Summary: Looseleaf For Integrated Principles Of Zoology | 9781259562310 | David J Eisenhour, et al

Summary: Looseleaf For Integrated Principles Of Zoology | 9781259562310 | David J Eisenhour, et al Book cover image
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Read the summary and the most important questions on LooseLeaf for Integrated Principles of Zoology | 9781259562310 | David J Eisenhour, Professor PhD; Susan L. Keen; Larry S Roberts; Cleveland P Hickman, Jr., Emeritus; Helen I'Anson; Allan Larson

  • 2 Phenotype plasticity

    This is a preview. There are 2 more flashcards available for chapter 2
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  • What is phenotypic plasticity?

    The capacity for change within a given genotype to respond to the environmental factors
  • What is developmental plasticity?

    Environmental factors during ontogeny determine phenotype of the mature organism
  • 3 Lz 3&4

  • 3.1 Early concepts: Preformation versus Epigenesis

  • What is the preformation concept of development?

    The idea that yound animals were preformed in eggs and that develpment was simply a matter of unfolding what was in the egg.
  • What is the epigenesis concept of development?

    This is the idea that a fertilised egg contains building materials only, and these are assembled by an unkown force. Now we know much more about this concept.
  • What are the six key events in development?

    1. Gamete formation
    2. Fertilisation
    3. Cleavage
    4. Gastrulation
    5. Organogenisis
    6. Growth
  • What is meant with "the hierarchy of developmental decisions"?

    The hierarchy in which different cell types arise in conditions created by the stages of development.
  • What happend when a structure becomes "determined"?

    As development proceeds the cells go on a course of differentation and their fate in the organism becomes irreversible. This is because of an progressive subdivision.
  • What are the two basic processen responsible for the progressive subdivisions in the embryo?

    These are cytoplasmic specification and induction
  • 3.3 Cleavage and early development

    This is a preview. There are 19 more flashcards available for chapter 3.3
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  • What happens during cleavage in an embryo?

    The embryo divides repeatedly, converting the single cell into many small cells called blastomeres until somatic cell size is attained, no growth occurs.
  • When does the embryo enter the blastula stage?

    AT the end of the cleavage stage when the embryo has been divided into many hundreds or thousands of cells

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