: Having identical
alleles for a particular
trait. See also homozygote.
Homo erectus: A species of
hominid that lived between
1.8 mya and 300,000 years ago; the first Homo species to
migrate beyond Africa.
Homo habilis: A species of
hominid that lived between
1.9 and 1.8 mya, the first species in genus Homo, and the
first hominid associated with clear evidence of tool manufacture and
use.
Homo neanderthalensis:
A species of hominid that
lived between 150,000 and 30,000 years ago in Europe and Western
Asia, originally thought to be a geographic variant of Homo
sapiens but now generally accepted to be a distinct species.
Homo sapiens: Modern
humans, which evolved to their present form about 100,000 years ago.
horsetail: A seedless plant related
to ferns. Twenty-five species
of only one genus,
Equisteum, remain today, whereas many different species, some
the size of modern trees, were abundant in ancient swamps. Along
with lycophytes and
ferns, horsetails were among the first
terrestrial plants to
appear.
Ho, David: A physician and world-renowed
AIDS researcher. Dr. Ho overturned an earlier conventional
assumption that the HIV virus remains dormant for up to 10 years in
a person before its outbreak into AIDS. His recognition that the
virus is active right from the beginning of infection led him to
initiate the deployment of a combination of drugs to overpower the
virus.
Huxley, Thomas Henry:
British intellect, photographer, and contemporary of Darwin. He was
the first to apply the theory of natural selection to humanity to
explain the course of human evolution.
hybrid: The offspring of a cross between
two species.
hypothesis: An explanation of one or
more phenomena in nature that can be tested by observations,
experiments, or both. In order to be considered scientific, a
hypothesis must be falsifiable, which means that it can be proven to
be incorrect.
idealism: The philosophical theory
that there are fundamental non-material "ideas," "plans," or "forms"
underlying the phenomena we observe in nature. It has been
historically influential in classification.
immigration: The movement of
organisms into an area.
immutability: The ability to
withstand change.
induction: The process of deriving
general principles from particular facts.
inference: A conclusion drawn from
evidence.
inheritance of
acquired characters: Historically influential but factually
erroneous theory that an individual inherits characters that its
parents acquired
during their lifetimes.
insectivorous: Feeding largely or
exclusively on insects.
intelligent design: The
non-scientific argument that complex biological structures have been
designed by an unidentified supernatural or extraterrestrial
intelligence.
intron: The
nucleotide sequences of
some genes consist of parts that code for amino acids, and other
parts that do not code for amino acids interspersed among them. The
interspersed non-coding parts, which are not translated, are called
introns; the coding parts are called
exons.
inversion: An event (or the product
of the event) in which a sequence of
nucleotides in the
DNA is reversed, or inverted.
Sometimes inversions are visible in the structure of the
chromosomes.
IQ: An abbreviation of "intelligence
quotient," usually defined as the mental age of an individual (as
measured by standardized tests) divided by his or her real age and
multiplied by 100. This formulation establishes the average IQ as
100. The usefulness and reliability of IQ as a measure of
intelligence has been questioned, in part because of the difficulty
of devising standardized tests that are free of cultural biases.
isolating mechanism: Any
mechanism, such as a difference between species in courtship
behavior or breeding season, that results in
reproductive
isolation between the species.
isolation: Synonym for
reproductive
isolation.
isotope: An atom that shares the same
atomic number and position as other atoms in an element but has a
different number of neutrons and thus a different atomic mass.
Jablonski, David:
Paleontologist and
professor in the Department of the Geophysical Sciences of the
University of Chicago. His research emphasizes combining data from
living and fossil organisms
to study the origins and fates of
lineages and
adaptations, to develop
an understanding of the underlying dynamics of
speciation and
extinction that could
lead to a general theory of evolutionary novelty. He is interested
in the way evolutionary patterns are shaped by the alternation of
extinction regimes, with rare but influential mass extinctions
driving unexpected evoutionary shifts.
Johanson, Don: A paleontologist
and founder of the Institute for Human Origins. Johanson discovered
Lucy (at
that time the oldest, most complete
hominid skeleton known) in
1974, and the following year unearthed the fossilized remains of 13
early hominids in Ethiopia. He is the author of several popular
books on human origins.
Johnson, Jerry: Johnson's
research interests focus on the interactions and evolutionary
relationships of amphibian and reptilian species of tropical
American and Mexican desert ecosystems. Johnson specializes in field
research in places such as Yucatan, Jalisco, Zacatecas, and Chiapas,
Mexico. He has done research on the biochemical analysis of
rattlesnake venom using immunological techniques, snake ecology, and
lizard ecology.
Johnston, Victor: Professor of
biopsychology at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. His
research interests include the evolution of consciousness and
perceptions of beauty. He is the author of Why We Feel: the
Science of Human Emotions.
Kegl, Judy: A linguist who works on
theoretical linguistics as it applies to signed and spoken
languages. Among her research interests is a study of Nicaraguan
Sign Language.
Kimbel, Bill: An anatomist, Kimbel
worked with Don Johanson and assembled Lucy's skull fragments. In
1991, Kimbel and Yoel Rak found a 70 percent complete skeleton of
Australopithecus afarensis.
kingdom: The second highest level of
taxonomic classification of organisms (below domains).
Classification schemes at the kingdom level have changed over time.
Recent molecular data have generally reinforced the evolutionary
significance of the kingdoms Animalia, Plantae, and Fungi. The
single-celled eukaryotes once lumped into the kingdom Protista are
now known to be very diverse, and not closely related to one
another. The prokaryotic organisms once lumped into the kingdom
Monera are now considered to belong to separate domains: Eubacteria
and Archaea. see taxon.
Kirchweger, Gina: An Austrian
biologist interested in the biological evolution of skin tone. Her
essay, "The Biology of Skin Color," concerns the evolution of race.
Kluger, Matthew: A researcher
whose work on lizards demonstrated that fever is beneficial and can
improve the immune response to infection. The implication for humans
is still being researched, but evidence indicates that mild fevers
can have a number of important immunological functions that allow us
to better fight bacterial and viral infections.
Knowlton, Nancy: Dr. Knowlton is
Professor of Marine Biology at the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, University of California San Diego, and Staff
Scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama.
Her primary research interests concern various facets of marine
biodiversity. These
include the nature of species
boundaries in corals,
elucidating biogeographic
patterns in tropical seas, the ecology of coral-algal
symbiosis, and threshold
effects in coral reef ecosystems.
Kondrashov, Alexey: A
population geneticist specializing in mathematical analysis who has
studied the evolutionary role of slightly deleterious
mutations. He has
theorized that a primitive organism's strategy for protecting itself
against damaging mutations may have been the first step in the
evolution of sexual reproduction.
Kreiswirth, Barry: Director of
the Public Health Research Institute TB Center in New York, Dr
Kreiswirth uses DNA fingerprinting to study the evolution of
antibiotic
resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the
pathogen that causes
TB.
Lamarckian inheritance:
Historically misleading synonym for
inheritance of acquired characteristics.
Lamarck, Jean: An 18th-century
naturalist, zoologist, and botanist noted for his study and
classification of invertebrates, as well as his evolutionary
theories. He traveled extensively throughout Europe and was elected
to the Academy of Sciences, where he introduced the principles of
heredity and acquired
characteristics.
land bridge: A connection between
two land masses, especially continents (e.g., the Bering land bridge
linking Alaska and Siberia across the Bering Strait) that allows
migration of plants and animals from one land mass to the other.
Before the widespread acceptance of
continental drift,
the existence of former land bridges was often invoked to explain
faunal and
floral similarities between
continents now widely separated. On a smaller scale, the term may be
applied to land connections that have now been removed by recent
tectonics or sea-level changes (e.g., between northern France and
southeastern England).
larva (and larval stage): The
prereproductive stage of many animals. The term is particularly apt
when the immature stage has a different form from the adult. For
example, a caterpillar is the larval stage of a butterfly or moth.
law: A description of how a natural
phenomenon will occur under certain circumstances.
