Mastering Biology Assignment 5

25 July 2022
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question
Cattle breeders have improved the quality of meat over the years by which process? a. artificial selection b. directional selection c. stabilizing selection d. artificial selection and directional selection e. artificial selection and stabilizing selection
answer
d.
question
Sexual dimorphism is most often a result of ? a. intersexual selection. b. stabilizing selection. c. artificial selection. d. pansexual selection. e. intrasexual selection.
answer
a.
question
The Darwinian fitness of an individual is measured most directly by ? a. the number of mates it attracts. b. the number of "good genes" it possesses. c. the number of its offspring that survive to reproduce. d. its physical strength. e. how long it lives.
answer
c.
question
The restriction enzymes of bacteria protect the bacteria from successful attack by bacteriophages, whose genomes can be degraded by the restriction enzymes. The bacterial genomes are not vulnerable to these restriction enzymes because bacterial DNA is methylated. This situation selects for bacteriophages whose genomes are also methylated. As new strains of resistant bacteriophages become more prevalent, this in turn selects for bacteria whose genomes are not methylated and whose restriction enzymes instead degrade methylated DNA. The outcome of the conflict between bacteria and bacteriophage at any point in time results from? a. neutral variation. b. genetic variation being preserved by diploidy. c. evolutionary imbalance. d. heterozygote advantage. e. frequency-dependent selection.
answer
e.
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Natural selection is most nearly the same as ? a. differential reproductive success. b. genetic drift. c. diploidy. d. non-random mating. e. gene flow.
answer
a.
question
Each of the following has a better chance of influencing gene frequencies in small populations than in large populations, but which one most consistently requires a small population as a precondition for its occurrence? a. Non-random mating b. Gene flow c. Mutation d. Natural selection e. Genetic drift
answer
e.
question
Which of the following is a true statement concerning genetic variation? a. It must be present in a population before natural selection can act upon the population. b. It tends to be reduced by the processes involved when diploid organisms produce gametes. c. It is created by the direct action of natural selection. d. A population that has a higher average heterozygosity has less genetic variation than one with a lower average heterozygosity. e. It arises in response to changes in the environment.
answer
a.
question
Which statement correctly describes the role of chance in evolution? a. Evolutionary change proceeds by an accumulation of changes that occur by chance. b. An allele that increases evolutionary fitness cannot be lost from a population by chance events. c. The ultimate source of new alleles is mutation, random changes in the nucleotide sequences of an organism's DNA
answer
c.
question
sexual dimorphism was developing over time in these species
answer
Adult male humans generally have deeper voices than do adult female humans, as the direct result of higher levels of testosterone causing growth of the larynx. If the fossil records of apes and humans alike show a trend toward decreasing larynx size in adult females, and increasing larynx size in adult males, then _____.
question
a population's gene frequency
answer
Which of these can change via natural selection?
question
Each insect's survival is strongly influenced by how resistant it is during a growing season.
answer
A population of boll weevils (an insect that damages cotton crops) is subjected to aerial spraying of a pesticide repeatedly throughout the growing season. Which statement about pesticide resistance in boll weevils during the growing season is true?
question
mistakes in translation of structural genes.
answer
In modern terminology, diversity is understood to be a result of genetic variation. Sources of variation for evolution include all of the following except _____.
question
a cline
answer
An ecologist is able to correlate the darkness of leaves in a particular species of small plant with its exposure to sunlight: when plants grow on the forest floor under trees, their leaves are dark green; plants growing at the edge of the forest at the edge of the forest with intermediate levels of sunlight are moderately green; and plants growing in the open field next to the forest under maximum sunlight have leaves that are pale green.This observed difference in leaf color is an example of _____.
question
The phenotype observed in the open field study plot arose from parental alleles causing dark leaves.
answer
The ecologist plants seeds produced from the forest-floor plants in the open field and she plants seeds from the open-field plants in the forest floor. After a sufficient period of growth, she observes that plants in the open-field study plot have dark leaves and plants in the forest-floor study plot have pale-green leaves. How should she interpret these results?
question
A, B, and C
answer
Lake Jackson is a 6.2-square mile lake on the northwest side of Tallahassee that drains every twenty-five years or so. Two sinkholes open up and the water in the lake drains into the Florida aquifer, or water table. The fish and other organisms in the lake obviously perish, except for those that survive in a small isolated pool. Remarkably, the lake gradually fills again over a period of several years as a result of rain and plant and animal populations rebound.A population geneticist experimentally determined that the large-mouth bass population in Tallahassee's Lake Jackson has a relatively high proportion of genes that are "fixed" in this population. As a result, this population would have relatively low ____.
question
Genetic drift
answer
What mechanism might account for the relatively high proportion of genes that are "fixed" in the Lake Jackson bass population?
question
All new alleles are the result of nucleotide variability.
answer
Which statement about variation is true?
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The proportions of both types of homozygote should decrease & The population's average heterozygosity should increase.
answer
In a hypothetical population's gene pool, an autosomal allele, which had previously been fixed, undergoes a mutation that introduces a new allele, one that is incompletely dominant to the original allele. Natural selection then causes stabilizing selection at this locus. Consequently, what should happen over the course of many generations?
question
Silent mutations
answer
Which of the following explains why comparing the DNA sequences of homologous genes and not the amino-acid sequences of homologus proteins is a more accurate way of determining the evolutionary relatedness of different species?
question
B (look at picture)
answer
Blue light is that portion of the visible spectrum that penetrates the deepest into bodies of water. Ultraviolet (UV) light, though, can penetrate even deeper. A gene within a population of marine fish that inhabits depths from 500 m to 1,000 m has an allele for a photopigment that is sensitive to UV light, and another allele for a photopigment that is sensitive to blue light. Which graph below best depicts the predicted distribution of these alleles if the fish that carry these alleles prefer to locate themselves where they can see best?
question
The two phenotypes are about equally adaptive under laboratory conditions.
answer
A large population of laboratory animals has been allowed to breed randomly for a number of generations. After several generations, 25% of the animals display a recessive phenotype, the same percentage as at the beginning of the breeding program. The rest of the animals show the dominant phenotype, with heterozygotes indistinguishable from the homozygous dominants. What is the most reasonable conclusion that can be drawn from the fact that the frequency of the recessive trait has not changed over time?
question
0.50
answer
A large population of laboratory animals has been allowed to breed randomly for a number of generations. After several generations, 25% of the animals display a recessive phenotype, the same percentage as at the beginning of the breeding program. The rest of the animals show the dominant phenotype, with heterozygotes indistinguishable from the homozygous dominants. What is the estimated frequency of the dominant allele in the gene pool?
question
0.50
answer
What proportion of the population is probably heterozygous for this trait?
