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Biological Diversity Review Questions Answer all questions in complete sentences on a separate piece of paper. Section 1.0 1. How is a population related to a community? Refer to a pond environment to illustrate your answer. A population refers to a group of individuals of the same species (such as a group of Northern Pike) but a community is when two or more populations of different species live in one area. 2. 7. Describe one major threat to biological diversity. Human – pollution, urbanization, habitat destruction Natural – catastrophic events, overspecialization, over-population which leads to increased competition. What is genetic diversity? Genetic diversity refers to the differences in the DNA of one species. For example – some people have a trait for brown eyes, some for blue, ect. 3. Using an example, explain how species are dependent on many other species in their environments. In a forest ecosystem a squirrel is dependent on the trees for shelter and food. It is also dependent on the fox to be its predator so its population number stays controlled so that there is an appropriate amount of competition between squirrels for shelter and food. 4. What is a niche? Describe the niche of a wolf in the Canadian Rockies. A niche is the role an organism has in its environment. A wolf is a predator and higher-level consumer in the food web. It is able to travel a great distance within the Rockies and has few predators. It eats caribou and travels in packs. 5. In parasitism, how does the parasite depend on its host for survival? The parasite depends on the host for its nutrient supply. The parasite benefits and the host is harmed. An example would be a tick surviving on the blood from a deer. 6. Why is the niche a species occupies so important to survival? The niche a species occupies determines what resources are available and what threats might exist to it. Picture for topic 2 number 12 Section 2.0 8. What is similar about sperm cells and egg cells? What is different? Sperm and eggs cells are gametes(sex cells). They contain half of the chromosome number that a body cell contains. They are different in that one is a male sex cell and one is a female sex cell. 9. What is a zygote? A zygote is a fertilized eggHow is it formed?When the sperm cell and the egg cell unite. 10. Differentiate between heritable and non-heritable characteristics. Provide examples of each type. Heritable – traits that you obtain from your DNA (passed down from generations). Example – hair colour Non – Heritable : Traits that you have to learn or acquire. For example – learning another language. 11. Outline the path of development in animals from gametes to embryo. Sperm fertilizes egg cell – zygote is formed – cleavage(cell division) – continued cell division – embryo formed. 12. Sketch the parts of a flower that are involved in reproduction. Describe how each part functions in crossfertilization. The pollen from one plant is transferred to the stigma of another plant 13. What form of asexual reproduction do yeast cells use and how does it work?Budding – asexual reproduction where a small version of the parent cell is formed and then can detach and exist independently. 14. Explain the difference between asexual and sexual reproduction and the advantages and disadvantages of each in terms of biological diversity. Both sexual and asexual reproduction produces a new individual in the breeding species. Asexual reproduction differs from sexual reproduction in that it only involves one parent whereas sexual reproduction involves two parents. Asexual reproduction also differs in that it produces an offspring with the exact same characteristics as the parent. Sexual reproduction produces offspring with characteristics of both parents. The advantages of asexual reproduction include not needing specialized cells and producing many offspring quickly where as sexual reproduction produces offspring with lots of variation. The disadvantages of asexual reproduction is that there is no variation in the offspring and the disadvantage of sexual reproduction is that it takes a lot of energy and there are limited number of offspring produced. 15. Compare the different types of asexual reproduction. The types of asexual reproduction are binary fission, budding, spore production and vegetative reproduction. Binary fission occurs in one-celled organisms such as amoebas when they split in two to produce two identical individuals. Budding occurs in organisms such as yeast where it produces a smaller version of itself that will eventually become a new individual identical to the parent. Ferns are organisms the reproduce through spore production, which produce seed-like individuals from the division of the parent that will eventually develop into a new individual identical to the parent. Vegetative reproduction occurs when a plant reproduce through a runner, a sucker, or a cutting, such as plucking a leaf from an African violet and sticking it in dirt will produce a new plant identical to the plant the leaf was plucked from. Section 3.0 16. What is meant by the term “genetic code”? DNA – is made of 4 bases (guanine, adenine, cytosine and thymine) and the arrangement/order of these bases determines the instructions for that cell. 17. Explain the relationship among DNA, genes, and chromosomes. The DNA molecule makes up genes and genes are located on the chromosomes. DNA, genes and chromosomes are all located in a cell’s nucleus. The roll of DNA, genes and chromosomes in the transmission of genetic information begins with the duplication of the DNA, genes and chromosomes. The cell splits and only half of the chromosomes, with the genetic information, are passed to the offspring so the offspring receives genetic information from both parents. 