Leakey, Maeve: A
paleoanthropologist at the National Museums of Kenya, Maeve is the
discoverer of Kenyanthropus platyops and Australopithecus
anamensis. She is married to Richard Leakey.
Leakey, Mary: A British
paleoanthropologist described as "a real fossil hunter" and "the
real scientist in the family." Her discoveries, some in
collaboration with her husband Louis Leakey, included the
1.75-million-year-old skull which first showed the antiquity of
hominids in Africa, jaws
and teeth of an early Homo species, and fossilized footprints
of bipedal hominids.
Leakey, Richard: The son of
renowned anthropologists Louis and
Mary Leakey, Richard
continued their work on early
hominids from 1964 until the 1980s, making a number of
significant fossil finds in the Lake Turkana area and serving as
Director of the National Museum of Kenya. Later he devoted his
energies to conservation and politics.
Lee, Melanie: A molecular
geneticist and microbial biologist, who in the 1980s collaborated
with Paul Nurse on novel research that demonstrated the commonality
of the genetic code between yeasts and humans. Dr Lee later took her
molecular skills into the pharmaceutical industry, and was a leader
in moving pharmacology away from animal models and towards the use
of recombinant DNA technology for screening potential new therapies.
She now heads the research division of Celltech, an international
biopharmaceutical company, where her team works on drug discovery
and development of new therapies, mainly for the treatment of
inflammatory and immune diseases.
lek: An area of ground divided into
territories that are defended by males for the purpose of displaying
to potential mates during the breeding season. This form of mating
behaviour is known as lekking, and occurs in various bird species
(for example the peacock) and also in some mammals. The dominant
males occupy the territories at the centre of the lek, where they
are most likely to attract and mate with visiting females. The outer
territories are occupied by subordinate males, who have less mating
success. Over successive breeding seasons, younger subordinate males
tend to gradually displace older individuals from the most desirable
territories and become dominant themselves. The lek territories do
not contain resources of value to the female, such as food or
nesting materials, although males of some species may build
structures such as bowers that form part of their display.
lemur: A small, tree-dwelling primate
that belongs to the group called
prosimians.
lethal recessive: The case in
which inheriting two recessive
alleles of a gene causes
the death of the organism.
Levine, Michael: Professor of
Genetics and Development in the Molecular and Cell Biology
Department at University of California, Berkeley. Discoverer (with
Bill McGinnis) of
homeobox sequences in
the homeotic genes Antennapedia and Ultrabithorax
while a postdoctoral researcher with
Walter Gehring at
the University of Basel, Switzerland. His current research involves
analysis of gene regulation and patterning in the early
Drosophila embryo;
studies of embryonic development in the
tunicate, Ciona
intestinalis, focused on the specification of the
notochord and tail
muscles; and a critical test of classical models for the
evolutionary origins of the
chordate body plan.
lineage: An ancestor-descendant
sequence of (1) populations, (2) cells, or (3) genes.
linkage disequilibrium:
A condition in which the
haplotype frequencies in a population deviate from the values
they would have if the genes at each locus were combined at random.
(When no deviation exists, the population is said to be in linkage
equilibrium.)
linked: Of genes, present on the same
chromosome.
Linnaean classification:
A hierarchical method of naming classificatory groups, invented by
the eighteenth century Swedish naturalist Carl von Linné, or
Linnaeus. Each individual is assigned to a species, genus, family,
order, class, phylum, and kingdom, and some intermediate
classificatory levels. Species are referred to by a Linnaean
binomial of its genus and species, such as Magnolia grandjflora.
Lively, Curtis: A professor of
biology who studies population biology and the ecology and evolution
of host-parasite
interactions. His laboratory is involved in detailed studies of the
interaction between a parasitic trematode and a freshwater New
Zealand snail in which both sexual and
asexual
females coexist.
locus: The location in the
DNA occupied by a particular
gene.
Lovejoy, Owen: A
paleoanthropologist
and consulting forensic anatomist, Lovejoy is known for his analysis
of early hominid fossils. His research includes work on Lucy (Australopithecus
afarensis).
lycophyte: Commonly known as club
mosses, lycophytes were among the first seedless plants to appear on
Earth. Along with horsetails and ferns, these made the planet more
hospitable for the first animals.
Lyell's notion of
gradual change: Also called uniformitarianism, Lyell's
notion was that Earth has been shaped by the same forces and
processes that operate today, acting continuously over very long
periods of time. For example, the ongoing erosion caused by flowing
water in a river could, given enough time, carve out the Grand
Canyon.
Lyell, Charles: A 19th-century
scientist considered a father of modern geology. Lyell proposed that
the geology of Earth is shaped by gradual processes, such as erosion
and sedimentation. Lyell's ideas, expressed in his landmark work,
Principles of Geology, greatly influenced the young Charles
Darwin. Darwin and Lyell later became close friends. While Lyell
initially opposed the idea of evolution, he came to accept it after
Darwin published On the Origin of Species.
macroevolution: A vague term
generally used to refer to evolution on a grand scale, or over long
periods of time. There is no precise scientific definition for this
term, but it is often used to refer to the emergence or modification
of taxa at or above the genus level. The origin or adaptive
radiation of a higher taxon, such as vertebrates, could be called a
macroevolutionary event.
macromutation:
Mutation of large
phenotypic effect, one
that produces a phenotype well outside the range of variation
previously existing in the population.
malaria: A sometimes-fatal disease
transferred to humans by mosquitoes, infecting the bloodstream.
Malthus, Thomas: A British
economist and demographer best known for his treatise on population
growth, which states that people will always threaten to outrun the
food supply unless reproduction is closely monitored. His theory was
in opposition to the utopians of the 18th century.
mammals: The group (specifically, a
class) of animals, descended from a common ancestor, that share the
derived characters of hair or fur, mammary glands, and several
distinctive features of skeletal anatomy, including a particular
type of middle ear. Humans, cows, and dolphins are all mammals.
mammary glands: Only found in
mammals, these are specialized glands that can produce milk for
feeding young.
mandible: A part of the bony structure
of a jaw. In vertebrates, it is the lower jaw; in birds, the lower
bill; in arthropods, one of the paired appendages closest to the
mouth.
Margulis, Lynn: A biologist who
developed the serial endosymbiosis theory of origin of the
eukaryotic cell. Although
now accepted as a plausible theory, both she and her theory were
ridiculed by mainstream biologists for a number of years.
marsupial mammals: A group
(specifically, an order) of
mammals whose females give birth to young at a very early stage
of development. These newborns complete their development while
sucking in a pouch, which is a permanent feature on the female.
Examples include kangaroos and opossums.
mastodon: An extinct elephant-like
mammal.
Mayr, Ernst: Mayr's work has
contributed to the synthesis of Mendelian genetics and Darwinian
evolution, and to the development of the
biological
species concept. Mayr has been universally recognized and
acknowledged as one of the leading evolutionary biologists of the
20th century.
McGinnis, William: Professor
of Biology, University of California at San Diego. Discover (with
Mike Levine) of
homeoboxes, the
sequences of DNA that are characteristic of homeotic genes, which
play a central role in specifying body development. His current
research uses both genetics and biochemistry to examine such
questions as how molecular variations in the Hox genes that specify
the head-tail pattern of an organism can generate variety in animal
shapes during evolution, and what the molecular changes were that
allowed single celled animals to become multicellular.
meiosis: A special kind of cell
division that occurs during the reproduction of
diploid organisms to
produce the gametes. The
double set of genes and chromosomes of the normal diploid cells is
reduced during meiosis to a single
haploid set in the gametes.
