* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 15
The Selfish Gene wikipedia , lookup
Hologenome theory of evolution wikipedia , lookup
Theistic evolution wikipedia , lookup
Evidence of common descent wikipedia , lookup
Inclusive fitness wikipedia , lookup
Saltation (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Vestigiality wikipedia , lookup
Sexual selection wikipedia , lookup
Genetics and the Origin of Species wikipedia , lookup
Koinophilia wikipedia , lookup
Natural selection wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 15 True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. ____ 1. A vestigial structure in one organism can be defined as a reduced form of a functional structure. ____ 2. Natural selection is based on the concepts of excess reproduction, variation, inheritance, and the advantages of certain traits. ____ 3. Darwin developed his theory of evolution after returning home from his work on the Galapagos Islands. ____ 4. Fossils, although interesting, do not actually provide evidence of evolution. ____ 5. Homologous structures indicate a shared ancestry, while vestigial structures do not. ____ 6. Animals with different mating behaviors are postzygotically isolated. ____ 7. Australian animals are examples of geographic isolation. ____ 8. The theory of natural selection says that change will not occur in a population unless the population is isolated. ____ 9. Any change in the allelic frequencies in a population that is due to chance is called founder effect. ____ 10. A population of ants declines to a very low number. When the ants’ habitat is turned into a picnic area for humans, the additional food causes the much smaller population of ants to rebound. This is an example of natural selection. ____ 11. A mutation is a random change in genetic material and is the source of variation needed for change. ____ 12. Humans born with either below-normal or above-normal birth weights have a lower chance of survival than those born with average birth weights. Consequently, birth weights vary little in human populations. This form of natural selection is called directional selection. ____ 13. Embryos of different organisms exhibit homologous structures during certain phases of development that become totally different structures in adult forms. This indicates that organisms evolved from different ancestors. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. ____ 14. Within a decade of the introduction of a new insecticide, nearly all of the descendants of the target insects are resistant to the usual-sized dose. What is the most likely explanation for this change in susceptibility to the insecticide? a. Eating the insecticide caused the insects to become more resistant to it. b. Eating the insecticide caused the insects to become less resistant to it. c. The pesticide destroyed organisms that cause disease in the insects, thus allowing them to live longer. d. The insects developed physiological adaptations to the insecticide. ____ 15. Which answer best shows an animal's adaptation to the tropical rain forest? a. camouflage in a tree frog c. an elephant's long trunk b. the long neck of a giraffe d. migration of birds in winter ____ 16. Which combination of characteristics in a population would provide the greatest potential for evolutionary change? a. small population, few mutations c. large population, few mutations b. small population, many mutations d. large population, many mutations ____ 17. When investigating shell color of a species of snail found only in a remote area seldom visited by humans, scientists discovered the distribution of individuals that is shown in the graph in Figure 15-1. Based on the information shown in the graph, what form of selection is the snail population undergoing? Figure 15-1 a. stabilizing selection b. disruptive selection c. artificial selection d. directional selection ____ 18. What type of adaptation is shown in Figure 15-2? (Walking Stick insect shown on branch) Figure 15-2 a. mimicry b. camouflage c. artificial selection d. homologous structure Figure 15-4 ____ 19. Which type of natural selection showed in Figure 15-4 favors average individuals? a. A c. C b. B d. D ____ 20. Which type of natural selection shown in Figure 15-4 would favor giraffes that need to reach the tallest branches to eat? a. A c. C b. B d. D ____ 21. How do fossils demonstrate evidence of evolution? a. They show that ancient species share similarities with species now on Earth. b. They show evidence of species that are now extinct. c. They are the primary source of evidence of natural selection. d. Fossils reveal that many species have remained unchanged for millions of years. ____ 22. Which of the following is an accurate comparison of derived traits and ancestral traits? a. Derived traits result from artificial selection; ancestral traits result from natural selection. b. Derived traits appear in species; ancestral traits appear in genera or higher taxa. c. Derived traits are primitive; ancestral traits are contemporary. d. Derived traits are recent features; ancestral traits are more primitive features. ____ 23. Which of the following is the explanation of why bird wings and reptile forelegs are evidence of evolution? a. Similar functions point to a common ancestor. b. Analogous structures indicate a common ancestor. c. Vestigial structures point to a common ancestor. d. Homologous structures indicate a common ancestor. ____ 24. Superficially similar features molded by natural selection in very different species are classified as what kind of structures? a. vestigial c. analogous b. homologous d. comparative ____ 25. A population diverges and becomes reproductively isolated. Which of the following is the best description of that phenomenon? a. speciation c. postzygotic isolation b. bottleneck d. sexual selection ____ 26. If a small population from one species is suddenly introduced into a new habitat, what might occur? a. habitat speciation c. founder effect b. coevolution d. stabilizing selection ____ 27. Which of the following is biochemical evidence for evolution? a. Embryonic human hemoglobin is different from adult human hemoglobin. b. Hemoglobin in humans can vary between different individuals. c. Human hemoglobin is more similar to chimp hemoglobin than mouse hemoglobin. d. Human hemoglobin is different than mouse hemoglobin. Completion Complete each statement. 