NCEA Level 2 Biology (91157) 2012 Assessment Schedule
... Gene pool is (all) the genes or alleles (held by the individuals) in a population. Mutation can be defined as a (permanent) change in the DNA. Somatic mutations occur in any cells of the body other than in the gametes Gametic mutations only occur in sex cells, eg, sperm /eggs (accept pollen). Explan ...
... Gene pool is (all) the genes or alleles (held by the individuals) in a population. Mutation can be defined as a (permanent) change in the DNA. Somatic mutations occur in any cells of the body other than in the gametes Gametic mutations only occur in sex cells, eg, sperm /eggs (accept pollen). Explan ...
Patterns of evolution worksheet answers
... chapter 17 over patterns of evolution, such as microevolution and macroevolution. Period: ______. Evolution Review Worksheet | Chapters 10 -12. True or False. Explain your answer:. Circle the letter of the TWO patterns that explain this. a. Patterns of evolution lesson plans and worksheets from thou ...
... chapter 17 over patterns of evolution, such as microevolution and macroevolution. Period: ______. Evolution Review Worksheet | Chapters 10 -12. True or False. Explain your answer:. Circle the letter of the TWO patterns that explain this. a. Patterns of evolution lesson plans and worksheets from thou ...
Theories of Aging - Molecular and Cell Biology
... Disposable Soma - Somatic cells are maintained only to ensure continued reproductive success, following reproduction the soma is disposable. (life span theory) ...
... Disposable Soma - Somatic cells are maintained only to ensure continued reproductive success, following reproduction the soma is disposable. (life span theory) ...
English 9 - Edmentum Support
... color pigment. Both of them are located on two different loci on different chromosomes. The flowers will be purple only when the plant has the genotypes as C_P_. No color will be produced with genotypes: ccPP, ccPp, CCpp, CCPp. Thus, gene C controls the expression of gene P. What pattern of inherita ...
... color pigment. Both of them are located on two different loci on different chromosomes. The flowers will be purple only when the plant has the genotypes as C_P_. No color will be produced with genotypes: ccPP, ccPp, CCpp, CCPp. Thus, gene C controls the expression of gene P. What pattern of inherita ...
“An instinct, unlike learned behavior, is a behavior under genetic
... nectar and pollen. Thousands of genes extracted from brains of honeybees of different ages, stamped onto glass slide, and their activity measured. ...
... nectar and pollen. Thousands of genes extracted from brains of honeybees of different ages, stamped onto glass slide, and their activity measured. ...
Chromosomal mutations
... (Turner’s Syndrome – Short Stature, sterility, other health complications are possible) ...
... (Turner’s Syndrome – Short Stature, sterility, other health complications are possible) ...
Biology 3 Study Guide
... is natural selection different from evolution? What are the four basic tenets of natural selection? What is directional selection and what impact does it have on a population? What is stabilizing selection and what impact does it have on a population? What is diversifying selection and what impact d ...
... is natural selection different from evolution? What are the four basic tenets of natural selection? What is directional selection and what impact does it have on a population? What is stabilizing selection and what impact does it have on a population? What is diversifying selection and what impact d ...
M. cardinalis
... alternate alleles at the YUP locus. a, b, M. lewisii; c, d, M. cardinalis.The wild-type allele at the YUP locus (a, c) has been substituted by introgression with the allele from the other species (b, d). Flowers in each NIL pair (a and b, c and d) are full ...
... alternate alleles at the YUP locus. a, b, M. lewisii; c, d, M. cardinalis.The wild-type allele at the YUP locus (a, c) has been substituted by introgression with the allele from the other species (b, d). Flowers in each NIL pair (a and b, c and d) are full ...
genetiC evidenCe for evolution - Origins
... Psuedogenes are broken or non-functional genes. Mammals have sweet receptor genes that allow them to taste that certain foods are sweet. It was recently discovered that in cats one of these sweet receptor genes is a pseudogene. Because cats have a pseudogene instead of a functioning gene, cats canno ...