Crossing-over and
therefore recombination
occur during a phase of meiosis.
meme: The word coined by
Richard Dawkins for
a unit of culture, such as an idea, skill, story, or custom, passed
from one person to another by imitation or teaching. Some theorists
argue that memes are the cultural equivalent of
genes, and reproduce, mutate,
are selected, and evolve in a similar way.
Mendelian inheritance:
The mode of inheritance of all
diploid species, and therefore of nearly all multicellular
organisms. Inheritance is controlled by
genes, which are passed on to
the offspring in the same form as they were inherited from the
previous generation. At each
locus an individual has two genes -- one inherited from its
father and the other from its mother. The two genes are represented
in equal proportions in its
gametes.
Mendel, Gregor: An Austrian monk
whose plant breeding experiments, begun in 1856, led to insights
into the mechanisms of heredity that are the foundation of genetics
today. His work was ignored in his lifetime and only rediscovered in
1900. See
Mendelian inheritance.
messenger RNA (mRNA): A kind of
RNA produced by
transcription from
the DNA and which acts as the message that is decoded to form
proteins.
metabolism: The chemical processes
that occur in a living organism in order to maintain life. There are
two kinds of metabolism: constructive metabolism, or anabolism, the
synthesis of the proteins, carbohydrates, and fats which form tissue
and store energy; and destructive metabolism, or catabolism, the
breakdown of complex substances, producing energy and waste matter.
metamorphosis: One or more
changes in form during the life cycle of an organism, such as an
amphibian or insect, in
which the juvenile stages differ from the adult. An example is the
transition from a tadpole to an adult frog. The term "complete
metamorphosis" is applied to insects such as butterflies in which
the caterpillar stage is distinct from the adult. "Incomplete
metamorphosis" describes the life histories of insects such as
locusts in which the young go through a series of larval stages,
each of which bears similarities to the adult. Metamorphosis in both
insects and amphibians is controlled by hormones, and often involves
considerable destruction of larval tissues by
enzymes.
metazoans: All animals that are
multicellular and whose cells
are organized into tissues and organs. In the simplest metazoans
only an inner and outer layer can be distinguished.
microbe: A nonscientific and very
general term, with no taxonomic significance, sometimes used to
refer to microscopic (not visible to the unaided eye) organisms. The
term often refers to bacteria or viruses that cause disease or
infection.
microevolution: Evolutionary
changes on the small scale, such as changes in gene frequencies
within a population.
Miller, Geoffrey: Author of
The Mating Mind, Miller is known for his research on
evolutionary psychology and sexual selection. He believes that our
minds evolved not only as survival machines, but also as courtship
machines -- at least in part, to help us attract a mate and pass on
genes.
Miller, Ken: A cell biologist and
professor of biology at Brown University. Miller's academic research
focuses on the structure and function of biological membranes. He is
the coauthor of widely used high school and college biology
textbooks, and he has also written Finding Darwin's God: A
Scientist's Search for Common Ground Between God and Evolution.
Miller, Veronica: A German
virologist whose research has focused on HIV-AIDS. Miller was the
first researcher to announce that an interruption in drug treatment
among AIDS patients may result in reversion of drug-resistant virus
to its wild type. This
led other researchers and clinicians to explore "structured
treatment interruptions" among some patients as an experimental
treatment option.
mimicry: A case in which one species
looks more or less similar to another species. See
Batesian mimicry
and Müllerian mimicry.
mitochondrial DNA:
DNA found in the
mitochondrion, a
small round body found in most cells. Because mitochondria are
generally carried in egg cells but not in sperm, mitochondrial DNA
is passed to offspring from mothers, but not fathers.
mitochondrion: A kind of
organelle in
eukaryotic cells.
Mitochondria produce enzymes
to convert food to energy. They contain DNA coding for some
mitochondrial proteins.
mitosis: Cell division. All cell
division in multicellular organisms occurs by mitosis except for the
special division called meiosis
that generates the gametes.
Müllerian mimicry: A kind of
mimicry in which two
poisonous species evolve to look like one another.
modern synthesis: The
synthesis of natural
selection and
Mendelian inheritance. Also called
neo-Darwinism.
molecular clock: The theory
that molecules evolve at an approximately constant rate. The
difference between the form of a molecule in two species is then
proportional to the time since the species diverged from a
common ancestor,
and molecules become of great value in the inference of
phylogeny.
molecular geneticists:
Scientists who study genes and
characters through work
with the molecules that make up and interact with
DNA.
mollusk: An invertebrate that has a
fleshy, muscular body. The phylum Mollusca includes snails,
bivalves, squids, and octopuses.
"monkey trial": In 1925, John
Scopes was convicted and fined $100 for teaching evolution in his
Dayton, Tenn., classroom in the first highly publicized trial
concerning the teaching of evolution. The press reported that
although they lost the case, Scopes's team had won the argument. The
verdict had a chilling effect on teaching evolution in the
classroom, however, and not until the 1960s did it reappear in
schoolbooks.
monogamy: A reproductive strategy in
which one male and one female mate and reproduce exclusively with
each other. Contrast with
polygyny and polyandry.
monophyletic group: A set of
species containing a common ancestor and all of its descendants, and
not containing any organisms that are not the descendants of that
common ancestor.
monotreme: Egg-laying mammals.
monotremes: A group (specifically,
an order) of mammals whose females lay eggs. The young hatch and
continue to develop in the mother's pouch, which is present only
when needed. Two species of spiny anteater and the duck-billed
platypus are the only living monotremes.
Moore, James: The author, with
Adrian Desmond, of an authoritative biography of Charles Darwin,
Moore has made a 20-year study of Darwin's life. With degrees in
science, divinity, and history, he has taught the history of science
at Harvard University and at the Open University in the U.K.
morphology: The study of the form,
shape, and structure of organisms.
Mueller, Ulrich G.: A
zoologist and professor whose research aims at understanding
microevolutionary forces and macroevolutionary patterns that govern
the evolution of organismal interactions, particularly the evolution
of mutualisms and the evolution of social conflict and cooperation.
Mueller's current research focuses on the coevolution between
fungus-growing ants and their fungi and the evolutionary ecology of
halictine bees.
Murray, Charles: An author and
policy analyst who has written many controversial and influential
books on social policy. He is coauthor with Richard J. Herrnstein of
The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life
(1994). He has also written Losing Ground: American Social
Policy 1950-1980 (1984), which argues for the abolishment of the
welfare system, The Underclass Revisited (1999), and
Income, Inequality and IQ (1998).
mutation: A change in genetic material
that results from an error in replication of
DNA. Mutations can be
beneficial, harmful, or neutral.
Nagel, Ronald: A hematologist and
professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. His research
includes molecular, biochemical, and physiological studies of
genetic red blood cell defects, including
sickle cell.
natural selection: The
differential survival and reproduction of classes of organisms that
differ from one another in on or more usually heritable
characteristics. Through this process, the forms of organisms in a
population that are best adapted to their local environment increase
in frequency relative to less well-adapted forms over a number of
generations. This difference in survival and reproduction is not due
to chance.
Neanderthal: A
hominid, similar to but
distinct from modern humans, that lived in Europe and Western Asia
about 150,000 to 30,000 years ago.
Nelson, Craig: A professor of
biology and environmental affairs at Indiana University in
Bloomington. His research focuses on evolutionary ecology.
neo-Darwinism: (1) Darwin's
theory of natural selection plus Mendelian inheritance. (2) The
larger body of evolutionary thought that was inspired by the
unification of natural selection and Mendelism. A synonym of the
modern synthesis.
nervous system: An organ system,
composed of a network of cells called neurons, that allows an animal
to monitor its internal and external environment, and to move
voluntarily or in response to stimulation.
neural: Related to nerves and neurons.
neutral drift: Synonym of
genetic drift.
neutral mutation: A
mutation with the same
fitness as the other
allele or alleles at its
locus.
neutral theory (and neutralism):
The theory that much evolution at the molecular level occurs by
genetic drift.