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cannot be determined from this information
answer
What is the frequency of the recessive allele for a particular gene in a population of frogs that is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium if the frequency of the heterozygote genotype is 0.42?
question
0.25
answer
Assume that all possible "ABO" blood phenotypes are present in a certain population that is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium with respect to this class of blood-type alleles. The frequency of the "IA" allele is 0.3 and the frequency of the IB allele is 0.2. What is the frequency of individuals with Type O blood in the population?
question
0.24
answer
Assume that all possible "ABO" blood phenotypes are present in a certain population that is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium with respect to this class of blood-type alleles. The frequency of the "IA" allele is 0.3 and the frequency of the IB allele is 0.2. What is the frequency of individuals with Type B blood in this population?
question
0.60
answer
A gene that is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium in the swallowtail butterfly population on St. George Island controls antennal length, whereby the long-antenna allele is completely dominant to the short-antenna allele. Of the 400 butterflies in this population, 256 butterflies have long antennae. What is the frequency of the recessive allele in this population?
question
A,B, & C
answer
A forest fire kills most of the gopher tortoises in an area, and a population geneticist experimentally determines that the frequency of the recessive allele for shell thickness decreased from 0.67 before the fire to 0.21 after the fire. What has occurred?
question
populations
answer
Gene flow is a concept best used to describe an exchange of alleles between _____.
question
natural selection
answer
Which of these evolutionary agents is most consistent at causing populations to become better suited to their environments over the course of generations?
question
mate choice and intersexual selection
answer
Sail-fin mollies (a small freshwater fish) prefer to mate with males that have long, colorful dorsal fins. Which of the following terms are appropriately applied to the situation described above?
question
directional selection
answer
Sail-fin mollies (a small freshwater fish) prefer to mate with males that have long, colorful dorsal fins. The distribution of fin phenotypes in the males of this population would reflect _____.
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relative fitness
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If genetic variation is truly "neutral," then it should have no effect on _____.
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disruptive selection
answer
Which describes an African butterfly species that exists with similar frequency in two strikingly different color patterns?
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artificial selection and directional selection
answer
Southern farmers have produced a variety of corn that grows tall and bears large ears of corn despite the intense summer heat by which process?
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living 2 years and producing six offspring with one mate
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Which of the following examples reflects the highest evolutionary fitness?
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stabilizing selection
answer
What is true of the trait whose frequency distribution in a large population appears above? It has probably undergone _____.
question
directional selection and adaptation
answer
If the curve shifts to the left or to the right, there is no gene flow, and the population size consequently increases over successive generations, then which of these is (are) probably occurring?
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the body design of snakes is analgous feature that evolved multiple times by convergent evolution
answer
What best explains why all snakes have a similar body design even though they are not all descended from a common ancestor?
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the two forms interbreed in nature and their offspring survive and reproduce well
answer
The myrtle warbler and Audubon's warbler were once listed as distinct species. Recently, these birds have been classified as eastern and western forms of a single species, the yellow-rumped warbler. Which of the following pieces of evidence, if true, would be cause for this reclassification?
question
biological
answer
Beetle pollinators of a particular plant are attracted to its flowers' bright orange color. The beetles not only pollinate the flowers, but they mate while inside of the flowers. A mutant version of the plant with red flowers becomes more common with the passage of time. A particular variant of the beetle prefers the red flowers to the orange flowers. Over time, interbreeding is no longer possible between these two beetle variants. Based on this information, the two variants of beetles can be assigned to different species based on which species concept?
question
choices A,B, AND C
answer
A pop'n. biologist obtains data indicating that the frequency of a particular recessive allele in a pop'n. previously in H/W equilibrium changed from 0.3 to 0.8. A possible explanation is _____.
question
bottom of diagram is oldest
answer
Which stratum (A-D) should contain the greatest proportion of extinct organisms? _____
question
closest anscestor is closer to bottom
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If "x" indicates the location of fossils of two closely related species, then fossils of their most-recent common ancestor are most likely to occur in which stratum? _____
question
Lamarck
answer
Who believed that species could evolve by individuals striving to become better adapted to their environment generation after generation?
question
0.70
answer
Let's assume that the latest census of great blue herons that hang out by the FSU Reservation on Lake Bradford revealed a population of only 25 adult herons (so not likely to be in H/W equilibrium). For a gene that determines bill size, whereby the allele for stout bills is dominant to the allele for more slender bills, calculate the frequency of the recessive allele in this population if ten herons have slender bills and all other herons are heterozygous?
question
Which of these is a statement that Darwin would have rejected? A) Environmental change plays a role in evolution. B) The smallest entity that can evolve is an individual organism. C) Individuals can acquire new characteristics as they respond to new environments or situations. D) Inherited variation in a population is a necessary precondition for natural selection to operate. E) Natural populations tend to produce more offspring than the environment can support.
answer
b
question
Which definition of evolution would have been most foreign to Charles Darwin during his lifetime? A) change in gene frequency in gene pools B) descent with modification C) the gradual change of a population使s heritable traits over generations D) populations becoming better adapted to their environments over the course of generations E) the appearance of new varieties and new species with the passage of time
answer
a
question
About which of these did Darwin have a poor understanding? A) that individuals in a population exhibit a good deal of variation B) that much of the variation between individuals in a population is inherited C) the factors that cause individuals in populations to struggle for survival D) the sources of genetic variations among individuals E) how a beneficial trait becomes more common in a population over the course of generations
answer
d
question
If, on average, 46% of the loci in a species使 gene pool are heterozygous, then the average homozygosity of the species should be A) 23% B) 46% C) 54% D) 92% E) There is not enough information to say
answer
c
question
Which of these variables is likely to undergo the largest change in value as the result of a mutation that introduces a brand-new allele into a population使s gene pool at a locus that had formerly been fixed? A) Average heterozygosity B) Nucleotide variability C) Geographic variability D) Average number of loci
answer
a
question
Which of these is the smallest unit upon which natural selection directly acts? A) a species使 gene frequency B) a population使s gene frequency C) an individual使s genome D) an individual使s genotype E) an individual使s phenotype
answer
e
question
Which of these is the smallest unit that natural selection can change? A) a species使 gene frequency B) a population使s gene frequency C) an individual使s genome D) an individual使s genotype E) an individual使s phenotype
answer
b
question
Which of these evolutionary agents is most consistent at causing populations to become better suited to their environments over the course of generations? A) Mutation B) Non-random mating C) Gene flow D) Natural selection E) Genetic drift
answer
d
question
Which statement about the beak size of finches on the island of Daphne Major during prolonged drought is true? A) Each bird evolved a deeper, stronger beak as the drought persisted. B) Each bird developed a deeper, stronger beak as the drought persisted. C) Each bird使s survival was strongly influenced by the depth and strength of its beak as the drought persisted. D) Each bird that survived the drought produced only offspring with deeper, stronger beaks than seen in the previous generation. E) The frequency of the strong-beak alleles increased in each bird as the drought persisted.
