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Adaptive Radiation definitions

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  • Adaptive Radiation

    Evolutionary process where a single lineage rapidly diversifies into many species, often filling new ecological niches after major events.
  • Ecological Niche

    A specific role or position an organism occupies in its environment, including its habitat, resources, and interactions.
  • Mass Extinction

    A widespread and rapid decrease in biodiversity, clearing ecological niches and enabling bursts of diversification.
  • Speciation

    The formation of new and distinct species from a single ancestral lineage, often following ecological opportunities.
  • Evolutionary Innovation

    A novel trait or set of traits that increases fitness, allowing organisms to exploit new niches and outcompete others.
  • Angiosperm

    A group of flowering plants with seeds enclosed in fruit, enabling wide dispersal and dominance over other plant groups.
  • Cambrian Explosion

    A period about 530 million years ago marked by the rapid emergence of most major animal groups with complex body plans.
  • Phylum

    A major taxonomic group below kingdom, representing large evolutionary branches such as chordates, mollusks, and arthropods.
  • Paleozoic Era

    A geologic era beginning with the Cambrian, characterized by the emergence and diversification of complex animal life.
  • Gene Regulation

    Control of when, where, and how much genes are expressed, often driving rapid evolutionary changes in development.
  • Homeotic Gene

    A regulatory gene that determines the organization and identity of body parts during development, influencing major structural changes.
  • Hox Gene

    A subset of homeotic genes controlling animal body plans along the head-to-tail axis, crucial for complex body structures.
  • Heterochrony

    Evolutionary changes in the timing or rate of developmental events, leading to significant differences in organismal form.
  • Homology

    Similarity in structures among different species due to shared ancestry, often modified by changes in developmental regulation.
  • Trilobite

    An extinct marine arthropod from the Cambrian with hard bodies and some of the earliest known eyes in the fossil record.