Newton, Isaac: An English
physician and mathematician, considered the culminating figure of
the scientific revolution of the 17th century. He is best known for
his explanation of gravity and for laying the foundation for modern
physical optics.
niche: The ecological role of a species;
the set of resources it consumes and habitats it occupies.
Nilsson, Dan-Erik: Professor
Nilsson heads the Functional Morphology Division of the Department
of Zoology at Lund University in Sweden. His main research interest
is the optics and evolution of invertebrate eyes.
Nilsson, Lennart: A Swedish
photographer who began as a photojournalist, Nilsson soon began
exploring new techniques such as the use of endoscopes and electron
microscopes to photograph the inner mysteries of the human body. He
published a book, A Child is Born of his photographs of the
beginning of life, and made a number of films, including the
mini-series Odyssey of Life a coproduction between WGBH/NOVA
and SVT Swedish Television.
nitrogen fixation: A chemical
process by which nitrogen in the atmosphere is assimilated into
organic compounds. Only certain
bacteria are able to fix
atmospheric nitrogen, which then becomes available to other
organisms through the food chains.
nomadic: Having to do with nomads,
people who live in no fixed place but move in search of food or
grazing land for their animals; of a wandering lifestyle.
notochord: A flexible skeletal rod
running the length of the body in the
embryos of the
chordates (including the
vertebrates). In some
simpler types, such as sea-squirts, only the free-swimming
larva has a notochord; in
others, such as the lancelets and lampreys, the notochord remains
the main axial support, and in vertebrates it is incorporated into
the backbone as the embryo develops.
Novacek, Michael J.:
Paleontologist with the American Museum of Natural History. Dr
Novacek's research interests include evolution of and relationships
among organisms, particularly
mammals. Author of Dinosaurs of the Flaming Cliffs, an
account of AMNH's Gobi Desert Expeditions.
nucleotide: A unit building block of
DNA and
RNA. A nucleotide consists of a
sugar and phosphate backbone with a
base attached.
nucleus: A region of
eukaryotic cells,
enclosed within a membrane, containing the
DNA.
numerical taxonomy: In
general, any method of
taxonomy using numerical measurements. In particular, it often
refers to
phenetic classification using large numbers of quantitatively
measured characters.
Nurse, Paul: A pioneer in genetic
and molecular studies who revealed the universal machinery for
regulating cell division in all
eukaryotic organisms,
from yeasts to frogs to human beings.
O'Brien, Stephen J.: A
geneticist at the National Cancer Institute whose research interests
include the evolutionary history of the immunological response in
mammals to retroviruses like HIV. With his colleagues, he discovered
a mutation that can protect individuals from infection by HIV, the
virus that causes AIDS.
order: The taxonomic classification level
between class and family. For example, within the class Mammalia,
there are several orders, including the meat-eaters, who make up the
order Carnivora; and the insect-eaters, grouped together in the
order Insectivora. The orders in turn are divided into families; the
order Carnivora includes the families Felidae (the cats), Canidae
(the dogs), and Ursidae (the bears), among others. See also
taxon.
organelle: Any of a number of
distinct small structures found in the cytoplasm (and therefore
outside the nucleus) of
eukaryotic cells (e.g.,
mitochondrion and
chloroplast).
organisms: Living things.
orthogenesis: The erroneous idea
that species tend to evolve in a fixed direction because of some
inherent force driving them to do so.
Owen, Richard: A 19th-century
British comparative anatomist, who coined the word "dinosaur" to
describe a breed of large, extinct reptiles. He was the first to
propose that dinosaurs were a separate taxonomic group. Owen opposed
Darwin's theory of evolution, but ultimately his work helped support
evolutionary arguments.
ozone layer: The region of the
atmosphere, generally 11-26 km (7-16 miles) above Earth, where ozone
forms in high concentrations. The ozone layer absorbs ultraviolet
radiation, shielding Earth from its damaging effects.
paleoanthropologist: A
scientist who uses fossil
evidence to study early human ancestors.
paleobiology: The biological study
of fossils.
paleontologist: A scientist who
studies fossils to better
understand life in prehistoric times.
paleontology: The scientific study
of fossils.
Pangaea: A supercontinent which began
to break apart into the modern continents about 260 million years
ago, causing the isolation (and separate evolution) of various
groups of organisms from each other.
panmixis: Random mating throughout a
population.
paradox: A seemingly absurd or
contradictory, though often true, statement.
parapatric speciation:
Speciation in which the new species forms from a population
contiguous with the ancestral species' geographic range.
paraphyletic group: A set of
species containing an ancestral species together with some, but not
all, of its descendants. The species included in the group are those
that have continued to resemble the ancestor; the excluded species
have evolved rapidly and no longer resemble their ancestor.
parasite: An organism that lives on or
in a plant or animal of a different species, taking nutrients
without providing any benefit to the host.
Parish, Amy: A biological
anthropologist and primatologist whose research focuses on the
social behavior of bonobos ("pygmy chimpanzees," or Pan paniscus).
In addition to comparative work with chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
and endocrinological investigations, Dr. Parish studies reciprocity
in chimpanzees, bonobos, and hunter-gatherers.
parsimony: The principle of
phylogenetic
reconstruction in which the phylogeny of a group of species is
inferred to be the branching pattern requiring the smallest number
of evolutionary changes.
parthenogenesis: Development
from an egg cell that has not been fertilized. The term for a
certain form of
asexual reproduction that is found in some lizards, insects
(notably among aphids), and certain other organisms.
particulate: (as property of theory
of inheritance) A synonym of
atomistic.
paternity: The identity of the father
of an offspring.
pathogen: A microorganism that causes
disease.
pathological: Related to or caused
by disease.
penicillin: The first antibiotic
discovered, penicillin is derived from the mold Penicillium
notatum. It is active against a wide variety of bacteria, acting
by disrupting synthesis of the bacterial cell wall.
peripatric speciation: A
synonym of
peripheral isolate speciation.
peripheral isolate
speciation: A form of
allopatric
speciation in which the new species is formed from a small
population isolated at the edge of the ancestral population's
geographic range. Also called
peripatric
speciation.
pesticide-resistant
insects: Insects with the ability to survive and reproduce
in the presence of pesticides. These resistant variants increase in
frequency over time if pesticides remain present in their
environment.
Petrie, Marion: A behavioural
ecologist at the University of Newcastle in the UK, Dr Petrie's
research interests include the links between
sexual selection
and speciation, and how
males and females assess genetic quality in a mate.
phenetic classification:
A method of classification in which species are grouped together
with other species that they most closely resemble
phenotypically.
phenetic species concept:
A concept of species according to which a species is a set of
organisms that are
phenotypically
similar to one another. Compare with
biological
species concept,
cladistic
species concept,
ecological
species concept, and
recognition
species concept.
phenotype: The physical or functional
characteristics of an organism, produced by the interaction of
genotype and environment
during growth and development.
phenotypic characters:
Individual traits that can be observed in an organism (including
appearance and behavior) and that result from the interaction
between the organism's genetic makeup and its environment.
pheromone: A chemical substance
produced by some organisms
and emitted into the environment to communicate with others of the
same species. Pheromones
play an important role in the social behavior of certain animals,
especially insects and some
mammals. They are used to mark out territories, to attract
mates, to lay trails, and to promote social cohesion and
coordination in colonies. Examples are the sex attractants secreted
by moths to attract mates and the queen substance produced by queen
honeybees, which controls the development and behavior of worker
bees. Pheromones are usually volatile organic molecules which are
effective at very low concentrations, as little as 1 part per
million.
