Campbell Biology In Focus
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780134203072
Author: Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Jane B. Reece
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 1.2, Problem 2CC
Explain why “editing” is an appropriate metaphor for how natural selection acts on a population’s heritable variation
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explain why “editing” is a metaphor for how naturalselection acts on a population’s heritable variation
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Natural selection predicts that two species that came from a common ancestor should have high degree of correlation in their genomes. what aspect (use) of correlation am I using when apply it for this purpose?
Chapter 1 Solutions
Campbell Biology In Focus
Ch. 1.1 - Starting with the molecular level in Figure 1.3,...Ch. 1.1 - Identify me theme or themes exemplified by (a) the...Ch. 1.1 - WHAT IF? For each theme discussed in this section...Ch. 1.2 - How is a mailing address analogous to biologys...Ch. 1.2 - Explain why editing is an appropriate metaphor for...Ch. 1.2 - DRAW IT Recent evidence indicates that fungi and...Ch. 1.3 - Contrast inductive reasoning with deductive...Ch. 1.3 - What qualitative observation led to the...Ch. 1.3 - Why is natural selection called a theory?Ch. 1.3 - How does science differ from technology?
Ch. 1 - All the organisms on your campus make up A. an...Ch. 1 - Which of the following best demonstrates the unity...Ch. 1 - Prob. 3TYUCh. 1 - Prob. 4TYUCh. 1 - Prob. 5TYUCh. 1 - DRAW IT With rough sketches, draw a biological...Ch. 1 - SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY Based on the results of the...Ch. 1 - Prob. 9TYUCh. 1 - FOCUS ON EVOLUTION In a short essay (100-150),...Ch. 1 - FOCUS ON INFORMATION A typical prokaryotic cell...Ch. 1 - SYNTHESI7F YOUR KNOWLEDGE Can you pick out the...
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- In this version of the simulation (500 population size; 500 carrying capacity), all fish are equally likely (though not 100% likely) to survive and reproduce. There are no mutations, nor are there any entering or leaving the population. When they reproduce, they choose a mate from the pool at random and produce ten offspring by chance with the probability of the offspring’s genotypes determined by the punnett square. What caused the allele frequencies to change and vary in the trials? (ex attached).arrow_forwardWhat is one important advantage of using environmental DNA (eDNA), instead of traditional field-based capture techniques, to study species distributions? 1.) For a given population density and sampling effort, eDNA has a higher probability of detecting a species if it is present. 2.) By looking at telomere length on the chromosomes found in an environmental DNA sample, researchers can gather information about the age distribution of organisms in a population. 3.) By looking at epigenetic marks on an environmental DNA sample, researchers can gather information about the health of the organisms in a population. 4.) All of the abovearrow_forwardAssume you are studying a population of ocean shrimp that reproduce asexually. You sequence the ocean shrimp and the species that is their closest living relative that reproduces sexually. You find that the asexually reproducing species has a higher number of mutations in the genome. This finding would provide support for which of the following ideas? Linkage disequilibrium Stabilizing selection Disruptive selection Muller's ratchetarrow_forward
- Describe natural selection and give an example of natural selection at work in a population. Please elaborate or explain in 10-15 sentences, please?arrow_forwardList the 3 types of constraints to explain why perfection is oftennot possible in natural populations. Provide an example of each.arrow_forwardThe evolution of a qualitative trait in reponse to natural selection is described by the following equation, R=h2 S a) What is h2 and what does it measure? b) Describe a study that would allow you to estimate h2 for a real populationarrow_forward
- Suppose that a population is at equilibrium between mutation and selection for a deleterious recessive allele, where s = 0.5 and μ = 10−5. What is the equilibrium frequency of the allele? What is the selection cost?arrow_forwardWhat is Darwinian fitness? What types of characteristics canpromote high fitness values? Give several examples.arrow_forwardFitness is, most correctly, a technical term. What does it mean? What two things do you suppose govern the rate of evolution by natural selection? Explain how Darwinian evolution can decrease and increase the frequency of an allele (or a more complex heritable trait, for that matter). Write it in an essay formarrow_forward
- Fitness is, most correctly, a technical term.What does it mean? What two things do u suppose govern the rate of evolution by natural selection? Explain how Darwinian evolution can decrease and increase the frequency of an allele (or a more complex heritable trait, for that matter).arrow_forwardWhat are some notes or take aways about this model? Model 1 – PopGen Fish Pond This model is an agent-based population genetics simulation. The program contains the tools to conduct virtual experiments violating all the assumptions of Hardy-Weinberg theory (small population, selection, mutation, migration, and non-random mating).arrow_forwardThe genetics research lab has sequenced a genomic region with 1000000 basepair of an unknown species. Consider that there is a difference between each pair of these sequences of about 200 basepairs. There is a mutation rate of 1x10^-6 and the generation time is 10 yrs. What is the effective population size of the species? Find the coalescent time.arrow_forward
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