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Example Questions
Example Question #4 : Identify Evolutionary Change Mechanisms
Which type of selection is depicted by the graph if the solid line represents the original population and the dashed line is the population following selection?
Disruptive selection
Directional selection
Stabilizing selection
Artificial selection
Stabilizing selection
Stabilizing selection removes extreme variants, as they do not provide a survival advantage in a given environment, and increases the frequency of the intermediate phenotype. For example, the bone density of a species of bird is likely to experience stabilizing selection. Bones that are too dense will inhibit the bird's ability to fly, and bones that are too light will be brittle and prone to injury. Stabilizing selection moderates the influence of these two factors and selects for the intermediate phenotype that is neither too heavy, nor too weak.
Disruptive selection shows an increase the in the frequency of extreme traits and a decline in the intermediate trait. For example, if two extremes are white and black coloration, disruptive selection will act against grey coloration and favor both white and back. Directional selection favors only one extreme, for example favoring black over grey and grey over white. Artificial selection occurs when humans interfere with breeding habits to promote the inheritance of a specific trait.
Example Question #265 : Evolution And Genetics
The various species of Galapagos finches utilize their beaks to access food resources in many ways. Those with longer beaks use their beaks to penetrate cactus fruit and eat the inside, while those with short beaks tear apart the base of the cactus and eat insect larvae and pupae.
Finches with medium beak size feed on seeds. These birds aren't specialized to feed on insect larvae or cactus fruit like finches with short or long beaks. What type of selection would be observed if deforestation removed all the trees from the area where these birds obtained seeds?
Multi-directional selection
Sexual selection
Disruptive selection
Directional selection
Stabilizing selection
Disruptive selection
In this example the extreme beak sizes are favored over the mean; however the mean beak size does not change. There is selection against the mean, without affecting the value of the mean. This type of selection is known as disruptive selection.
Example Question #266 : Evolution And Genetics
Due to the abundance of blue-bellied lizards, they are easier for predators to find. Predators such as hawks become adapted to spotting these blue-bellied lizards and prey on them more frequently than yellow-bellied lizards. When the blue-bellied lizard population begins to decline, the yellow-bellied lizard population begins to rise (due to more abundant resources and the fact that they are preyed on less than the blue-bellies). Which of the following best describes the relationship between the two types of lizards?
Intersexual selection
Heterozygote advantage
Relative fitness
Frequency-dependent selection
Disruptive selection
Frequency-dependent selection
This relationship displays a frequency-dependent selection. Frequency-dependent selection occurs when the fitness of a phenotype depends on how common it is in the population. When blue-bellied lizards are preyed on the most because they are most abundant, the yellow-bellied lizard population grows quickly. However, as the blue-bellied lizard population declines, predators will begin to prey on the yellow-bellied lizards. As the yellow-bellied lizard population declines, the blue-bellied lizard population will increase, and so on. The number of blue or yellow-bellied lizards depends on the relative amount of lizards of a different phenotype, demonstrating frequency-dependent selection.
Example Question #5 : Identify Evolutionary Change Mechanisms
What is true regarding mutations?
All of these
Mutations may be harmful
Mutations are changes to a cell's genome
Duplications, inversions, and translocations are all types of mutations
All of these
Mutations are changes to a cell’s genome and include inversions, duplications, translocations, and deletions, among other unplanned changes to the DNA. Mutations can be harmful to the organism, but can also have beneficial or neutral impacts. Mutation is an important means of evolution because it introduces new genetic combinations into a genome, allowing for the potential of new functions.
Example Question #267 : Evolution And Genetics
Which of the following is not a type of mutation?
Insertion
Genetic drift
Inversion
Translocation
Genetic drift
Mutations are changes in a cell’s genomic DNA sequence. Types of mutation include insertion, deletion, translocation, inversion, and duplication. An insertion is the addition of a nucleotide somewhere in the DNA; a deletion is the opposite. A translocation mutation involves the physical movement of DNA segments, and can occur within a chromosome or between different chromosomes. Genetic drift, on the other hand, is a type of sampling error that leads to the perceived allele frequency changing among generations.
Example Question #268 : Evolution And Genetics
Horizontal gene transfer is an example of what mechanism of evolution?
Natural selection
Genetic drift
Gene flow
Mutation
Gene flow
Horizontal gene transfer is a method of transferring genetic material from one organism to another and is common among bacteria. Horizontal gene transfer is an example of gene flow, a mechanism of evolution that involves the flow of genes among populations, species, and organisms. Natural selection involves uneven survival and evolutionary fitness due to the advantages granted to certain individuals through genetic variation. A mutation is an unplanned change in the DNA sequence of a cell or organism. Genetic drift is the change in an allele frequency in a population due to random sampling.
Example Question #271 : Evolution And Genetics
Which of the following is true regarding the process of stabilizing selection?
It decreases genetic diversity
It has the same impact as disruptive selection
It increases genetic diversity
It favors individuals with extreme phenotypes
It decreases genetic diversity
Stabilizing selection is a type of selection that decreases genetic diversity and stabilizes an optimum trait. In this situation, there is selection against extreme phenotypes. It is the opposite of disruptive selection and similar to purifying selection.
Example Question #272 : Evolution And Genetics
Which of the following is true regarding the process of directional selection?
Allele frequency doesn't shift over time
One phenotypic extreme is selectively advantageous
It is the same as disruptive selection
Phenotype is pushed to both extremes
One phenotypic extreme is selectively advantageous
Directional selection is a type of natural selection in which one extreme phenotype is selectively advantageous. In other words, individuals with this trait are more likely to be reproductively successful. In this type of selection, one advantageous allele increases in frequency over time.
Example Question #273 : Evolution And Genetics
Which of the following is not true regarding the process of disruptive selection?
It favors extreme traits in the population
It increases genetic diversity
It is the opposite of stabilizing selection
It favors intermediates in the population
It favors intermediates in the population
Disruptive selection is a type of natural selection in which the extremes of a phenotype are favored. This means that there is active selection against intermediates. It increases genetic diversity and is the opposite of stabilizing selection.
Example Question #273 : Evolution And Genetics
Which of the following best describes what happens to the frequency of a certain allele in the process of positive selection?
It increases in frequency
It decreases in frequency
The allele disappears from the gene pool
There is no change in the allele's frequency
It increases in frequency
Positive selection is a type of natural selection in which the frequency of an allele increases.
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