answer
c
question
Each of the following has a better chance of influencing gene frequencies in small populations than in large populations, but which one most consistently requires a small population as a precondition for its occurrence? A) Mutation B) Non-random mating C) Genetic drift D) Natural selection E) Gene flow
answer
c
question
In modern terminology, diversity is understood to be a result of genetic variation. Sources of variation for evolution include all of the following except A) mistakes in translation of structural genes. B) mistakes in DNA replication. C) translocations and mistakes in meiosis. D) recombination at fertilization. E) recombination by crossing over in meiosis.
answer
a
question
A trend toward the decrease in the size of plants on the slopes of mountains as altitudes increase is an example of A) a cline. B) a bottleneck. C) relative fitness. D) genetic drift. E) geographic variation.
answer
a
question
The higher the proportion of loci that are 屎fixed屎 in a population, the lower is that population使s A) nucleotide variability. B) genetic polyploidy. C) average heterozygosity. D) A, B, and C E) A and C only
answer
e
question
Which statement about variation is true? A) All phenotypic variation is the result of genotypic variation. B) All genetic variation produces phenotypic variation. C) All nucleotide variability results in neutral variation. D) All new alleles are the result of nucleotide variability. E) All geographic variation results from the existence of clines.
answer
d
question
In a hypothetical population使s gene pool, an autosomal gene, which had previously been fixed, undergoes a mutation that introduces a new allele, one inherited according to incomplete dominance. Natural selection then causes stabilizing selection at this locus. Consequently, what should happen over the course of many generations? A) The proportions of both types of homozygote should decrease. B) The proportion of the population that is heterozygous at this locus should remain constant. C) The population使s average heterozygosity should increase. D) Both (A)and (B) E) Both (A)and (C)
answer
e
question
Rank the following 1-base point mutations (from most likely to least likely) with respect to their likelihood of affecting the structure of the corresponding polypeptide: 1. insertion mutation deep within an intron 2. substitution mutation at the 3rd position of an exonic codon 3. substitution mutation at the 2nd position of an exonic codon 4. deletion mutation within the first exon of the gene A) 1, 2, 3, 4 B) 4, 3, 2, 1 C) 2, 1, 4, 3 D) 3, 1, 4, 2 E) 2, 3, 1, 4
answer
b
question
Sponges are known to contain a single Hox gene. Most invertebrates have a cluster of 10 similar Hox genes, all located on the same chromosome. Most vertebrates have four such clusters of Hox genes, located on four non-homologous chromosomes. The process responsible for the change in number of Hox genes from sponges to invertebrates was most likely __________, whereas a different process that could have potentially contributed to the cluster使s presence on more than one chromosome was __________. I. binary fission II. translation III. gene duplication IV. non-disjunction V. transcription A) I, II B) II, III C) II, V D) III, IV E) III, V
answer
d
question
HIV使s genome of RNA includes code for reverse transcriptase (RT), an enzyme that acts early in infection to synthesize a DNA genome off of an RNA template. The HIV genome also codes for protease (PR), an enzyme that acts later in infection by cutting long viral polyproteins into smaller, functional proteins. Both RT and PR represent potential targets for antiretroviral drugs. Drugs called nucleoside analogs (NA) act against RT, whereas drugs called protease inhibitors (PI) act against PR. 18) Which of these represents the treatment option that is most likely to avoid the production of drug -resistant HIV (assuming no drug interactions or side effects)? A) using a series of NAs, one at a time, and changed about once a week B) using a single PI, but slowly increasing the dosage over the course of a week C) using high doses of NA and a PI at the same time for a period not to exceed 1 day D) using moderate doses of NA and of two different PI使s at the same time for several months
answer
d
question
Within the body of an HIV-infected individual who is being treated with a single NA, and whose HIV particles are currently vulnerable to this NA, which of these situations can increase the virus使 relative fitness? 1. mutations resulting in RTs with decreased rates of nucleotide mismatch 2. mutations resulting in RTs with increased rates of nucleotide mismatch 3. mutations resulting in RTs that have proofreading capability A) 1 only B) 2 only C) 3 only D) 1 and 3 E) 2 and 3
answer
b
question
HIV has 9 genes in its RNA genome. Every HIV particle contains two RNA molecules, each molecule containing all 9 genes. If, for some reason, the two RNA molecules within a single HIV particle do not have identical sequences, then which of these terms can be applied due to the existence of the non-identical regions? A) homozygous B) gene variability C) nucleotide variability D) average heterozygosity E) all except A
answer
e
question
If two genes from one RNA molecule become detached and then, as a unit, get attached to one end of the other RNA molecule within a single HIV particle, which of these is true? A) There are now fewer genes within the viral particle. B) There are now more genes within the viral particle. C) A point substitution mutation has occurred in the retroviral genome. D) The retroviral equivalent of crossing-over has occurred, no doubt resulting in a heightened positive effect. E) One of the RNA molecules has experienced gene duplication as the result of translocation.
answer
e
question
The DNA polymerases of all cellular organisms have proofreading capability. This capability tends to reduce the introduction of A) extra genes by gene duplication events. B) chromosomal translocation. C) genetic variation by mutations. D) proofreading capability into prokaryotes.
answer
c
question
Which of these makes determining the evolutionary relatedness of different species based on the amino acid sequence of homologous proteins generally less accurate than determinations of relatedness based on the nucleotide sequences of homologous genes? A) Silent mutations B) Gene duplications C) Translocation events that change gene sequences D) Crossing-over E) Independent assortment
answer
a
question
Which is a true statement concerning genetic variation? A) It is created by the direct action of natural selection. B) It arises in response to changes in the environment. C) It must be present in a population before natural selection can act upon the population. D) It tends to be reduced by the processes involved when diploid organisms produce gametes. E) A population that has a higher average heterozygosity has less genetic variation than one with a larger average heterozygosity.
answer
c
question
What is the most reasonable conclusion that can be drawn from the fact that the frequency of the recessive trait (aa) has not changed over time? A) The population is undergoing genetic drift. B) The two phenotypes are about equally adaptive under laboratory conditions. C) The genotype AA is lethal. D) There has been a high rate of mutation of allele A to allele a. E) There has been sexual selection favoring allele a.
