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Stearns & Hoekstra: Evolution 2e
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What are the three major branches in the Tree of Life?
How long ago did land plants, animals, and fungi last share a common ancestor?
Phylogenetic relatives are species that:
What is the name for a group that does not contain all of the extant species that descended from a common ancestor?
What is the name for a group that contains species descended from several ancestors that are also the ancestors of species placed in other named groups?
Convergence is an example of:
Why do we think that the wing of the bat and the leg of the horse are both descended from a similar structure in a common ancestor?
Modern systematists:
Shared derived traits:
Why is it important to have a pretty good hypothesis of what the outgroup might be?
Why do the DNA sequences of two species have to be aligned properly before we can compare them to find out at how many nucleotide positions they differ?
Why do we think that molecular clocks exist and are accurate enough to be informative?
What is the microevolutionary processes that forms the basis of the molecular clock?
Why is the genealogy of genes not always the same as the phylogeny of species and not always the same as the genealogy of other genes in the same organism?
In what direction is the coalescent process conceived as working?
Is giving organisms names that reflect natural relationships a problem?
What kind of gene should we sequence to describe the relationships among clades that diverged more than a billion years ago?
The reason that we can use phylogenetic methods to identify who transmitted HIV to a victim is that:
Which of the following is not a reason to think that all life on the planet is descended from one common ancestor and that therefore there is only one Tree of Life?
Molecular systematics tells us that the closest free-living relatives of mitochondria are: