GRE Subject Test: Biology : GRE Subject Test: Biology

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for GRE Subject Test: Biology

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Example Questions

Example Question #391 : Gre Subject Test: Biology

Genetic drift is a phenomenon by which __________ in a population change.

Possible Answers:

random mating

natural selection

mutation frequencies

allele frequencies 

Correct answer:

allele frequencies 

Explanation:

Genetic drift specifically refers to the change of allele frequencies because of random sampling of gametes. Essentially, this induces genetic bias for particular alleles and can lead to speciation events simply by the chance event of certain gametes producing offspring rather than others.

Changes in mutation frequencies, random mating, and natural selection may lead to changes in allele frequencies, but they are not necessarily the cause of genetic drift. 

Example Question #2 : Understanding Genetic Drift

Which of the following factors plays the biggest role in the impact of genetic drift on a population?

Possible Answers:

Immigration of animals

Mating preferences

Natural selection

Random chance

Correct answer:

Random chance

Explanation:

Genetic drift occurs when a gene's frequency is changed in a population due to pure chance. Consider a rock rolling down a hill and crushing all flowers that have white petals. The population will now have only red petals because the white ones were destroyed. Were the red petal flowers more suited to their environment? No, it just so happened that all of the white were removed from the gene pool. This shows that evolution can occur due to random chance as well as natural selection, and both forces can have an impact on a population.

Example Question #2 : Evolutionary Factors

Which of the following is an example of natural selection?

I.  Horses are bred for strength and endurance, and over time, the population of horses is more robust.

II.  A late spring storm kills all the young plants in a region, but they are spared outside the storm zone.

III.  Ancient ancestors of giraffes instinctively wanted to have longer necks to reach food higher in the trees, leading to the present appearance of giraffes.

IV.  A flower that happens to be more attractive to pollinators is more likely to have reproductive success. 

V.  A mutation of a bacterium caused by exposure to ultraviolet light causes the originally red colonies to be yellow instead.

Possible Answers:

IV

V

III

I

II

Correct answer:

IV

Explanation:

It is always difficult to rephrase "survival of the fittest" in some new, clever way. The flowers which BY CHANCE have developed a different color, pattern, or odor that better attracts pollinators are indeed more likely to experience reproductive success and pass on these genes to their offspring. Competing plants might do well for a while, but they are already disfavored, and further environmental changes may put them even more at risk (or have no effect, or again favor them over the presently more attractive plants).

The horse choice is an example of intentional breeding—artificial selection.

The storm option does not imply any condition in any of the plants which conferred an advantage against freezing to death, or even any difference between species of plants; it is more akin to a question about mass extinction than to one about evolution.

The giraffe choice relates to the Lamarckian fallacy of being able to pass on acquired characteristics; species that are more successful just plain "luck out" relative to environmental stresses.  

The bacterial response discusses a mutation without likely survival implications for the bacterium.

Example Question #3 : Evolutionary Factors

Vertebrates are evolutionarily adapted to terrestial life. Which one of the following adaptations is LEAST likely to contribute to this land-based predominance?

Possible Answers:

Impermeable outer skin

Development of legs

Short loops of Henle

Internal lungs

Internal fertilization

Correct answer:

Short loops of Henle

Explanation:

Vertebrates have adapted to terrestial living due to their ability to maintain water inside their bodies, despite no longer being immersed in water. The loop of Henle in the nephrons is designed to concentrate urine, reabsorbing water without unnecessarily excreting it. The longer the loops descend into the medulla, the more concentrated the urine becomes. Shorter loops would not concentrate urine as much, and thus would not contribute to a vertebrate's adaptation to land-based life.

Internal lungs, impermeable skin, and internal fertilization would all protect vital processes from interference by the external environment.

Example Question #1 : Evolution

Members of a species of red fox have teeth of varying sharpness. Foxes with very sharp teeth are able to kill large prey for food, while foxes with very dull, strong teeth are able to crush eggs and small animals. Foxes with teeth of medium sharpness, however, cannot get food and many die before they are able to reproduce. Over time, the fox population shows a greater proportion of individuals with either very sharp or very dull teeth. Which type of natural selection best describes this situation?

Possible Answers:

Artificial selection

Directional selection

Stabilizing selection

Vestigial selection

Disruptive selection

Correct answer:

Disruptive selection

Explanation:

In this scenario, the two extreme phenotypes are selected for, while intermediate phenotypes are selected against. This is disruptive natural selection. Over time, disruptive selection results in a decreased frequency of "middle" phenotypes and an increased frequency of the two groups at the extreme ends. This is a process that can eventually lead to speciation.