answer
b
question
What is the estimated frequency of allele A in the gene pool? A) 0.05 B) 0.25 C) 0.50 D) 0.75 E) 1.00
answer
c
question
What proportion of the population is probably heterozygous (Aa) for this trait? A) 0.05 B) 0.25 C) 0.50 D) 0.75 E) 1.00
answer
c
question
In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that are in equilibrium, the frequency of the allele a is 0.4. What is the percentage of the population that is homozygous for this allele? A) 4 B) 16 C) 32 D) 36 E) 40
answer
b
question
In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that are in equilibrium, the frequency of allele a is 0.1. What is the percentage of the population that is heterozygous for this allele? A) 90 B) 81 C) 49 D) 18 E) 10
answer
d
question
In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that are in equilibrium, the frequency of allele a is 0.2. What is the frequency of individuals with Aa genotype? A) 0.20 B) 0.32 C) 0.42 D) 0.80 E) Genotype frequency cannot be determined from the information provided.
answer
b
question
You sample a population of butterflies and find that 42% are heterozygous at a particular locus. What should be the frequency of the recessive allele in this population? A) 0.09 B) 0.30 C) 0.49 D) 0.70 E) Allele frequency cannot be determined from this information.
answer
e
question
What is the frequency of the B allele? A) 0.001 B) 0.002 C) 0.100 D) 0.400 E) 0.600
answer
e
question
If there are 4,000 children born to this generation, how many would be expected to have AB blood under the conditions of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium? A) 100 B) 960 C) 1,920 D) 2,000 E) 2,400
answer
c
question
In peas, a gene controls flower color such that R = purple and r = white. In an isolated pea patch, there are 36 purple-flowering plants and 64 white-flowering plants. Assuming Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, what is the value of q for this population? A) 0.36 B) 0.60 C) 0.64 D) 0.75 E) 0.80
answer
e
question
Which of these is closest to the allele frequency in the founding population? A) 0.1 a, 0.9 A B) 0.2 a, 0.8 A C) 0.5 a, 0.5 A D) 0.8 a, 0.2 A E) 0.4 a, 0.6 A
answer
a
question
If one assumes that Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium applies to the population of colonists on this planet, about how many people will have attached earlobes when the planet使s population reaches 10,000? A) 100 B) 400 C) 800 D) 1,000 E) 10,000
answer
a
question
If four of the original colonists died before they produced offspring, the ratios of genotypes could be quite different in the subsequent generations. This would be an example of A) diploidy. B) gene flow. C) genetic drift. D) disruptive selection. E) stabilizing selection.
answer
c
question
In which population is the frequency of the allele for brown feathers highest? A) Population A. B) Population B. C) Population C. D) They are all the same. E) It is impossible to tell from the information given.
answer
d
question
In which population would it be least likely that an accident would significantly alter the frequency of the brown allele? A) Population A. B) Population B. C) Population C. D) They are all the same. E) It is impossible to tell from the information given.
answer
b
question
Which population is most likely to be subject to the bottleneck effect? A) Population A. B) Population B. C) Population C. D) They are all the same. E) It is impossible to tell from the information given.
answer
a
question
You are maintaining a small population of fruit flies in the laboratory by transferring the flies to a new culture bottle after each generation. After several generations, you notice that the viability of the flies has decreased greatly. Recognizing that small population size is likely to be linked to decreased viability, the best way to reverse this trend is to A) cross your flies with flies from another lab. B) reduce the number of flies that you transfer at each generation. C) transfer only the largest flies. D) change the temperature at which you rear the flies. E) shock the flies with a brief treatment of heat or cold to make them more hardy.
answer
a
question
If the frequency of a particular allele that is present in a small, isolated population of alpine plants decreases due to a landslide that leaves an even smaller remnant of surviving plants bearing this allele, then what has occurred? A) a bottleneck B) genetic drift C) microevolution D) A and B only E) A, B, and C
answer
e
question
If the original finches that had been blown over to the Galapagos from South America had already been genetically different from the parental population of South American finches, even before adapting to the Galapagos, this would have been an example of A) genetic drift. B) bottleneck effect. C) founder使s effect. D) all three of these E) both A and C
answer
e
question
Over time, the movement of people on Earth has steadily increased. This has altered the course of human evolution by increasing A) non-random mating. B) geographic isolation. C) genetic drift. D) mutations. E) gene flow.
answer
e
question
Gene flow is a concept best used to describe an exchange between A) species. B) males and females. C) populations. D) individuals. E) chromosomes.
answer
c
question
The outcome of the conflict between bacteria and bacteriophage at any point in time results from A) frequency-dependent selection. B) evolutionary imbalance. C) heterozygote advantage. D) neutral variation. E) genetic variation being preserved by diploidy.
answer
a
question
Natural selection is most nearly the same as A) diploidy. B) gene flow. C) genetic drift. D) non-random mating. E) differential reproductive success.
answer
e
question
Over the course of evolutionary time, what should occur? A) Methylated DNA should become fixed in the gene pools of bacterial species. B) Nonmethylated DNA should become fixed in the gene pools of bacteriophages. C) Methylated DNA should become fixed in the gene pools of bacteriophages. D) Methylated and nonmethylated strains should be maintained among both bacteria and bacteriophages, with ratios that vary over time. E) Both A and B are correct.
answer
d
question
Arrange the following from most general (i.e., most inclusive) to most specific (i.e., least inclusive): 1. Natural selection 2. Microevolution 3. Intrasexual selection 4. Evolution 5. Sexual selection A) 4, 1, 2, 3, 5 B) 4, 2, 1, 3, 5 C) 4, 2, 1, 5, 3 D) 1, 4, 2, 5, 3 E) 1, 2, 4, 5, 3
answer
c
question
Sexual dimorphism is most often a result of A) pansexual selection. B) stabilizing selection. C) intrasexual selection. D) intersexual selection. E) artificial selection.
answer
d
question
During breeding season, one should expect female house finches to prefer to mate with males with the brightest red feathers. Which of the following is true of this situation? A) Alleles that promote more efficient acquisition of carotenoid-containing foods by males should increase over the course of generations. B) Alleles that promote more effective deposition of carotenoid pigments in the feathers of males should increase over the course of generations. C) There should be directional selection for bright red feathers in males. D) All three of these. E) Only B and C.
answer
d
question
Which of the following terms are appropriately applied to the situation described in the previous question? A) Sexual selection B) Mate choice C) Intersexual selection D) All three of these E) Only B and C
answer
d
question
The situation as described in the paragraph above should select most directly against males that A) are unable to distinguish food items that are red from those of other colors. B) are older, but still healthy. C) are capable of defending only moderately sized territories. D) have slightly lower levels of testosterone during breeding season than have other males. E) have no prior experience courting female house finches.
answer
a
question
If the fossil records of apes and humans alike show a trend toward decreasing larynx size in adult females, and increasing larynx size in adult males, then A) sexual dimorphism was developing over time in these species. B) intrasexual selection seems to have occurred. C) the 屎good genes屎 hypothesis was refuted by these data. D) stabilizing selection was occurring in these species concerning larynx size. E) selection was acting more directly upon genotype than upon phenotype.
answer
a
question
Which addition to the information in the paragraph above would make more than one of the answers listed in the previous question correct? A) If larynx size was also affected by the amount the larynx was used (i.e., the amount of vocalization). B) If males prefer to mate with females possessing higher voices. C) If females killed female offspring whose voices were too deep. D) If the trend described above was seen in the fossil record of only one species of ape.
answer
c
question
If one excludes the involvement of gender in the situation described in the paragraph above, then the pattern that is apparent in the fossil record is most similar to one that should be expected from A) pansexual selection. B) directional selection. C) disruptive selection. D) stabilizing selection. E) asexual selection.
answer
c
question
The Darwinian fitness of an individual is measured most directly by A) the number of its offspring that survive to reproduce. B) the number of 屎good genes屎 it possesses. C) the number of mates it attracts. D) its physical strength. E) how long it lives.
answer
a
question
When we say that an individual organism has a greater fitness than another individual, we specifically mean that the organism A) lives longer than others of its species. B) competes for resources more successfully than others of its species. C) mates more frequently than others of its species. D) utilizes resources more efficiently than other species occupying similar niches. E) leaves more viable offspring than others of its species.
answer
e
question
Which of the following statements best summarizes evolution as it is viewed today? A) It is goal-directed. B) It represents the result of selection for acquired characteristics. C) It is synonymous with the process of gene flow. D) It is the descent of humans from the present-day great apes. E) It is the differential survival and reproduction of the most-fit phenotypes.
answer
e
question
If neutral variation is truly 屎neutral,屎 then it should have no effect on A) nucleotide diversity. B) average heterozygosity. C) our ability to measure the rate of evolution. D) relative fitness. E) gene diversity.
answer
d
question
Which describes an African butterfly species that exists in two strikingly different color patterns? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) disruptive selection E) sexual selection
answer
d
question
Which describes brightly colored peacocks mating more frequently than drab peacocks? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) disruptive selection E) sexual selection
answer
e
question
Most Swiss starlings produce four to five eggs in each clutch. Those producing fewer or more than this have reduced fitness. Which of the following terms best describes this? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) disruptive selection E) sexual selection
answer
c
question
Fossil evidence indicates that horses have gradually increased in size over geologic time. Which of the following terms best describes this? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) disruptive selection E) sexual selection
answer
b
question
The average birth weight for human babies is about 3 kg. Which of the following terms best describes this? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) disruptive selection E) sexual selection
answer
c
question
A certain species of land snail exists as either a cream color or a solid brown color. Intermediate individuals are relatively rare. Which of the following terms best describes this? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) disruptive selection E) sexual selection
answer
d
question
Cattle breeders have improved the quality of meat over the years by which process? A) artificial selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) A and B E) A and C
answer
d
question
The recessive allele that causes phenylketonuria (PKU) is harmful, except when an infant使s diet lacks the amino acid, phenylalanine. What maintains the presence of this harmful allele in a population使s gene pool? A) heterozygote advantage B) stabilizing selection C) diploidy D) balancing selection
answer
c
question
Mules are relatively long-lived and hardy organisms that cannot, generally speaking, perform successful meiosis. Consequently, which statement about mules is true? A) They have a relative evolutionary fitness of zero. B) Their offspring have less genetic variation than the parents. C) Mutations cannot occur in their genomes. D) If crossing-over happens in mules, then it must be limited to prophase of mitosis. E) When two mules interbreed, genetic recombination cannot occur by meiotic crossing over, but only by the act of fertilization.
answer
a
question
Heterozygote advantage should be most closely linked to which of the following? A) sexual selection B) stabilizing selection C) random selection D) directional selection E) disruptive selection
answer
b
question
In seedcracker finches from Cameroon, small- and large-billed birds specialize in cracking soft and hard seeds, respectively. If long-term climatic change resulted in all seeds becoming hard, what type of selection would then operate on the finch population? A) disruptive selection B) directional selection C) stabilizing selection D) sexual selection E) No selection would operate because the population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium.
answer
b
question
What is true of the trait whose frequency distribution in a large population appears above? It has probably undergone A) directional selection. B) stabilizing selection. C) disruptive selection. D) sexual selection. E) random selection.
answer
b
question
If the curve shifts to the left or to the right, there is no gene flow, and the population size consequently increases over successive generations, then which of these is (are) probably occurring? 1. immigration or emigration 2. directional selection 3. adaptation 4. genetic drift 5. disruptive selection A) 1 only B) 4 only C) 2 and 3 D) 4 and 5 E) 1, 2, and 3
answer
c
question
Male satin bowerbirds adorn structures that they build, called 屎bowers,屎 with parrot feathers, flowers, and other bizarre ornaments in order to attract females. Females inspect the bowers and, if suitably impressed, allow males to mate with them. The evolution of this male behavior is due to A) frequency-dependent selection. B) artificial selection. C) sexual selection. D) natural selection. E) disruptive selection.
answer
c
question
When imbalances occur in the sex ratio of sexual species that have two sexes (i.e., other than a 50:50 ratio), the members of the minority sex often receive a greater proportion of care and resources from parents than do the offspring of the majority sex. This is most clearly an example of A) sexual selection. B) disruptive selection. C) balancing selection. D) stabilizing selection. E) frequency-dependent selection.
answer
e
question
The same gene that causes various coat patterns in wild and domesticated cats also causes the cross -eyed condition in these cats, the cross-eyed condition being slightly maladaptive. In a hypothetical environment, the coat pattern that is associated with crossed eyes is highly adaptive, with the result that both the coat pattern and the cross-eyed condition increase in a feline population over time. Which statement is supported by these observations? A) Evolution is progressive and tends toward a more perfect population. B) Phenotype is often the result of compromise. C) Natural selection reduces the frequency of maladaptive genes in populations over the course of time. D) Polygenic inheritance is generally maladaptive, and should become less common in future generations. E) In all environments, coat pattern is a more important survival factor than is eye-muscle tone.
