All AP Biology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Understanding Mendel
Gregor Mendel, an Augustinian friar, studied genetics through what types of experiments?
Crossbreeding pea plants
Studying museum specimens
Calculated economic impact of population growth
Studying finches
Crossbreeding pea plants
Gregor Mendel studied genetics through the crossbreeding of pea plants. Through his studies, he proposed laws of heredity (the law of segregation, the law of independent assortment, and the law of dominance), that are now called the laws of Mendelian inheritance. Darwin famously studied finches on the Galapagos Islands.
Example Question #21 : Theorists And Evidence
If two heterozygous yellow plants are mated with one another, what percent of the offspring will be yellow? Assume complete dominance.
Heterozygous organisms carry one dominant allele and one recessive allele. The dominant allele is expressed over the recessive allele, giving the organism the dominant phenotype. If the heterozygous plants in the question are yellow, then we can conclude that yellow is dominant to some other phenotype (not given).
The cross for these two plants would be:
Parents: Yy (yellow) x Yy (yellow)
Offspring: YY (yellow), Yy (yellow), Yy (yellow), yy (other/unknown)
Three of the four possible offspring will show the dominant yellow phenotype, leading to the answer: 75%.
Example Question #13 : Understanding Mendel
Which of the following concepts was not discovered by the scientist Gregor Mendel?
Alleles for different traits are passed down from parents to offspring independently from each other.
The likelihood of alleles for different traits being inherited together is based on how close together those alleles are on the chromosome.
The effects of recessive alleles are masked by the presence of dominant alleles.
Organisms have two alleles for each trait, one allele from each parent.
The traits of organisms are determined by factors inherited from their parents.
The likelihood of alleles for different traits being inherited together is based on how close together those alleles are on the chromosome.
The overall idea that Mendel was studying was that organisms have two alleles per trait, and that each parent passes down one allele. The other answers refer to Mendel’s laws: the Law of Segregation, the Law of Independent Assortment, and the Law of Dominance. Mendel was unaware of genetic linkage, which is an exception to the Law of Independent Assortment. We know this to be true because chromosomes and DNA had not yet been discovered in his time.
Example Question #14 : Understanding Mendel
Gregor Mendel’s major contribution to the study of inheritance was to show that __________.
individual particles in various combinations can produce traits
DNA exists
dominant alleles appear more in male pea plants than in female pea plants
a dominant allele is stronger than a recessive allele
individual particles in various combinations can produce traits
Gregor Mendel's famous work on pea plants built our first understandings of inheritance. He identified that "discrete particles", which we now call genes and alleles, are passed to offspring in numerous of combinations. These different combinations create variation in a population.
Example Question #1 : Understanding Other Theorists
The sum of all genetic alleles in a population is the __________.
gene supply
gene stock
gene pool
gene frequency
gene resources
gene pool
A population is composed of numerous individuals, each carrying a common set of genes with a unique combination of genetic alleles. The gene pool is the sum of all of these alleles.
Example Question #2 : Understanding Other Theorists
Which term refers to the relative proportions of a specific allele in relation to all alleles for the given gene in a population?
Allele coefficient
Allele population
Allele amount
Allele concentration
Allele frequency
Allele frequency
The allele frequency for any given gene is the relative proportion of each allele of that gene in a population. This value can be found by dividing the number of a specific allele by the total number of alleles in a population.
Example Question #3 : Understanding Other Theorists
Mutation, gene flow, nonrandom mating, and natural selection combine to cause which of the following?
Genetic drift
Evolution
Reproduction
Mutations
Segregation
Evolution
Evolution is any change in the proportions of different genotypes in a population from one generation to the next. Mutation, geneflow, nonrandom mating, and natural selection all contribute toward favoring certain alleles over others within a population. This leads to changes in allele frequency, and subsequent evolution.
Example Question #4 : Understanding Other Theorists
The requirements for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium are designed to create which scenario for the given population?
Divergency will occur
Evolution will not occur
Nonrandom mating will flourish
Mutations will be common
Extinction is eminent
Evolution will not occur
The Hardy-Weinberg principle is a mathematical model that states that, under certain conditions, the allele frequencies and genotype frequencies in a sexually reproducing population will remain constant over generations. This consistency means that evolution is not occurring, as evolution (by definition) requires a change in allele frequency.
Requirements for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium include: large population size, no mutation, no migration, random mating, and no natural selection.
Example Question #5 : Understanding Other Theorists
A process in which chance events are likely to change allele frequencies in a small population is known as __________.
evolution
allele fluctuation
bottleneck effect
genetic drift
natural selection
genetic drift
Genetic drift is a change in the allele frequencies of a small population purely by chance.
The bottleneck effect occurs when allele frequencies are affected by a cataclysmic event. Evolution refers to a change in allele frequency, but is not limited to small populations or random chance. Natural selection refers to changes in allele frequency due to specific conditions, as opposed to random chance.
Example Question #6 : Understanding Other Theorists
Which of the following are characteristics that help an individual survive and reproduce in an environment?
Traits
Mutations
Skills
Adaptations
Habits
Adaptations
An adaptation is a characteristic of an organism that helps it survive and reproduce in a particular environment. Adaptations are the result of random mutations that have favorable outcomes. The favorability of these traits enables offspring that inherit them to thrive, thus increasing their prevalence in the population.
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