CAMPBELL BIOLOGY SFC PACKAGE >CUSTOM<
CAMPBELL BIOLOGY SFC PACKAGE >CUSTOM<
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781269941860
Author: Campbell
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Chapter 15, Problem 11TYU

EVOLUTION CONNECTION Crossing over is thought to be evolutionarily advantageous because it continually shuffles genetic alleles into novel combinations. Until recently, it was thought that the genes on the Y chromosome might degenerate because they lack homologous genes on the X chromosome with which to pair up prior to crossing over. However, when the Y chromosome was sequenced, eight large regions were found to be internally homologous to each other, and quite a few of the 78 genes represent duplicates. (Y chromosome researcher David Page has called it a "hall of mirrors") Explain what might be a benefit of these regions.

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Progeny of triploid tomato plants often contain parts of an extra chromosome, in addition to the normal complement of 24 chromosomes . Mutantswith a part of an extra chromosome are referred to as secondaries. James and Margaret Lesley observed that secondaries arise from triploid (3 n), trisomic (3 n + 1), and double trisomic (3 n + 1 + 1) parents, but never from diploids (2 n). Give one or more possible reasons that secondaries arise from parents that have unpaired chromosomes but not from parents that are normal diploids.
Progeny of triploid tomato plants often contain parts of an extra chromosome, in addition to the normal complement of 24 chromosomes (J. W. Lesley and M. M. Lesley. 1929. Genetics 14:321–336). Mutants with a part of an extra chromosome are referred to as secondaries. James and Margaret Lesley observed that secondaries arise from triploid (3 n), trisomic (3 n + 1), and double trisomic (3 n + 1 + 1) parents, but never from diploids (2 n). Give one or more possible reasons that secondaries arise from parents that have unpaired chromosomes but not from parents that are normal diploids.
A cytogeneticist has collected tissue samples from members of a certain butterfly species. Some of the butterflies were located in Canada, and others were found in Mexico. Through karyotyping, the cytogeneticist discovered that chromosome 5 of the Canadian butterflies has a large inversion compared with chromosome 5 of the Mexican butterflies. The Canadian butterflies were inversion homozygotes, whereas the Mexican butterflies had two normal copies of chromosome 5. 1) Would a cross between Mexican and Canadian butterflies produce phenotypically normal offspring? and  2) Would the offspring of the cross (so F2 generation) be fertile?

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