answer
b
question
A proficient engineer can easily design skeletal structures that are more functional than those currently found in the forelimbs of such diverse mammals as horses, whales, and bats. That the actual forelimbs of these mammals do not seem to be optimally arranged is because A) natural selection has not had sufficient time to create the optimal design in each case, but will do so given enough time. B) natural selection operates in ways that are beyond the capability of the human mind to comprehend. C) in many cases, phenotype is not merely determined by genotype, but by the environment as well. D) though we may not consider the fit between the current skeletal arrangements and their functions excellent, we should not doubt that natural selection ultimately produces the best design. E) natural selection is generally limited to modifying structures that were present in previous generations and in previous species.
answer
e
question
There are those who claim that the theory of evolution cannot be true because the apes, which are supposed to be closely related to humans, do not likewise share the same large brains, capacity for complicated speech, and tool-making capability. They reason that if these features are generally beneficial, then the apes should have evolved them as well. Which of these provides the best argument against this misconception? A) Advantageous alleles do not arise on demand. B) A population使s evolution is limited by historical constraints. C) Adaptations are often compromises. D) Evolution can be influenced by environmental change.
answer
a
question
A fruit fly population has a gene with two alleles, A1 and A2. Tests show that 70% of the gametes produced in the population contain the A1 allele. If the population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, what proportion of the flies carry both A1 and A2? A) 0.7 B) 0.49 C) 0.21 D) 0.42 E) 0.09
answer
d
question
There are 40 individuals in population 1, all of which have genotype A1A1, and there are 25 individuals in population 2, all of genotype A2A2. Assume that these populations are located far from one another and that their environmental conditions are very similar. Based on the information given here, the observed genetic variation is mostly likely an example of A) genetic drift. B) gene flow. C) disruptive selection. D) discrete variation. E) directional selection.
answer
a
question
Natural selection changes allele frequencies in populations because some __________ survive and reproduce more successfully than others. A) alleles B) loci C) gene pools D) species E) individuals
answer
e
question
No two people are genetically identical, except for identical twins. The chief cause of genetic variation among human individuals is A) new mutations that occurred in the preceding generation. B) the reshuffling of alleles in sexual reproduction. C) genetic drift due to the small size of the population. D) geographic variation within the population. E) environmental effects.
answer
b
question
Sparrows with average-sized wings survive severe storms better than those with longer or shorter wings, illustrating A) the bottleneck effect. B) stabilizing selection. C) frequency-dependent selection. D) neutral variation. E) disruptive selection.
answer
b
question
inter
answer
between
question
intra
answer
within
question
micro
answer
small
question
gene duplication
answer
Humans have an estimated 1,000 olfactory receptor genes. This is most likely a result of _________.
question
sexual reproduction
answer
What provides the genetic variation found in plant and animal population?
question
directional selection
answer
A plant population is found in an area that is becoming more arid. The average surface area of leaves has been decreasing over generations. This trend is an example of _______.
question
relative number of viable offspring
answer
What describes an organism's relative fitness?
question
individuals
answer
Natural selection changes allele frequencies because some ______ survive and reproduce more successfully than others.
question
stabilizing selection
answer
Sparrows with average-sized wings survive severe storms better than those with longer or shorter wings, illustrating ________
question
Pathogenic bacteria found in many hospitals are antibiotic resistant.
answer
B. directional selection
question
Cattle breeders have improved the quality of meat over the years by which process?
answer
c. stabilizing selection
question
The allele that causes phenylketonuria (PKU) is harmful, except when an infant's diet lacks the amino acid, phenylalanine. What maintains the presence of this harmful allele in a population's gene pool?
answer
b. stabilizing selection
question
Mules are relatively long-lived and hardy organisms that cannot, generally speaking, perform successful meiosis. Which statement about mules is true?
answer
a. They have a relative evolutionary fitness of zero.
question
Heterozygote advantage should be most closely linked to which of the following?
answer
b. stabilizing selection
question
In equatorial Africa, all of the following factors contribute to keeping the sickle-cell allele at a high frequency in the population, except
answer
E) frequency-dependent selection.
question
Which statement about variation is most true?
answer
D) All new alleles are the result of nucleotide variability.
question
If long-term climatic change resulted in all seeds becoming hard, what type of selection would then operate on the finch population?
answer
b. directional selection
question
What is true of the trait whose frequency distribution in a large population appears above? It has probably undergone
answer
b. stabilizing selection.
question
If the unimodal distribution shown above becomes a bimodal distribution over time, then
answer
B) a situation of balanced polymorphism may be produced.
question
If the curve shifts to the left or to the right, there is no gene flow, and the population size consequently increases over successive generations, then which of these is (are) probably occurring?
answer
c. 2 and 3
question
Male satin bowerbirds adorn structures that they build, called "bowers," with parrot feathers, flowers, and other bizarre ornaments in order to attract females. Females inspect the bowers and, if suitably impressed, allow males to mate with them, after which they go off to nest by themselves. The evolution of this behavior is best described as due to
answer
c. sexual selection.
question
In many animal species, mature males are much larger than mature females. This size difference can be attributed to
answer
E) A, B, and C
question
Adult male vervet monkeys have red penises and blue scrotums. Males use their colorful genitalia in dominance displays wherein they compete with each other for access to females. The coloration of the male genitalia is best explained as the result of ____, and specifically of ____.
answer
C) sexual selection; intrasexual selection
question
Which of the following is most likely to have been produced by sexual selection?
answer
A) a male lion's mane
question
When imbalances occur in the sex ratio of sexual species that have two sexes (i.e., other than a 50:50 ratio), the members of the minority sex often receive a greater proportion of care and resources from parents than do the offspring of the majority sex. This is most clearly an example of
answer
e. frequency-dependent selection.
question
Female wasps, which are protected by the use of a painful stinger, often make their presence conspicuous by rapidly moving their usually long antennae. These wasps are often mimicked by flies with short antennae who give the appearance of rapidly moving long antennae by waving their forelegs in front of their bodies. Which of the following statements concerning this behavior is not consistent with current evolutionary theory?
answer
D) Given enough time, these flies will develop longer antennae and become perfect mimics.
question
The same gene that causes various coat patterns in wild and domesticated cats also causes the cross-eyed condition in these cats, the cross-eyed condition being slightly maladaptive. In a hypothetical environment, the coat pattern that is associated with crossed eyes is highly adaptive, with the result that both the coat pattern and the cross-eyed condition increase in a feline population over time. Which statement is best supported by these observations?
answer
b. Phenotype is often the result of compromise.
