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Figure 23.13 Directional selection for beak size in a Galápagos population of the medium ground finch.

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Presentation on theme: "Figure 23.13 Directional selection for beak size in a Galápagos population of the medium ground finch."— Presentation transcript:

1 Figure 23.13 Directional selection for beak size in a Galápagos population of the medium ground finch

2 Figure 23.8 Clinal variation in a plant

3 Figure 22.10 Camouflage as an example of evolutionary adaptation

4 Figure 22.15 Different geographic regions, different mammalian “brands” This is an example of convergent evolution

5 Figure 23.16x1 Sexual selection and the evolution of male appearance

6 Figure 24.18 A range of eye complexity among mollusks

7 Figure 23.10 Mapping malaria and the sickle-cell allele

8 Table 25.1 The Geologic Time Scale

9 Figure 22.14 Homologous structures: anatomical signs of descent with modification

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12 Figure 25.5 Diversity of life and periods of mass extinction

13 Figure 25.4 The history of continental drift

14 Figure 26.16 Our changing view of biological diversity

15 Table 27.2 A Comparison of the Three Domains of Life

16 Table 27.1 Major Nutritional Modes

17 Table 27.3 Five of the Major Clades of Bacteria

18 Figure 27.17 Lyme disease, a bacterial disease transmitted by ticks

19 Figure 27.18 Putting prokaryotes to work in sewage treatment facilities

20 Figure 27.19 Bioremediation for an oil spill

21 Figure 28.7 An alternative hypothesis for how the three domains of life are related

22 Figure 28.8 A tentative phylogeny of eukaryotes

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25 Figure 29.1 Some highlights of plant evolution

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27 Figure 30.9 The life cycle of a pine (Layer 3)

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29 An overview of transport in whole plants

30 Sucrose transport via phloem

31 Figure 35.4 Modified shoots: Stolons, strawberry (top left); rhizomes, iris (top right); tubers, potato (bottom left); bulb, onion (bottom right)

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33 Fungi

34 Figure 31.1 Fungal mycelia

35 Lichen A moldy orange (left), Penicillium (right) Mycorrhizae

36 Figure 32.4 A traditional view of animal diversity based on body-plan grades

37 Figure 32.13 A sample of some of the animals that evolved during the Cambrian explosion

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43 Figure 34.1 Clades of extant chordates

44 Figure 34.7 Phylogeny of the major groups of extant vertebrates

45 Figure 34.38 A timeline for some hominid species

46 Figure 34.32 Evolutionary convergence of marsupial and eutherian (placental) mammals


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