28. Natural selection is the only mechanism of evolution that will lead to (adaptation or genetic drift). 29. Anatomically similar structures inherited from a common ancestor are called ____________________ structures. 30. The hip sockets in the pelvis of a whale is an example of a ____________________ structure. Problem - SELECT ONE TO WRITE A DETAILED WRITTEN RESPONSE TO. 31. An agricultural researcher has carried out a selection regime on corn plants in an attempt to increase the number of kernels per cob. The researcher is applying directional selection by choosing only the plants with the top 5% number of kernels per cob to be planted for the next generation. After 20 generations, the rate of increase in number of kernels per cob has declined greatly suggesting that selection is no longer working. Given what you know about the requirements for natural selection (artificial selection in this case), what do you suggest the researcher could do to continue increasing the numbers of kernels per cob? 32. A researcher is examining a population of butterflies in which there are two color types. One type of butterfly in this species has dark-colored wings, a second type has patterned wings with black and yellow colors. The two types are determined by two alleles at a single gene. The researcher finds that over several years, twice the number of pattern-winged butterflies are eaten by bird predators. The researcher identifies this as a form of natural selection against the pattern-winged allele. However, the researcher has also found that the frequency of the two types in the population is not changing over time. Given what you know about the factors that can cause evolution in a population, what should the researcher look into to explain the lack of change despite the strong natural selection? Evaluate the possibility that each of these is operating. Chapter 15 Answer Section TRUE/FALSE 1. ANS: T PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy B REF: 425 NAT: LS_3c TOP: 15-5 2. ANS: T PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C REF: 420 NAT: LS_3a STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-2 3. ANS: T To develop his understanding of evolution, Darwin used his studies on H.M.S. Beagle and the work that he did later after his return to England. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy B STA: II.1.4 TOP: 15-1 4. ANS: F Fossils provide strong evidence of evolution. REF: 420–422 PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy B REF: 423 NAT: LS_3c STA: III.4.1 TOP: 15-4 5. ANS: F Vestigial structures are homologous structures and both indicate a shared ancestry. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C NAT: LS_3c STA: III.4.1 TOP: 15-5 6. ANS: F Prezygotic isolation PTS: STA: 7. ANS: REF: 1 III.5.1 T 431–432 DIF: TOP: PTS: STA: REF: 424–425 Bloom's Taxonomy B REF: 427 15-7 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C II.1.3 TOP: 15-7 MODIFIED TRUE/FALSE 8. ANS: T REF: 431–432 STA: II.1.3 9. ANS: F, genetic drift PTS: 1 TOP: 15-7 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-7 10. ANS: F, a bottleneck REF: 433 PTS: STA: 11. ANS: REF: REF: 433 1 III.4.2 T 434 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy D TOP: 15-7 PTS: 1 NAT: LS_2c STA: III.3.3 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy B TOP: 15-7 12. ANS: F, stabilizing selection PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3a 13. ANS: F, common DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy E STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-8 REF: 434 PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3d DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C STA: III.1.1 TOP: 15-5 REF: 426 MULTIPLE CHOICE 14. ANS: D Over time, organisms often adapt to changes in the environment. In this case, the insects adapted to the insecticide and lost their initial susceptibility. Feedback A B C D You are thinking on the right track. Try to be a little more specific in your response. Would eating the insecticide be the actual cause? Did you consider all the variables? Good job! You are correct! PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level C REF: 428–430 NAT: LS_3a STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-3 15. ANS: A Some species have evolved morphological adaptations that allow them to blend in with their environments and therefore survive. Feedback A B C D Correct! Do giraffes live in tropical rainforests? Read the question again carefully. Read the information in the question carefully. D/No, try again! PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level C REF: 428 STA: III.5.1 TOP: 15-5 16. ANS: B Darwin’s theory of how traits change in a population over time includes the idea that variations can be inherited. Mutations in a small population would be inherited and passed to the next generation. The smaller the population and the more mutations, the more changes would happen in the population. Feedback A B C D Almost. Keep trying. Good job! You are correct! Think again. Would that cause the most changes? Try again. Read page 420 of your text. PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3a 17. ANS: D DIF: Bloom's Level C STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-7 REF: 420 If an extreme version of a trait makes an organism more fit, directional selection may occur. This form of selection increases the extreme versions of a trait in a population. Feedback A B C D Try again. Read page 435 in your text again. Good try. Read page 435 in your text again. Keep trying. Read page 435 to help with this concept. Correct! PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level C REF: 435 NAT: LS_3a STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-7 18. ANS: B Camouflage is an adaptation that allows species to blend in with the environment and therefore survive. Camouflage is an adaptation that allows species to reproduce. Feedback A B C D Mimicry is an adaptation, but not the one shown in Figure 15-2. Read page 428 again. Correct! No. Artificial selection isn't an adaptation. Read page 428 again Keep trying. Read page 428 again. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level A REF: 428 STA: III.5.1 TOP: 15-5 19. ANS: A Selected distribution would favor average individuals because they would not have extreme traits. Feedback A B C D Good job! Keep trying. Check out page 434 to understand this graph. Almost. Read page 434 for help. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level D REF: 434 NAT: LS_3a STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-7 20. ANS: C Natural selection acts to select the individuals that are best adapted for survival and reproduction. That concept is reflected in C. Feedback A B C D Not quite. Try again. No. Examine the graphs again and compare them to the information on page 434. Correct! Sorry. Read about the Hardy-Weinberg principle on page 434. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level D REF: 434 | 436 NAT: LS_3a STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-7 21. ANS: A Fossils are the main evidence of evolution because they show ancestors of modern species. Feedback A B C D Good job! You got it. Good try. Read page 423 in your text again. Keep trying. Read page 423 in your text again. Sorry. Fossils reveal much more than that. Read page 423 in your text again. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C REF: 423 NAT: LS_3c STA: III.4.1 TOP: 15-4 22. ANS: D Derived traits are recent features, such as feathers in vertebrates; ancestral traits are more primitive features, such as teeth in vertebrates. Feedback A B C D No. This isn't about natural selection or genetics. Read page 424 in your text again. No. Read page 424 in your text again. You are on the right track! Read page 424 in your text again. Correct! PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy D REF: 424 NAT: LS_3d TOP: 15-5 23. ANS: D Evolution predicts that an organism’s body parts are more likely to be modifications of ancestral body parts than new features. Feedback A B C D Try again. Read page 424 in your text again. You're on the right track. Read page 424 in your text again. Keep trying. Read page 424 in your text again. Correct! Nice work. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy D REF: 424 NAT: LS_3d STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-5 24. ANS: C Analogous structures are evidence of convergent evolution through natural selection. Feedback A B C D Try again. Read page 426 in your text again. This describes structures that are more than superficially similar. Correct! No. Read page 426 in your text again. PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3d 25. ANS: A DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C STA: III.5.1 TOP: 15-5 Feedback A B C Correct! Good try. Read page 438 in your text again. Try again. Read page 438 in your text again. REF: 426 D Incorrect. Keep trying. Read page 438 in your text again. PTS: 1 STA: III.4.2 26. ANS: C DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C TOP: 15-8 REF: 438 Feedback A B C D Keep trying! Read page 439 in your text again. Try again. Read page 439 in your text again Correct! Good try. Read page 439 in your text again PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy D REF: 439 NAT: LS_3b STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-7 27. ANS: C The structure of biochemical traits, such as protein structure, reflects the degree of relationship of different species in the same way that anatomical traits do. Feedback A B C D This is just an example of development. This is variation, there can be variation without evolution. That's right! Have a look at page 427 again. PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3c DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy F STA: III.4.1 TOP: 15-6 REF: 427 PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3a 29. ANS: homologous DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-2 REF: 421–422 PTS: 1 NAT: LS_3d 30. ANS: vestigial DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy C STA: III.4.1 TOP: 15-5 REF: 424 DIF: Bloom's Taxonomy D REF: 425 COMPLETION 28. ANS: adaptation PTS: 1 TOP: 15-5 PROBLEM 31. ANS: The researcher has probably exhausted all of the genetic variation for the trait. Heritable variation in a trait is one of the requirements for natural selection to work. To continue the experiment, the researcher could introduce new variation by introducing unrelated plants or by causing mutations in the corn plants. PTS: 1 DIF: Bloom's Level F REF: 420 | 435 NAT: LS_3a | IS_1a STA: II.1.3 TOP: 15-2 32. ANS: The factors that can cause evolution are natural selection, genetic drift, nonrandom mating, gene flow, and mutation. The researcher should look at each of the possibilities to determine whether it is working against natural selection. Natural selection might be the process working against selection through predation. There may be some other advantage to having the patterned wings. Mutation is probably occurring, but the rate is low and probably couldn’t stop the selection. Gene flow might be occurring from another population. Genetic drift might be occurring, although it should not always occur in the direction opposite to natural selection. Nonrandom mating might be the cause if pattern-winged butterflies mate more often and produce more offspring than dark-winged butterflies. PTS: 1 NAT: IS_1a DIF: Bloom's Level F STA: III.4.2 TOP: 15-3 REF: 431–436