Inheritance & EvolutionMemory Aid

Memory Aids

Part of EvolutionGCSE Biology

This memory aid covers Memory Aids within Evolution for GCSE Biology. Theory of evolution, natural selection, and evidence for evolution It is section 9 of 13 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.

Topic position

Section 9 of 13

Practice

26 questions

Recall

25 flashcards

Memory Aids

VISA — The four steps of natural selection:

"You need a VISA to get through the environment."

  • V — Variation (individuals differ)
  • I — Inheritance (traits passed to offspring)
  • S — Selection (environment favours some individuals)
  • A — Accumulation (advantageous alleles increase over generations)

Darwin vs Lamarck — spot the difference:

  • Lamarck: Organism changes during its lifetime → passes the change on. (WRONG)
  • Darwin: Random variation already exists → selection acts on it. (CORRECT)
  • Memory trick: "Lamarck = Learned traits passed on. Darwin = Born different, best survive."

Evolution = population change, not individual change:

"One giraffe does not grow a longer neck. The POPULATION ends up with longer necks."

Quick Check: A population of beetles lives on green leaves. Most are green, but some are brown. Birds eat beetles. Explain, using natural selection, how this population could become mostly brown if the leaves dried out and turned brown.

Quick Check: A student says that a giraffe stretched its neck during its lifetime and passed on a longer neck to its offspring. Identify whose theory this represents and explain the scientific evidence that disproves it.

Quick Check: Explain why a single mutation that gives one bacterium antibiotic resistance can lead to the entire bacterial population becoming resistant within a short period of time.

Keep building this topic

Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in Evolution. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for Evolution

What is evolution?

  • A. The gradual change in living organisms over time
  • B. The growth of an individual organism
  • C. Animals moving to different habitats
  • D. The creation of new organisms from nothing
1 markfoundation

Describe three pieces of evidence that support Darwin's theory of evolution.

4 marksstandard

Quick Recall Flashcards

What is evolution?
The gradual change in the inherited characteristics of a population over many generations through the process of natural selection. It can lead to new species forming over very long time periods.
What did Charles Darwin propose and when?
In 1859, Darwin published 'On the Origin of Species', proposing that all species evolve through natural selection. Individuals with advantageous characteristics are more likely to survive, reproduce, and pass on those traits to offspring.

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