photoreceptor cell: A cell,
functionally part of the nervous system, that reacts to the presence
of light. It usually contains a pigment that undergoes a chemical
change when light is absorbed. This chemical change stimulates
electrical changes in the photoreceptor that, when passed along and
processed by other neurons, form the basis of vision.
photosynthesis: The fundamental
biological process by which green plants make organic compounds such
as carbohydrates from atmospheric carbon dioxide and water using
light energy from the Sun. The process has two main phases: the
light-dependent light reaction responsible for the initial capture
of energy, and the light-independent dark reaction in which this
energy is stored in the chemical bonds of organic molecules. Since
virtually all other forms of life are directly or indirectly
dependent on green plants for food, photosynthesis is the basis for
almost all life on earth.
phylogeny: The study of ancestral
relations among species, often illustrated with a "tree of life"
branching diagram, which is also known as a phylogenetic tree.
phylum (plural phyla): One of the
highest levels of taxonomic classification. See
taxon.
phytoplankton: Microscopic
aquatic organisms that, like plants, use photosynthesis to capture
and harness solar energy.
Pickford, Martin: A
paleontologist at the College de France in Paris. In 2000, Pickford
and Brigitte Senut discovered Orrorin tugensis, a
proto-hominid dated at 6 million years old.
Pinker, Steven: A psychologist
and professor with a special interest in language, linguistic
behavior, and cognitive science. Pinker's publications include the
popular science books The Language Instinct and How the
Mind Works.
placental mammals: A group
(specifically, an order) of mammals in which the young develop
inside the mother, attached to her and nourished by a specialized
structure called the placenta. In placental mammals, the young are
born in an advanced stage of development. Compare with
marsupial and
monotreme.
placoderm: An extinct bottom-dwelling
fish that was among the first to develop jaws and paired fins.
plankton: Minute or microscopic
animals (zooplankton) and plants (phytoplankton) that float and
drift in water, usually near the surface. In the top meter or two of
water, both in the sea and in freshwater, small plants can
photosynthesize, and abundant microscopic life can be observed. Many
organisms that are sessile (attached to a surface) as adults
disperse by means of a planktonic
larval stage.
plan of nature: The
philosophical theory that nature is organized according to a plan.
It has been influential in classification, and is a kind of
idealism.
plasmid: A genetic element that exists
(or can exist) independently of the main DNA in the cell. In
bacteria, plasmids can exist as small loops of DNA and be passed
between cells independently.
plate tectonics: The theory
that the surface of the earth is made of a number of plates, which
have moved throughout geological time resulting in the present-day
positions of the continents. Plate tectonics explains the locations
of mountain building as well as earthquakes and volcanoes. The rigid
plates consist of continental and oceanic crust together with the
upper mantle, which "float" on the semi-molten layer of the mantle
beneath them, and move relative to each other across the earth. Six
major plates (Eurasian, American, African, Pacific, Indian, and
Antarctic) are recognized, together with a number of smaller ones.
The plate margins coincide with zones of seismic and volcanic
activity.
Poisson distribution: A
frequency distribution for number of events per unit time, when the
number of events is determined randomly and the probability of each
event is low.
polyandry: A reproductive system in
which one female mates with many males. Seahorses and jacanas are
examples of polyandrous species, which are less common than
monogamous or
polygynous species.
polygyny: Reproductive strategy in
which one male mates with several females. Lions, peacocks, and
gorillas all have polygynous mating systems. Compare with
polyandry and
monogamy.
polymorphism: A condition in which
a population possesses more than one
allele at a
locus. Sometimes it is
defined as the condition of having more than one allele with a
frequency of more than five percent in the population.
polyphyletic group: A set of
species descended from more than one
common ancestor.
The ultimate common ancestor of all species in the group is not a
member of the polyphyletic group.
polyploid: An individual containing
more than two sets of genes
and chromosomes.
population: A group of organisms,
usually a group of sexual organisms that interbreed and share a
gene pool.
population genetics: The
study of processes influencing gene frequencies.
postulate: A basic principle.
postzygotic isolation: A
form of
reproductive isolation in which a
zygote is successfully
formed but then either fails to develop or develops into a sterile
adult. Donkeys and horses are postzygotically isolated from one
another; a male donkey and a female horse can mate to produce a
mule, but the mule is sterile.
prezygotic isolation: A
form of
reproductive isolation in which the two species never reach the
stage of successful mating, and thus no
zygote is formed. Examples
would be species that have different breeding seasons or courtship
displays, and which therefore never recognize one another as
potential mates.
primate: A
mammal belonging to the
order Primates (about 195 species), which includes prosimians,
monkeys, apes, and humans. Primates probably evolved from
insectivorous
climbing creatures like tree shrews and have many adaptations for
climbing, including five fingers and five toes with opposable first
digits (except in the hind feet of humans). They have well-developed
hearing and sight, with forward-facing eyes allowing binocular
vision, and large brains. The young are usually produced singly and
undergo a long period of growth and development to the adult form.
Most primates are arboreal,
but the great apes and humans are largely terrestrial.
prokaryote: A cell without a
distinct nucleus. Bacteria and some other simple organisms are
prokaryotic. Compare with
eukaryote. In classificatory terms, the group of all prokaryotes
is paraphyletic.
prosimian: One of the group of
primates that includes
lemurs and lorises; the other two primate groups are tarsoids and
anthropoids.
protein: A molecule made up of a
sequence of amino acids.
Many of the important molecules in a living thing -- for example,
all enzymes -- are proteins.
protozoa: A group of unicellular,
usually microscopic, organisms now classified in various phyla of
the kingdom Protoctista.
They were formerly regarded either as a phylum of simple animals or
as members of the kingdom Protista. Most feed on decomposing dead
organic matter, but some are parasites, including the agents causing
malaria (Plasmodium) and sleeping sickness (Trypanosoma),
and a few contain chlorophyll and carry out
photosynthesis, like
plants.
pseudogene: A sequence of
nucleotides in the DNA that resembles a
gene but is nonfunctional for
some reason.
pupa (plural pupae): The third stage of
development in the life cycle of some insects, including flies,
butterflies (in which it is the chrysalis), ants, bees, and beetles.
During the pupal stage locomotion and feeding cease and
metamorphosis from
the larva to the adult form
takes place. The adult emerges by cutting or digesting the pupal
case after a few days or several months.
purine: A kind of
base in the DNA; adenine (A)
and guanine (G) are purines.
pyrimidine: A kind of
base. In DNA, cytosine (C) and
thymine (T) are pyrimidines. In RNA, cytosine (C) and uracil (U) are
pyrimidines.
quantitative character:
A character showing
continuous variation in a population.
radioactivity: The emission of
energy due to changes in the nucleus of an atom. Such spontaneously
released radiation is a characteristic of certain elements and at
some levels can be harmful.
radiometric dating: A dating
technique that uses the decay rate of radioactive
isotopes to estimate the
age of an object.