... Psuedogenes are broken or non-functional genes. Mammals have sweet receptor genes that allow them to taste that certain foods are sweet. It was recently discovered that in cats one of these sweet receptor genes is a pseudogene. Because cats have a pseudogene instead of a functioning gene, cats canno ...
Human Development Fall 2011 Daily Questions Genetic Bases of
... 15. When your two alleles (one from each parent) don’t match, how do dominant and recessive genes determine what your phenotype will be? 16. What is incomplete dominance? What’s an example of incomplete dominance? 17. Most genetic disorders are inherited on a recessive gene. Why is it that more are ...
... 15. When your two alleles (one from each parent) don’t match, how do dominant and recessive genes determine what your phenotype will be? 16. What is incomplete dominance? What’s an example of incomplete dominance? 17. Most genetic disorders are inherited on a recessive gene. Why is it that more are ...
Chapter 35
... – A territory is an area, usually fixed in location, which individuals defend and from which other members of the same species are usually excluded – Territory behavior is a form of social behavior that partitions resources ...
... – A territory is an area, usually fixed in location, which individuals defend and from which other members of the same species are usually excluded – Territory behavior is a form of social behavior that partitions resources ...
Objectives
... Know what Lemarck’s hypothesis was, and why it is incorrect. Know what Lyell’s contributions to Darwin’s Theory were. Know what artificial selection is, and how it occurs. Know what sexual selection is, and how it occurs. Be able to reproduce Malthus’s graph. Know who came up with the Theory of Natu ...
... Know what Lemarck’s hypothesis was, and why it is incorrect. Know what Lyell’s contributions to Darwin’s Theory were. Know what artificial selection is, and how it occurs. Know what sexual selection is, and how it occurs. Be able to reproduce Malthus’s graph. Know who came up with the Theory of Natu ...
printer-friendly version of benchmark
... dogs are the same species (Canis familiaris) but exhibit incredible variation from the tiny Chihuahua to the enormous St. Bernard, from the hairless Chinese Crested Terrier to the long haired English Sheepdog, and from the intelligent Border Collies to the challenged Irish Setters. Recent mitochondr ...
... dogs are the same species (Canis familiaris) but exhibit incredible variation from the tiny Chihuahua to the enormous St. Bernard, from the hairless Chinese Crested Terrier to the long haired English Sheepdog, and from the intelligent Border Collies to the challenged Irish Setters. Recent mitochondr ...
population
... On the other hand, longevity may increase fitness if long-lived individuals leave more offspring than short-lived individuals. ...
... On the other hand, longevity may increase fitness if long-lived individuals leave more offspring than short-lived individuals. ...
Appendix S2.
... Appendix 2 Summary of gene representation and saturation in the phylogenetic analysis. In this appendix we provide a summary of representation for each gene, as well as an analysis of saturation by gene. Gene representation Even though the percent of species represented solely by mitochondrial genes ...
... Appendix 2 Summary of gene representation and saturation in the phylogenetic analysis. In this appendix we provide a summary of representation for each gene, as well as an analysis of saturation by gene. Gene representation Even though the percent of species represented solely by mitochondrial genes ...
Species, Variability, and Integration
... of a sexually reproducing species can exemplify (Okasha 2002, p. 196). Furthermore, we can have distinct species sharing a considerable array of genes. Thereby, the assumption that essences are genetic is empirically problematic because it fails to single out individual species. The argument present ...
... of a sexually reproducing species can exemplify (Okasha 2002, p. 196). Furthermore, we can have distinct species sharing a considerable array of genes. Thereby, the assumption that essences are genetic is empirically problematic because it fails to single out individual species. The argument present ...
originofspecies text - Everglades High School
... The strong preference of “starch flies” and “maltose flies” to mate with like-adapted flies, even if they were from different populations, indicates that a reproductive barrier is forming between the divergent populations of flies. The barrier is not absolute (some mating between starch flies and ma ...
