Exam 23: The Evolution of Populations
Exam 1: Evolution, the Themes of Biology, and Scientific Inquiry51 Questions
Exam 2: The Chemical Context of Life61 Questions
Exam 3: Water and Life55 Questions
Exam 4: Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life58 Questions
Exam 5: The Structure and Function of Large Biological Molecules70 Questions
Exam 6: A Tour of the Cell66 Questions
Exam 7: Membrane Structure and Function68 Questions
Exam 8: An Introduction to Metabolism67 Questions
Exam 9: Cellular Respiration and Fermentation68 Questions
Exam 10: Photosynthesis65 Questions
Exam 11: Cell Communication65 Questions
Exam 12: The Cell Cycle66 Questions
Exam 13: Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles64 Questions
Exam 14: Mendel and the Gene Idea62 Questions
Exam 15: The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance58 Questions
Exam 16: The Molecular Basis of Inheritance65 Questions
Exam 17: Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein67 Questions
Exam 18: Regulation of Gene Expression66 Questions
Exam 19: Viruses54 Questions
Exam 20: DNA Tools and Biotechnology57 Questions
Exam 21: Genomes and Their Evolution44 Questions
Exam 22: Descent with Modification: A Darwinian View of Life60 Questions
Exam 23: The Evolution of Populations64 Questions
Exam 24: The Origin of Species67 Questions
Exam 25: The History of Life on Earth59 Questions
Exam 26: Phylogeny and the Tree of Life75 Questions
Exam 27: Bacteria and Archaea75 Questions
Exam 28: Protists79 Questions
Exam 29: Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land82 Questions
Exam 30: Plant Diversity II: The Evolution of Seed Plants80 Questions
Exam 31: Fungi75 Questions
Exam 32: An Overview of Animal Diversity67 Questions
Exam 33: An Introduction to Invertebrates83 Questions
Exam 34: The Origin and Evolution of Vertebrates82 Questions
Exam 35: Vascular Plant Structure, Growth, and Development65 Questions
Exam 36: Resource Acquisition and Transport in Vascular Plants74 Questions
Exam 37: Soil and Plant Nutrition52 Questions
Exam 38: Angiosperm Reproduction and Biotechnology60 Questions
Exam 39: Plant Responses to Internal and External Signals61 Questions
Exam 40: Basic Principles of Animal Form and Function68 Questions
Exam 41: Animal Nutrition64 Questions
Exam 42: Circulation and Gas Exchange67 Questions
Exam 43: The Immune System69 Questions
Exam 44: Osmoregulation and Excretion64 Questions
Exam 45: Hormones and the Endocrine System66 Questions
Exam 46: Animal Reproduction68 Questions
Exam 47: Animal Development70 Questions
Exam 48: Neurons, Synapses, and Signaling68 Questions
Exam 49: Nervous Systems65 Questions
Exam 50: Sensory and Motor Mechanisms67 Questions
Exam 51: Animal Behavior69 Questions
Exam 52: An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere68 Questions
Exam 53: Population Ecology69 Questions
Exam 54: Community Ecology71 Questions
Exam 55: Ecosystems and Restoration Ecology68 Questions
Exam 56: Conservation Biology and Global Change69 Questions
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No two people are genetically identical, except for identical twins. The main source of genetic variation among humans is
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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. Over the course of evolutionary time, what should occur?
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D
You sample a population of butterflies and find that 56% are heterozygous at a particular locus. What should be the frequency of the homozygous individuals in this population?
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Correct Answer:
D
In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that are in equilibrium, the frequency of the allele a is 0.3. What is the frequency of individuals that are homozygous for this allele?
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If individuals tend to mate within a subset of the population, there is ________.
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In 1986, a nuclear power accident in Chernobyl, USSR (now Ukraine), led to high radiation levels for miles surrounding the plant. The high levels of radiation caused elevated mutation rates in the surviving organisms, and evolutionary biologists have been studying rodent populations in the Chernobyl area ever since.
Based on your understanding of evolutionary mechanisms, which of the following most likely occurred in the rodent populations following the accident?
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Most Swiss starlings produce four to five eggs in each clutch. Starlings producing fewer or more than this have reduced fitness. Which of the following terms best describes this situation?
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Adult male humans generally have deeper voices than do adult female humans, which is 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 ________.
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The inability of organisms to evolve anything that could be an advantage reflects ________.
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HIV's genome of RNA includes the 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.
Which mechanism produces variation for evolution by shuffling existing alleles?
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Suppose 64% of a remote mountain village can taste phenylthiocarbamide (PTC) and must, therefore, have at least one copy of the dominant PTC taster allele. If this population conforms to Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium for this gene, what percentage of the population must be heterozygous for this trait?
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The Dunkers are a religious group that moved from Germany to Pennsylvania in the mid-1700s. They do not marry with members outside their own immediate community. Today, the Dunkers are genetically unique and differ in gene frequencies, at many loci, from all other populations including those in their original homeland.
Which of the following mechanisms likely explains the genetic uniqueness of this population?
(Multiple Choice)
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Anopheles mosquitoes, which carry the malaria parasite, cannot live above elevations of 5,900 feet. In addition, oxygen availability decreases with higher altitude. Consider a hypothetical human population that is adapted to life on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, a country in equatorial Africa. Mt. Kilimanjaro's base is about 2,600 feet above sea level and its peak is 19,341 feet above sea level. If the incidence of the sickle-cell allele in the population is plotted against altitude (feet above sea level), which of the following distributions is most likely, assuming little migration of people up or down the mountain?
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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 trait (aa), 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 allele A in the gene pool?
(Multiple Choice)
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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 bacteriophages at any point in time results from ________.
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Which Hardy-Weinberg condition is affected by population size?
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Soon after the island of Hawaii rose above the sea surface (somewhat less than one million years ago), the evolution of life on this new island should have been most strongly influenced by ________.

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Which of the following is the best modern definition of evolution?
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