18. Explain why sex cells need to contain only half the DNA of body cells. The male sex cell (sperm) and the female sex cell (egg) unit to form the zygote; therefore, we each sex cell only needs to have half the total amount of DNA. The sperm contains half and the egg contains half and together they contain the whole amount. 19. Describe how a hybrid black cat differs from a purebred black cat. A hybrid black cat would have a dominant and a recessive allele (Bb) whereas the purebred cat would have two of the same (BBtwo dominant) or (bb – two recessive). 20. Using words or a diagram, describe the processes of mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis happens in . In mitosis, one cell divides to form cells. In mitosis, each new cell has number and type of Daughter cells chromosomes as the original cell. Meiosis happens in . In meiosis, one cell divides to form cells. In meiosis, each new cell has the number of chromosomes as the original cell. 21. How does binary fission differ from meiosis? Binary fission is the same as mitosis – where the cell duplicates its DNA, the DNA lines up, and then the cell splits (only one cell division with 2 daughter cells with the full amount of DNA). In meiosis, the cell divides twice and there are 4 daughter cells with half the DNA. Section 4.0 22. Summarize the differences between extinction and extirpation. Give one example of each. Extinction and extirpation are both the disappearance of a species. When a species no longer exists anywhere on the planet it is extinct while a species has only disappeared from a certain area it is extirpated. The Dodo is extinct as it no longer exists on Earth, while the Blackfooted ferret is gone from the southern prairies only so it is extirpated. 23. Describe what environmental factors are contributing to the increased rate of extinction currently being observed. Lack of food from overpopulation, catastrophic events, habitat destruction, disease, overspecialization, overhunting, introduction of invasive species, pesticide/herbicide use 24. Explain the effect that technology used in the livestock industry, such as artificial insemination, has on the genetic variation of domesticated animals such as cattle and sheep. Using only the “best” traits leads to a lack of biodiversity making herds susceptible to diseases, inbreeding may be a result of calves from the same genes mating. 25. Identify at least four different ways that human activity affects plant and animal species and provide examples of each. Overhunting – reduction in the buffalo/bison population. Habitat destruction – blackfooted ferret being extirpated. Introduction of non-native invasive species – purple loosestrife taking over. Pesticide/herbicide use – makes herbicide resistant weeds. 26. Compare and contrast genetic engineering with other types of reproductive technology. Genetic engineering is similar to artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization as it is a way to “improve” organisms or produce organisms with the traits we want. However, genetic engineering involves taking DNA and altering it or inserting it into another organism, while both artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization does not change the DNA or an organism or insert it into a different organism. 27. Describe three examples of genetic engineering. Inserting a gene from one species into another – glowing monkeys, duplicating the DNA to create a clone of the organism – Dolly, altering the DNA to “fix” problems. Important Terminology Biological Diversity Unit Exam The following terms are important for you to know and understand for the upcoming unit exam: Biological Diversity Abiotic/Biotic Factors Ecosystem Symbiotic Relationships (Commensalism/Mutualism/Parasitism) Interspecies Competition Resource Partitioning Variation Niche Habitat Natural Selection/Artificial Selection Heritable/Non-heritable characteristics Asexual reproduction (budding/binary fission/spore production/vegetative reproduction(cuttings)) Sexual Reproduction Ova/Gametes/Zygote/Embryo/Cleavage/Sperm Cells Cross Pollination Cross Fertilization DNA Nucleus Thymine/Adenine/Guanine/Cytosine Allele/Gene/Chromosome Mitosis/Meiosis – reference page 47 of textbook Purebred/Hybrid Dominant/Recessive/Incomplete Dominance Overspecialization Extirpated/Extinct/Threatened/Special Concern COSEWIC Cloning/In Vitro Fertilization/Genetic Engineering/Selective Breeding To be successful on this unit exam please study your: Notes Textbook Check and Reflect Questions Review Questions Projects (ecosystem, Asexual reproduction, DNA relationship and Extinct/Extirpated organism newsletter)