question
A proficient engineer can easily design skeletal structures that are more functional than those currently found in the forelimbs of such diverse mammals as horses, whales, and bats. That the actual forelimbs of these mammals do not seem to be optimally arranged is because
answer
e. natural selection is generally limited to modifying structures that were present in previous generations and in previous species.
question
Gene flow is a concept best used to describe an exchange between
answer
c. populations.
question
Which of these is closest to the allele frequency in the founding population?
answer
a. 0.1 a, 0.9 A
question
If one assumes that Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium applies to the population of colonists on this planet, about how many people will have attached earlobes when the planet's population reaches 10,000?
answer
a. 100
question
If four of the original colonists died before they produced offspring, the ratios of genotypes could be quite different in the subsequent generations. This is an example of
answer
c. genetic drift.
question
A trend toward the decrease in the size of plants on the slopes of mountains as altitudes increase is an example of
answer
a. a cline.
question
Which of the following is one important evolutionary feature of the diploid condition?
answer
D) Diploid organisms express less of their genetic variability than haploid organisms.
question
The outcome of the conflict between bacteria and bacteriophage at any point in time results from
answer
a. frequency-dependent selection.
question
Over the course of evolutionary time, what should occur?
answer
d. Methylated and nonmethylated strains should be maintained among both bacteria and bacteriophages, with ratios that vary over time.
question
The Darwinian fitness of an individual is measured by
answer
a. the number of its offspring that survive to reproduce.
question
If a phenotypic polymorphism lacks a genetic component, then
answer
B) natural selection cannot act upon it to make a population better adapted over the course of generations.
question
When we say that an individual organism has a greater fitness than another individual, we specifically mean that the organism
answer
e. leaves more viable offspring than others of its species.
question
Which of the following statements best summarizes evolution as it is viewed today?
answer
e. It is the differential survival and reproduction of the most fit phenotypes.
question
The higher the proportion of loci that are "fixed" in a population, the lower is that population's
answer
D) A, B, and C
question
If neutral variation is truly "neutral," then it should have no effect on
answer
d. relative fitness.
question
An African butterfly species exists in two strikingly different color patterns
answer
D. disruptive selection
question
Brightly colored peacocks mate more frequently than do drab peacocks.
answer
E. sexual selection
question
Most Swiss starlings produce four to five eggs in each clutch.
answer
C. stabilizing selection
question
Fossil evidence indicates that horses have gradually increased in size over geologic time
answer
B. directional selection
question
The average birth weight for human babies is about 3 kg.
answer
C. stabilizing selection
question
A certain species of land snail exists as either a cream color or a solid brown color. Intermediate individuals are relatively rare.
answer
D. disruptive selection
question
Which of the following is the best example of humans undergoing evolution, understood as "descent with modification"?
answer
a. reduction in the amount and coarseness of body hair over millennia
question
Which statement best describes how the evolution of pesticide resistance occurs in a population of insects?
answer
d. A number of genetically resistant pesticide survivors reproduce. The next generation of insects contains more genes from the survivors than it does from susceptible individuals.
question
DDT was once considered a "silver bullet" that would permanently eradicate insect pests. Today, instead, DDT is largely useless against many insects. What would need to be true for pest eradication efforts to have been successful in the long run?
answer
d. All individual insects should have possessed genomes that made them susceptible to DDT.
question
Some members of a photosynthetic plant species are genetically resistant to an herbicide, while other members of the same species are not resistant to the herbicide. Maintaining resistance against the herbicide is metabolically expensive for the plants. Which combination of events should cause the most effective replacement of the non-herbicide-resistant strain of plants by the resistant strain?
answer
d. 1, 3, and 6
question
If 3TC resistance is costly for HIV, then which plot (I-IV) best represents the response of a strain of 3TC-resistant HIV over time, if 3TC administration begins at the time indicated by the arrow?
answer
c. III
question
Of the following anatomical structures, which is homologous to the wing of a bat?
answer
e. arm of a human
question
If two modern organisms are distantly related in an evolutionary sense, then one should expect that
answer
b. they should share fewer homologous structures than two more closely related organisms.
question
Structures as different as human arms, bat wings, and dolphin flippers contain many of the same bones, these bones having developed from the same embryonic tissues. How do biologists interpret these similarities?
answer
d. A and C only
question
Human intestines are held in place by membranes called mesenteries. In bipedal humans, it would be logical for these mesenteries to be attached to the rib cage. Instead, they are attached to the backbone, as they are in quadrupedal mammals. Because of this arrangement, human mesenteries have a tendency to tear more often than mesenteries in other mammals, as frequently observed among truck drivers and jackhammer operators. The same evolutionary modification that causes increased susceptibility to torn mesenteries is responsible for
answer
c. back and knee problems.
question
As adults, certain species of whales possess baleen instead of teeth. Baleen is used to filter the whales' diet of planktonic animals from seawater. As embryos, baleen whales possess teeth, which are later replaced by baleen. The teeth of embryonic baleen whales are evidence that
answer
c. baleen whales are descendants of toothed whales.
question
Over evolutionary time, many cave-dwelling organisms have lost their eyes. Tapeworms have lost their digestive systems. Whales have lost their hind limbs. How can natural selection account for these losses?
answer
c. Under particular circumstances that persisted for long periods, each of these structures presented greater costs than benefits.
question
Which of the following pieces of evidence most strongly supports the common origin of all life on Earth?
answer
b. All organisms use essentially the same genetic code.
question
What would be the best technique for determining the evolutionary relationships among several closely related species, each of which still contains living members?
answer
e. DNA or RNA analysis
question
Logically, which of these should cast the most doubt on the relationships depicted by an evolutionary tree?
answer
e. DNA sequence evidence fully disagreed with morphological evidence.
question
Members of two different species possess a similar-looking structure that they use in a similar fashion to perform the same function. Which information would shed the most light on whether these structures are homologous or whether they are, instead, the result of convergent evolution?
answer
b. The two species share many proteins in common, and the nucleotide sequences that code for these proteins are almost identical.
question
Ichthyosaurs were aquatic dinosaurs. Fossils show us that they had dorsal fins and tails just as fish do, even though their closest relatives were terrestrial reptiles that had neither dorsal fins nor aquatic tails. The dorsal fins and tails of ichthyosaurs and fish are
answer
e. B and C only
question
It has been observed that organisms on islands are different from, but closely related to, similar forms found on the nearest continent. This is taken as evidence that
answer
a. island forms and mainland forms descended from common ancestors.
question
Monkeys of South and Central America have prehensile tails, meaning that their tails can be used to grasp objects. The tails of African and Asian monkeys are not prehensile. Which discipline is most likely to provide an explanation for how this difference in tails came about?
