EBK BIOLOGY
EBK BIOLOGY
6th Edition
ISBN: 9780134819150
Author: Maier
Publisher: VST
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Chapter 13, Problem 8LTB

All of the following statements support the hypothesis that humans cannot be classified into biological races except.

  1. There is more genetic diversity within a racial group than average differences between racial groups;
  2. Alleles that are common in one population in a racial group may be uncommon in other populations of the same race;
  3. Geneticists can use particular SNP alleles to identify the ancestral group(s) of any individual human;
  4. There are no alleles found in all members of a given racial group;
  5. There is genetic evidence of mixing among human populations occurring thousands of years ago until the present.

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Which of the following are true about human variation? (Choose all that apply):   Group of answer choices   Genotype refers to how a person looks, through interaction of genes and environment.   Siblings are more like each other, genetically, than they are to either of their parents.   Usually, it is only identical twins (or sometimes triplets or other multiple births) who have identical DNA, and even so, there is still some phenotypic variation between them.   You could have genes for being tall, but if your mother (or even grandmother) had poor nutrition during fetal gestation, you could be shorter than your genes allow.   You can produce taller offspring by stretching and remembering to stand up as tall as you can.
Albinism is rare in most human populations, occurring at a frequency of about 1 in 20,000 people. However, the trait occurs at a frequency of 1 in 200 in certain Hopi villages of Black Mesa in Arizona. In light of this example and others that you might be aware of, what can you conclude about particular alleles such as the allele for albinism? Any allele that leads to an abnormal phenotype will be rare in most populations but common in Native American populations. Alleles that produce abnormal phenotypes are never beneficial. An allele that leads to an abnormal phenotype may be beneficial in some environments but harmful in others. An allele that leads to an abnormal phenotype will rise in frequency after many generations. An allele that leads to an abnormal phenotype will soon disappear from a population.
Selection confers a reproductive advantage to individuals based on their adaptations, and therefore causes the alleles carried by those individuals to increase in the population. Selection can be simulated by having your partner remove any three individuals of a particular suit as you deal the cards into a pile. The fitness of that variant is therefore 0.77 (10/13 survive), while the fitness of the other three variants remains at 1.0 (13/13 survive). Recalculate allelic (suit) frequencies after selection. 1. What is the effect of selection on reproduction, allelic diversity, and frequency? 2. What would happen if similar selection continued over several generations?   Cite references.
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Genetic Variation and Mutation | 9-1 GCSE Science Biology | OCR, AQA, Edexcel; Author: SnapRevise;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bLP8udGGfHU;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY