Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

unit 3: instructional sequence 3 |mechanism|description|example| | ----…

Question

unit 3: instructional sequence 3

mechanismdescriptionexample
comparative anatomy
comparative embryology
biogeographylocation of speice around the world show hows evolution happens due to segrabon & enviromet
using dna and protein sequences to show similarities anoung specieshuman & chompanzees
observed evolutionary change

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

This table covers evidence for evolution. Each row is completed with standard scientific descriptions and examples for each evolutionary evidence mechanism:

  1. Fossil Record: Preserved remains/traces show species change over time; the example is a fossil (like the provided image of an ancient organism fossil).
  2. Comparative Anatomy: Compares body structures of different species to find shared evolutionary origins; a common example is homologous structures like human arms, bat wings, and whale flippers.
  3. Comparative Embryology: Studies early embryo development to reveal shared ancestry; the provided image shows similar early embryos of different vertebrates, which is the key example.
  4. Biogeography: The provided description is refined to clarify it's the geographic distribution of species showing evolution via isolation/habitat differences; the map example shows unique island species (like Galápagos finches) that evolved in isolation.
  5. Molecular Biology: This is the correct mechanism name for the given description; the example of humans and chimpanzees (highly similar DNA/proteins) fits.
  6. Observed Evolutionary Change: Tracks real-time evolution in living populations; a classic example is antibiotic-resistant bacteria or peppered moths adapting to pollution.

Answer:

MechanismDescriptionExample
Comparative AnatomyCompares body structures for shared ancestryHomologous structures: human arm, bat wing, whale flipper
Comparative EmbryologySimilar embryo development shows shared originsEarly vertebrate embryos (as pictured, e.g., human, chicken, fish embryos)
BiogeographySpecies distribution shows evolution via isolationGalápagos finches (unique island species, as pictured on map)
Molecular BiologyUsing DNA/protein sequences to show similaritiesHumans and chimpanzees (highly matching DNA)
Observed Evolutionary ChangeTracks real-time evolution in living populationsAntibiotic-resistant bacteria