answer
b. biogeography
question
The theory of evolution is most accurately described as
answer
d. an overarching explanation, supported by much evidence, for how populations change over time.
question
An event that describes the idea of catastrophism
answer
The sudden demise of the dinosaurs, and various other groups, by the impact of a large extraterrestrial body with Earth
question
the prevailing notion prior to the time of Lyell and Darwin
answer
Earth is a few thousand years old, and populations are unchanging
question
During a study session about evolution, one of your fellow students remarks, "The giraffe stretched its neck while reaching for higher leaves; its offspring inherited longer necks as a result." What decription is most likely to be helpful in correcting this student's misconception?
answer
Characteristics acquired during an organism's life are generally not passed on through genes.
question
In the mid-1900s, the Soviet geneticist Lysenko believed that his winter wheat plants, exposed to ever-colder temperatures, would eventually give rise to ever more cold-tolerant winter wheat. Lysenko's attempts in this regard were most in agreement with the ideas of...
answer
Lamarck.
question
In Darwin's thinking, the more closely related two different organisms are, the...
answer
more recently they shared a common ancestor
question
Natural selection is not based on
answer
individuals adapt to their environments and, thereby, evolve.
question
Natural selection is based on all of the following
answer
genetic variation exists within populations. the best-adapted individuals tend to leave the most offspring. individuals who survive longer tend to leave more offspring than those who die young. populations tend to produce more individuals than the environment can support.
question
During drought years on the Galapagos, small, easily eaten seeds become rare, leaving mostly large, hard-cased seeds that only birds with large beaks can eat. If a drought persists for several years, what should one expect to result from natural selection?
answer
More small-beaked birds dying than larger-beaked birds. The offspring produced in subsequent generations have a higher percentage of birds with large beaks.
question
Today, DDT is largely useless against many insects. Which of these would have been required for this pest eradication effort to be successful in the long run?
answer
None of the individual insects should have possessed genomes that made them resistant to DDT.
question
Logically, what should have casted the most doubt on the relationships depicted by an evolutionary tree?
answer
Relationships between DNA sequences among the species did not match relationships between skeletal patterns.
question
Members of two different species possess a similar-looking structure that they use in a similar fashion to perform the same function. Which information would best help distinguish between an explanation based on homology versus one based on convergent evolution?
answer
The two species share many proteins in common, and the nucleotide sequences that code for these proteins are almost identical.
question
Structures as different as human arms, bat wings, and dolphin flippers contain many of the same bones, these bones having developed from very similar embryonic tissues. How do biologists interpret these similarities?
answer
By proposing that humans, bats, and dolphins share a common ancestor
question
the smallest unit that natural selection can change?
answer
a population's gene frequency
question
What is a TRUE statement concerning genetic variation?
answer
It must be present in a population before natural selection can act upon the population
question
You are studying three populations of birds. Population A has ten birds, of which one is brown (a recessive trait) and nine are red. Population B has 100 birds, of which ten are brown. Population C has 30 birds, and three of them are brown. In which population would it be LEAST likely would alter the frequency of the brown allele?
answer
Population B.
question
You are maintaining a small population of fruit flies in the laboratory by transferring the flies to a new culture bottle after each generation. After several generations, you notice that the viability of the flies has decreased greatly. Recognizing that small population size is likely to be linked to decreased viability, the best way to reverse this trend is to...
answer
cross your flies with flies from another lab
question
Over time, the movement of people on Earth has steadily increased. This has altered the course of human evolution by increasing the chance of...
answer
gene flow
question
Describe an African butterfly species that exists in two strikingly different color patterns within the same population?
answer
diversifying (disruptive) selection
question
What describes brightly colored peacocks mating more frequently than drab peacocks?
answer
sexual selection
question
Most Swiss starlings produce four to five eggs in each clutch. Those producing fewer or more than this have reduced fitness. What term best describes this?
answer
stabilizing selection
question
Fossil evidence indicates that horses have gradually increased in size over geologic time. What term best describes this?
answer
directional selection
question
Mules are relatively long-lived and hardy organisms that cannot, generally speaking, perform successful meiosis. Consequently, what is true statement about mules?
answer
They have a relative evolutionary fitness of zero
question
the fossil record.
answer
Catastrophism, meaning the regular occurrence of geological or meteorological disturbances (catastrophes), was Cuvier's attempt to explain the existence of
question
The sudden demise of the dinosaurs, and various other groups, by the impact of a large extraterrestrial body with Earth
answer
Which of the events described below agrees with the idea of catastrophism?
question
D
answer
The following questions refer to Figure 22.1, which shows an outcrop of sedimentary rock whose strata are labeled A-D. Surface A x B C D Figure 22.1 Which stratum should contain the greatest proportion of extinct organisms?
question
C
answer
The following questions refer to Figure 22.1, which shows an outcrop of sedimentary rock whose strata are labeled A-D. Surface A x B C D Figure 22.1 If "x" indicates the location of fossils of two closely related species, then fossils of their most-recent common ancestor are most likely to occur in which stratum?
question
Cuvier
answer
The following questions refer to Figure 22.1, which shows an outcrop of sedimentary rock whose strata are labeled A-D. Surface A x B C D Figure 22.1 Who would have proposed that the boundaries between each stratum mark the occurrence of different localized floods?
question
Hutton and Lyell
answer
The following questions refer to Figure 22.1, which shows an outcrop of sedimentary rock whose strata are labeled A-D. Surface A x B C D Figure 22.1 Which pair would have been likely to agree that strata such as those depicted here were deposited gradually over long periods of time by subtle mechanisms that are still at work?
question
a mechanism for evolution that was supported by evidence.
answer
Charles Darwin was the first person to propose
question
All variation between individuals is due only to environmental factors.
answer
Which of these conditions should completely prevent the occurrence of natural selection in a population over time?
question
individuals adapt to their environments and, thereby, evolve.
answer
Natural selection is based on all of the following except
question
2 4 1 3
answer
Given a population that contains genetic variation, what is the correct sequence of the following events, under the influence of natural selection? 1. Well-adapted individuals leave more offspring than do poorly adapted individuals. 2. A change occurs in the environment. 3. Genetic frequencies within the population change. 4. Poorly adapted individuals have decreased survivorship.
question
Subsequent generations of a population should have greater proportions of individuals that possess traits better suited for success in unchanging environments.
answer
Which of the following statements is an inference of natural selection?
question
an overarching explanation, supported by much evidence, for how populations change over time.
answer
The theory of evolution is most accurately described as