Rak, Yoel: An Israeli
paleoanthropologist and anatomist whose research interests include
facial morphology of
fossil hominids. Rak was
part of the team that found a 2.3-million-year-old skull fragment
from the genus Homo at Hadar, Ethiopia.
random drift: Synonym of
genetic drift.
random mating: A mating pattern
in which the probability of mating with another individual of a
particular genotype (or
phenotype) equals the
frequency of that genotype (or phenotype) in the population.
recanted: Withdrew a statement or
opinion; disavowed a former assertion.
recapitulation: A partly or
wholly erroneous hypothesis stating that an individual, during its
development, passes through a series of stages corresponding to its
successive evolutionary ancestors. According to the recapitulation
hypothesis, an individual thus develops by "climbing up its family
tree."
receptors:
Proteins that can bind to
other specific molecules. Usually on the surface of a cell,
receptors often bind to antibodies or hormones.
recessive: An
allele (A) is recessive if
the phenotype of the
heterozygote (Aa) is
the same as the homozygote
(aa) for the alternative allele (a) and different from the
homozygote for the recessive (AA). The allele (a) controls the
heterozygote's phenotype and is called
dominant. An allele may
be partly, rather than fully, recessive; in that case, the
heterozygous phenotype is nearer to, rather than identical with, the
homozygote for the dominant allele.
recognition species
concept: A concept of species according to which a species
is a set of organisms that recognize one another as potential mates;
they have a shared mate recognition system. Compare with
biological
species concept,
cladistic
species concept,
ecological
species concept, and
phenetic
species concept.
recombination: An event,
occurring by the
crossing-over of
chromosomes during meiosis,
in which DNA is exchanged between a pair of chromosomes of a pair.
Thus, two genes that were previously unlinked, being on different
chromosomes, can become linked
because of recombination, and linked genes may become unlinked.
reinforcement: An increase in
reproductive
isolation between incipient species by
natural selection.
Natural selection can directly favor only an increase in prezygotic
isolation; reinforcement therefore amounts to selection for
assortative mating
between the incipiently speciating forms.
relative dating: The process of
ordering fossils, rocks, and geologic events from oldest to
youngest. Because of the way sedimentary rocks form, lower layers in
most series are older than higher layers, making it possible to
determine which fossils found in those layers are oldest and which
are youngest. By itself, relative dating cannot assign any absolute
age to rocks or fossils.
reproductive
character displacement: The increased reproductive isolation
between two closely related species when they live in the same
geographic region (sympatry)
as compared with when they live in separate geographic regions. A
kind of
character displacement in which the character concerned
influences reproductive isolation, not ecological competition.
reproductive isolation:
Two populations or individuals of opposite sex are considered
reproductively isolated from one another if they cannot together
produce fertile offspring. See
prezygotic
isolation and
postzygotic isolation.
retina: The back wall of the eye onto
which images are projected. From the retina, the information is sent
to the brain via the optic nerve.
ribosomal RNA (rRNA): The kind of
RNA that constitutes the
ribosomes and provides the site for translation.
ribosome: The site of protein
synthesis (or translation)
in the cell, mainly consisting of
ribosomal RNA.
ring species: A situation in which
two reproductively isolated populations (see
reproductive
isolation) living in the same region are connected by a
geographic ring of populations that can interbreed.
RNA: Ribonucleic acid.
Messenger RNA,
ribosomal RNA, and
transfer RNA are its
three main forms. These act as the intermediaries by which the
hereditary code of DNA is converted into proteins. In some viruses,
RNA is itself the hereditary molecule.
Saag, Michael: Dr. Saag is
director of the AIDS Outpatient Clinic and Associate Professor of
Medicine at the University of Alabama, Birmingham. He is also
associate director for clinical care and therapeutics at the UAB
AIDS Center. Dr. Saag's research activities focus on both clinical
and basic aspects of the human immunodeficiency virus. He serves on
several state and national advisory panels, including the NIH/NIAID
AIDS Clinical Trials Group Executive Committee.
sagittal crest: A ridge of bone
projecting up from the top midline of the skull, running from front
to back. It serves as a muscle attachment area for the muscles that
extend up the side of the head from the jaw. The presence of a
sagittal crest indicates extremely strong jaw muscles.
Schneider, Chris: A biologist
and professor at Boston University whose research focuses on the
evolution of vertebrate diversity in tropical systems and the
scientific basis for conservation of tropical diversity. He uses a
variety of molecular genetic methods, such as DNA sequencing, to
study speciation, systematics, and biogeography of terrestrial
vertebrates, with an emphasis on reptiles and amphibians.
Schultz, Ted R.: An ant
systematist at the Smithsonian Institution, Dr. Schultz studies the
evolution of the symbiosis between fungus-growing ants and the fungi
they cultivate.
science: A way of knowing about the
natural world based on observations and experiments that can be
confirmed or disproved by other scientists using accepted scientific
techniques.
Scopes, John: The 24-year-old
teacher in the public high school in Dayton, Tenn., who was the
defendant in the "monkey trial" of 1925. He agreed to be the focus
of a test case attacking a newly passed Tennessee state law against
teaching evolution or any other theory denying the biblical account
of the creation of man, and was arrested and tried, with the
American Civil Liberties Union backing his defense.
Scott, Eugenie C.: A human
biologist specializing in medical anthropology and skeletal biology.
As executive director of the National Center for Science Education,
Scott is an advocate of church/state separation in schools, and
speaks widely about science, evolution, and natural selection.
Scott, Matthew P.: A professor
and researcher whose work in developmental biology explores how
homeotic genes
orchestrate differentiation and multicellular organization.
sedimentary rocks: Rocks
composed of sediments, usually with a layered appearance. The
sediments are composed of particles that come mostly from the
weathering of pre-existing rocks, but often include material of
organic origin; they are then transported and deposited by wind,
water, or glacial ice. Sedimentary rocks are deposited mainly under
water, usually in approximately horizontal layers (beds). Clastic
sedimentary rocks are formed from the erosion and deposition of
pre-existing rocks and are classified according to the size of the
particles. Organically formed sedimentary rocks are derived from the
remains of plants and animals, for example limestone and coal.
Chemically formed sedimentary rocks result from natural chemical
processes and include sedimentary iron ores. Many sedimentary rocks
contain fossils.
selection: Synonym of
natural selection.
selectionism: The theory that some
class of evolutionary events, such as molecular or
phenotypic changes, have
mainly been caused by
natural selection.
selective pressures:
Environmental forces such as scarcity of food or extreme
temperatures that result in the survival of only certain organisms
with characteristics that provide resistance.
Senut, Brigitte: An anatomist at
France's National Museum of Natural History. In 2000, Senut and
Martin Pickford discovered Orrorin tugensis, a proto-hominid
dated at 6 million years old.
separate creation: The theory
that species have separate origins and never change after their
origin. Most versions of the theory of separate creation are
religiously inspired and suggest that the origin of species occurs
by supernatural
action.
sexually dimorphic: When
males and females of a species have considerably different
appearances, which may include size, coloration, or other features,
such as special plumage.
sexual selection: A selection
on mating behavior, either through competition among members of one
sex (usually males) for access to members of the other sex or
through choice by members of one sex (usually females) of certain
members of the other sex. In sexual selection, individuals are
favored by their fitness relative to other members of the same sex,
whereas natural
selection works on the fitness of a
genotype relative to the
whole population.
sex chromosome: The
chromosome or
chromosomes that influence sex determination. In mammals, including
humans, the X and Y chromosomes are the sex chromosomes (females are
XX, males XY). Compare with
autosome.
Shubin, Neil: A paleontologist who
is known for his work on early
tetrapods (any creature with four limbs). He presented a
hypothesis of general patterns of the development of tetrapod limbs
which changed the way scientists think about this field. The study
of limbs is crucial to evolutionary science; one example of why this
is important is that human development would have been impossible
without limbs.
sickle cell anemia: A
disease in which poorly formed red blood cells cannot bind correctly
to oxygen, resulting in low iron, blood clotting, and joint pain.
Simpson, George Gaylord:
One of the most influential paleontologists of the 20th century and
a leading developer of the
modern synthesis.
He wrote hundreds of technical papers in addition to many widely
read popular books and textbooks, and was a leading expert on
Mesozoic, Paleocene, and South American mammals.
Small, Meredith: A professor of
anthropology. Her research interests include primate behavior and
ecology; mating strategies; reproduction; and the evolution of human
behavior. Small's publications include Female Choices: Sexual
Behaviour of Female Primates, What's Love Got to Do With It?,
and The Evolution of Human Mating.