The opposite is process stabilizing selection, in which the extreme variations are selected against in favor of more "average" phenotypes. Directional selection occurs when only one end of the spectrum is favored, such as sharp teeth but not dull teeth. Artificial selection involves human intervention in selecting desirable traits. Vestigial selection is not a type of natural selection.

Example Question #1 : Understanding Natural Selection And Fitness

In a certain species of feline, all males are much larger than females. Members of either sex that are of intermediate size struggle to find mates. What principle best describes this phenomenon?

Possible Answers:

Bottleneck effect

Stabilizing selection

Disruptive selection

Directional selection

Genetic drift

Correct answer:

Disruptive selection

Explanation:

Large size is favored in males and small size is favored in females, but intermediate size is always disfavored. The result is an increase in the two extreme phenotypes (either large or small) and a decrease in the average phenotype. This type of trend is known as disruptive selection.

Stabilizing selection occurs when the extreme phenotypes are disfavored, and the average or intermediate phenotype is preferable. Directional selection occurs when only one extreme phenotype is advantageous, for example if only large felines were able to find mates. Genetic drift is the phenomenon by which the allele frequencies of a population change by chance, due to independent assortment or other random events. The bottleneck effect occurs when an outside event, such as disease or natural disaster, diminishes the original population such that the allele frequencies of the new population differ from those of the original.

Example Question #1 : Evolution

What is the definition of "fitness" in terms of evolution?

Possible Answers:

The ability of an organism to contribute its genes to future generations

The organism's ability to attract the most mates

The organism's ability to attain resources while in competition with other organisms of its species

The organism's health

The ability of an organism to survive its environment

Correct answer:

The ability of an organism to contribute its genes to future generations

Explanation:

An organism's evolutionary "fitness" depends on its ability to reproduce and create viable offspring, or contribute its genes to future generations.

Even if an organism is in perfect health, it is considered to have very low fitness if it cannot produce viable offspring. In an evolutionary sense, the perseverence of certain genes in a population defines the favorability of those genes. An increased prevalence of certain genes can be interpreted as evolution. The activities of a single individual (aside from reproductive viability) are relatively ineffective in determining its ability to pass on its genes to future generations.

Example Question #2 : Evolution

A certain class of protein is found to exist in several different species. The amino acid sequence of this protein is compared between a large number of species. The greatest number of amino acid differences will be found between species of different __________.

Possible Answers:

phyla

orders

families

genera

Correct answer:

phyla

Explanation:

The higher the taxonomic group, the less similar the members are. This is true for appearance, behavior, and genetics. The order of taxonomic groupings, from most general to most specific is: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species.

Of the given answers, phyla are the highest taxonomic rank. Species of different phyla would show the greatest genetic difference. In contrast, genera are the lowest taxonomic rank of the given answers; species of the same genus would show the least genetic difference.

Example Question #1 : Speciation

Which of the following is an example of convergent evolution?

Possible Answers:

Two different species independently gain the ability to fly

Two populations living in the same geographic region acquire enough differences to diverge into two separate species

A species regains a trait that an ancestor had previously lost

Two species merge together to form a single species

Correct answer:

Two different species independently gain the ability to fly

Explanation:

Convergent evolution is the phenomenon by which two separate species evolve a shared trait. A classic example of this is that both birds and bats have evolved wings, but do not share a common ancestor prior to the development of this trait. Birds and bats developed their wings separately through completely unique mechanisms.

A population diverging into two separate species while residing in the same area describes the phenomenon of sympatric speciation. A species regaining a trait is an example of evolutionary reversal. 

Example Question #2 : Speciation

An example of __________ is the speciation of Darwin's finches through the accumulation of many small, distinct traits.

Possible Answers:

divergent evolution

parsimony

artificial selection

convergent evolution

Correct answer:

divergent evolution

Explanation:

Convergent evolution is the phenomenon by which two species independently evolve a similar trait. An excellent example is the evolution of flight/wings in birds and bats, which do not share a common ancestor. Parsimony is a principle that guides scientific explanation toward simple terms, rather than eleborate principles. By parsimonious thinking, the simplest explanation is also the most likely to be true. Artificial selection is a form of evolution in which organisms are selected and bred for beneficial traits that would not necessarily be selected for in nature. Dog breeding and the production of numerous types of produce and grains are subject to artificial selection by humans (this is different from genetic modification).

Divergent evolution describes the accumulation of distinct traits that can lead to speciation events. A large population consists of a single ancestor species. Over time, different groups of the population come to inhabit different niches and develop traits for specialized inhabitance of that niche. As these changes accumulate, the population slowly develops distinct groups. When these groups can no longer reproduce due to some sexual barrier, a speciation event has occurred. This process aligns with the theory of evolution for Darwin's finches.

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