... The strong preference of “starch flies” and “maltose flies” to mate with like-adapted flies, even if they were from different populations, indicates that a reproductive barrier is forming between the divergent populations of flies. The barrier is not absolute (some mating between starch flies and ma ...
Genetic disorders
... Detecting Human Genetic Disorders Advantage of both: - Physicians can detect more than _________________________________ Disadvantage of Amniocentesis: most conditions are incurable and the results ____________________________________ (abortion at this time is very difficult) Disadvantage of CV ...
... Detecting Human Genetic Disorders Advantage of both: - Physicians can detect more than _________________________________ Disadvantage of Amniocentesis: most conditions are incurable and the results ____________________________________ (abortion at this time is very difficult) Disadvantage of CV ...
Modern theory of evolution o Bottleneck Mutation
... What are the results of Natural Selection? r Natural selection causes deviations from Hardy Weinberg by changing allele frequenry. o Adaptations to living and physical conditions enables organisms to survive under a given set of conditions and live to reproduce Natural selection is a main cause of e ...
... What are the results of Natural Selection? r Natural selection causes deviations from Hardy Weinberg by changing allele frequenry. o Adaptations to living and physical conditions enables organisms to survive under a given set of conditions and live to reproduce Natural selection is a main cause of e ...
8.5 - Evolution of Australian Biota
... secondary sources and use available evidence to illustrate the changing ideas of scientists in the last 200 years about individual species such the platypus as new information and technologies become available. - Over the past 200 years, scientists‟ attitudes to the platypus has changed greatly - A ...
... secondary sources and use available evidence to illustrate the changing ideas of scientists in the last 200 years about individual species such the platypus as new information and technologies become available. - Over the past 200 years, scientists‟ attitudes to the platypus has changed greatly - A ...
Koinophilia
Koinophilia is an evolutionary hypothesis concerning sexual selection which proposes that animals seeking mate preferentially choose individuals with a minimum of unusual features. Koinophilia intends to explain the clustering of organisms into species and other issues described by Darwin's Dilemma. The term derives from the Greek, koinos, ""the usual"", and philos, ""fondness"".Natural selection causes beneficial inherited features to become more common and eventually replace their disadvantageous counterparts. A sexually-reproducing animal would be expected to avoid individuals with unusual features, and to prefer to mate with individuals displaying a predominance of common or average features. This means that mates displaying mutant features are also avoided. This is advantageous because most mutations that manifest themselves as changes in appearance, functionality or behavior, are disadvantageous. Because it is impossible to judge whether a new mutation is beneficial or not, koinophilic animals avoid them all, at the cost of avoiding the occasional beneficial mutation. Thus, koinophilia, although not infallible in its ability to distinguish fit from unfit mates, is a good strategy when choosing a mate. A koinophilic choice ensures that offspring are likely to inherit features that have been successful in the past.Koinophilia differs from assortative mating, where ""like prefers like"". If like preferred like, leucistic animals (such as white peacocks) would be sexually attracted to one another, and a leucistic subspecies would come into being. Koinophilia predicts that this is unlikely because leucistic animals are attracted to the average in the same way as other animals. Since non-leucistic animals are not attracted by leucism, few leucistic individuals find mates, and leucistic lineages will rarely form.Koinophilia provides simple explanations for the rarity of speciation (in particular Darwin's Dilemma), evolutionary stasis, punctuated equilibria, and the evolution of cooperation. Koinophilia might also contribute to the maintenance of sexual reproduction, preventing its reversion to the much simpler and inherently more advantageous asexual form of reproduction.The koinophilia hypothesis is supported by research into the physical attractiveness of human faces by Judith Langlois and her co-workers. They found that the average of two human faces was more attractive than either of the faces from which that average was derived. The more faces (of the same gender and age) that were used in the averaging process the more attractive and appealing the average face became. This work into averageness supports koinophilia as an explanation of what constitutes a beautiful face, and how the individuality of a face is recognized.