Smith, John Maynard: An
eminent evolutionary biologist and author of many books on
evolution, both for scientists and the general public. A professor
emeritus at the University of Sussex, his research interests include
evolution of human
mitochondrial DNA sequences and investigation of evidence for
extensive recombination.
Smith, Tom: An ornithologist and
conservation biologist, Smith is executive director of the Center
for Tropical Research at San Francisco State University. His work
combines basic research in ecology and evolutionary science with
applied research in conservation biology. Among other issues, Smith
is interested in the role of ecological gradients in speciation and
maintaining species diversity.
social Darwinism: A doctrine
that applies the principles of selection to the structure of
society, asserting that social structure is determined by how well
people are suited to living conditions.
spacer region: A sequence of
nucleotides in the DNA between coding
genes.
speciation: Changes in related
organisms to the point where they are different enough to be
considered separate species. This occurs when populations of one
species are separated and adapt to their new environment or
conditions (physiological, geographic, or behavioral).
species: An important classificatory
category, which can be variously defined by the
biological
species concept,
cladistic
species concept,
ecological
species concept,
phenetic
species concept, and
recognition
species concept. The biological species concept, according to
which a species is a set of interbreeding organisms, is the most
widely used definition, at least by biologists who study
vertebrates. A particular species is referred to by a
Linnaean
binomial, such as Homo sapiens for human beings.
sponge: A member of the
phylum Porifera, marine and
freshwater invertebrates that live permanently attached to rocks or
other surfaces. The body of a sponge is hollow and consists
basically of an aggregation of
cells between which there is little nervous coordination,
although they do have specialized sets of cells that perform
different functions. One set of cells causes water to flow in
through openings in the body wall and out through openings at the
top; food particles are filtered from the water by these cells.
Other cells construct a stiffening skeletal framework of spicules of
chalk, silica, or fibrous protein to support the body.
stabilizing selection: A
form of selection that tends to keep the form of a population
constant. Individuals with the mean value for a character have high
fitness; those with extreme
values have low fitness.
stepped cline: A
cline with a sudden change in
gene or character frequency.
stromatoporoid: Stromatoporoids,
once thought to be related to the
corals, are now recognized as being calcareous
sponges. Sponges similar to
fossil stromatoporoids are
found in the oceans today. Like modern sponges, stromatoporoid
created currents to pump water in and out of their body, where they
filtered out tiny food particles. Fossil stromatoporoids can be
massive, chocolate-drop in shape, tabular, encrusting, cylindrical,
or even arm-shaped ("ramose"). There are two main groups of fossil
stromatoporoids that lived in different eras, the Paleozoic and the
Mesozoic. After their appearance in the Ordovician, the Paleozoic
stromatoporoids were dominant reef builders for over 100 million
years. The second group of stromatoporoids, from the Mesozoic, may
represent a distinct group with a similar growth form. They were
also important contributors to reef formation, especially during the
Cretaceous.
subduction zone: A zone where
rocks of an oceanic plate are forced to plunge below much thicker
continental crust, along margins between adjoining plates. As the
plate descends it melts and is released into the magma below the
earth's crust. Such a zone is marked by volcanoes and earthquakes.
See plate tectonics.
substitution: The evolutionary
replacement of one allele by
another in a population.
supernatural: Relating to
phenomena that cannot be described by natural laws, cannot be tested
by scientific methodology, and are therefore outside the realm of
science.
symbiosis: A relationship of mutual
benefit between two organisms that live together.
sympatric speciation:
Speciation via populations with overlapping geographic ranges.
sympatry: Living in the same
geographic region. Compare with
allopatry.
syntax: The rules by which words are
combined to form grammatical sentences.
systematics: A near synonym of
taxonomy.
tarsier: One of three species of small
nocturnal primate belonging
to the genus Tarsius, found in Sumatra, Borneo, Celebes, and
the Philippines. They have a naked tail, 130-270 mm (about 5 - 11
inches) long, that makes up about half the total length of their
bodies (220-460 mm or between 8 and 19 inches). Tarsiers have
enormous eyes, large hairless ears, and gripping pads at the end of
their digits. They are mainly
arboreal, using both hands to seize insects and small
vertebrates such as lizards.
taxon (plural taxa): Any named taxonomic
group, such as the family Felidae, or the genus Homo, or the
species Homo sapiens. Also, a formally recognized group, as
distinct from any other group (such as the group of herbivores, or
the group of tree-climbers).
taxonomy: The theory and practice of
biological
classification.
terrestrial: Living on land.
tetrapod: A member of the group made
up of amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
thecodont: The thecodonts were a
diverse group of Triassic reptiles that included large four-legged
carnivores, armored herbivores, small, agile two- and four-legged
forms, and crocodile-like aquatic reptiles. They gave rise to
crocodiles, dinosaurs, and pterosaurs. The term Thecodontia is no
longer used, as they are a paraphyletic group. The thecodonts are
therefore an evolutionary grade of animals, rather than a clade.
Most palaeontologists now use the term "basal archosaur" to refer to
thecodonts. As a group, they are defined by certain shared ancestral
features, such as teeth in sockets, an archosaurian characteristic
that was inherited by the dinosaurs. The name thecodont is actually
Latin for "socket-tooth." Members of the group show a general trend
toward a more upright, less sprawling stance, with the hindlimbs
especially being progressively positioned more directly beneath the
body, until some could walk upright on two legs.
theory: A well-substantiated explanation
of some aspect of the natural world that typically incorporates many
confirmed obserations, laws, and successfully verified
hypotheses.
theropod: The theropod (meaning
"beast-footed") dinosaurs are a diverse group of
bipedal dinosaurs. They
include the largest
terrestrial carnivores
ever to have lived, and many quite small
species. Theropods
typically share a number of
traits including hollow, thin-walled bones and modifications of
the hands and feet (3 main fingers on the hand, and 3 main
(weight-bearing) toes on the foot.) Most theropods had sharp,
recurved teeth for eating flesh, and claws on the ends of all of the
fingers and toes. Some of these characters were lost or modified in
some groups later in theropod evolution. Theropod
fossils are fairly rare and
often fragmentary. Fossils of small theropods are especially rare,
since small bones are harder to find and are weathered away easily.
Thiagarajan, Sivasailam:
The president of Workshops by Thiagi, Inc., his organization helps
people improve their performance through games and simulations.
trait: A characteristic or condition.
transcription: The process by
which messenger RNA
is read from the DNA forming a
gene.
transfer RNA (tRNA): A type of
RNA that brings the amino acids
to the ribosomes to make
proteins. There are 20 kinds of transfer RNA molecules, one for each
of the 20 main amino acids. A transfer RNA molecule has an amino
acid attached to it, and contains the anticodon corresponding to
that amino acid in another part of its structure. In protein
synthesis, each codon in the
messenger RNA
combines with the appropriate tRNA's anticodon, and the amino acids
are arranged in order to make the protein.
transformism: The evolutionary
theory of Lamarck in which changes occur within a
lineage of populations, but
in which lineages do not split (i.e., no speciation occurs, at least
not in the sense of the
cladistic
species concept) and do not go extinct.
transition: A
mutation changing one
purine into the other purine,
or one pyrimidine into
the other pyrimidine (i.e., changes from A to G, or vice versa, and
changes from C to T, or vice versa).
transitional fossil: A
fossil or group of fossils
representing a series of similar species, genera, or families, that
link an older group of organisms to a younger group. Often,
transitional fossils combine some traits of older, ancestral species
with traits of more recent species (for instance, a series of
transitional fossils documents the evolution of fully aquatic whales
from terrestrial ancestors).
translation: The process by which a
protein is manufactured at a
ribosome, using
messenger RNA code and
transfer RNA to supply the
amino acids.
transversion: A
mutation changing a
purine into a
pyrimidine, or vice
versa (i.e., changes from A or G to C or T and changes from C or T
to A or G).
trilobite: An extinct marine
arthropod common from the Cambrian to Permian eras (570-245 million
years ago). Trilobite fossils are abundant in rocks of this period.
Trilobites were 10-675 mm long, and their flattened oval bodies were
divided into three lobes by two longitudinal furrows. They had a
single head shield, which bore a pair of antennae and in many
species, insect-like compound eyes. This was followed by more than
20 short body segments, each with a pair of forked appendages. Many
trilobites apparently burrowed in sand or mud, preying on other
animals or scavenging.
tuberculosis: An infection of the
lungs, accompanied by fever and a loss of appetite, caused by the
bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
tunicate: A group of simple
chordates, including sea
squirts (class Ascidacea) that live attached to rocks, and the salps
(class Thaliacea) that float in the sea. Tunicates are small marine
animals, cylindrical, spherical, or irregular in shape, ranging from
several millimetres to over 30 cm in size. They have a saclike
cellulose tunic covering the body; water is drawn in through a
siphon and food particles are filtered out. The free-swimming
tadpole-like larvae show the
major characteristics of all chordates. They subsequently undergo
metamorphosis, losing
their chordate features and becoming adults. One group (class
Larvacea) retain their larval characteristics throughout life.
typology: (1) The definition of
classificatory groups by
phenetic
similarity to a "type" specimen. A species, for example, might be
defined as all individuals less than x phenetic units from the
species' type. (2) The theory that distinct "types" exist in nature,
perhaps because they are part of some
plan of nature. (See
also idealism.) The type
of the species is then the most important form of it, and variants
around that type are noise, or "mistakes." Neo-Darwinism opposes
typology because in a gene
pool no one variant is any more important than any others.
unequal crossing-over: A
crossing-over in
which the two chromosomes do not exchange equal lengths of DNA; one
receives more than the other.
Van Valen, Leigh: An
evolutionary biologist who came up with the model of the Red Queen
-- the living chess piece that Alice encounters in Through the
Looking Glass who must keep running as fast as she can to stay
in the same place -- as a metaphor to explain evolutionary patterns.
His studies involve genetics and
systematics, and
involve a wide range of topics, including the evolution of biotas
and of mammals.
variance: A measure of how variable a
set of numbers are. Technically, it is the sum of squared deviations
from the mean divided by (n-1) (the number of numbers in the sample
minus one). Thus, to find the variance of the set of numbers, 4, 6,
and 8, we first calculate the mean, which is 6. We then sum the
squared deviations from the mean (4 - 6)2 + (6 - 6)2 + (8 - 6)2,
which comes to 8, and divide by (n-1) (which is 2 in this case). The
variance of the three numbers is 8/2 = 4. The more variable the set
of numbers, the higher the variance. The variance of a set of
identical numbers (such as 6, 6, and 6) is zero.
Vermeij, Geerat J.: Biologist at
the Center for Population Biology of the University of California at
Davis, and author of Privileged Hands: A Scientific Life.
Vermeij, blind since age 3, combines autobiography and description
of the evolutionary "rams race" between intertidal predator and prey
species. Wider research interests include economic relationships
between organisms and ecosystems and their implications for human
organisms.
vertebrates: The group
(specifically, a subphylum) of animals, descended from a common
ancestor, that share the derived character of an internal skeleton
made of bone or cartilage.
vestigial: Any structures that have
been greatly reduced in size and function over evolutionary time to
the extent that they now appear to have little or no current
function.
virulence: The disease-producing
ability of a microorganism.
virus: A kind of intracellular
parasite that can
replicate only inside a living cell. In its dispersal stage between
host cells, a virus consists of nucleic acid that codes for a small
number of genes, surrounded by a protein coat. (Less formally,
according to Medawar's definition, a virus is "a piece of bad news
wrapped in a protein.")
vitamin A: A member of a chemically
heterogeneous class of organic compounds that are essential, in
small quantities, for life.
Von Mutius, Erika: A
pediatrician and allergist, Dr. von Mutius's research interests
include the epidemiology of childhood asthma and allergies with a
focus on environmental predictors and gene-environment interactions.
Vrijenhoek, Robert: A senior
scientist in the areas of evolutionary biology, marine biology, and
conservation, Vrijenhoek studies the ecological and evolutionary
consequences of genetic diversity in animals. His research efforts
have focused on the evolutionary and ecological consequences of
sexual and asexual
reproduction in Mexican poeciliid fish (genus Poeciliopsis),
as well as invertebrates in deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
Wake, David: A professor in the
Department of Integrative Biology at the University of California at
Berkeley, Dr Wake's research emphasizes analysis of evolutionary
patterns and the processes that produce them, ranging from
functional morphology to evolutionary genetics and population
ecology. Amphibians and reptiles are the focus of his work.
Wallace, Alfred Russel: A
British naturalist and contemporary of Charles Darwin. Wallace
conducted research on the Amazon River and studied the zoological
differences between animal species of Asia and Australia, developing
a theory of evolution similar to Darwin's.
Ward, Peter Douglas: Professor of
geological sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle,
where he is also adjunct professor of zoology and of astronomy.
Author of several books on biodiversity and the fossil record,
including Rivers in Time: The Search for Clues to Earth's Mass
Extinctions and Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in
the Universe (with Donald Brownlee). He is the principal
investigator for the University of Washington's portion of the NASA
Astrobiology Institute.
Wegener, Alfred: A German
climatologist and geophysicist whose book, The Origins of
Continents and Oceans, was the first to propose the concept of
continental drift (the forerunner to the theory of plate tectonics),
as well as to suggest a supercontinent called Pangaea, which Wegener
suggested had fragmented into the continents as we know them today.
His ideas remained controversial until the 1960s, when they became
widely accepted as new evidence led to the development of the
concept of plate tectonics.
White, Tim: A paleoanthropologist
with University of California, Berkeley's Laboratory for Human
Evolutionary Studies, White is known for his meticulous fieldwork
and analysis investigating early
hominid skeletal biology,
environmental context, and behavior. With an international team of
colleagues, he discovered and named Ardipithecus ramidus and
Australopithecus garhi.
wild type: The
genotype or
phenotype, out of a set
of genotypes or phenotypes of a species, that is found in nature.
The expression is mainly used in lab genetics to distinguish rare
mutant forms of a species from the lab stock of normal individuals.
Wilford, John Noble: A
New York Times reporter and winner of two Pulitzer Prizes for
his national reporting of science topics, and for his work on the
Challenger explosion and the aftermath. While at the Times he
served as science correspondent, assistant national news editor, and
director of science news.
Wilson, E.O.: A biologist and
professor at Harvard University since 1955. Wilson has won two
Pulitzer Prizes for his books On Human Nature and The Ants,
and has received numerous honors for his research and conservation
efforts.
wobble: The ability of the third
base in some anticodons of
tRNA to bond with more than one kind of base in the complementary
position in the mRNA codon.
Woese, Carl: A molecular biologist,
Dr. Woese's identification of the Archaea as a distinctive group of
organisms changed the way life is classified on Earth and
transformed our view of biology.
Wrangham, Richard: A
primatologist, Dr. Wrangham's central interest is in the
significance of chimpanzee behavior, ecology, and life-history for
understanding the common ancestor between chimps and humans and
subsequent human evolution.
young Earth creationism:
The belief that the universe came into being only a few thousand
years ago. Most young Earth creationists interpret the Bible
literally, including not just the special,
separate creation
of human beings and all other species, but the historicity of Noah's
flood.
zygote: The cell formed by the
fertilization of male and female
gametes.
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