Cengage Advantage Books: Biology: The Dynamic Science, Loose-leaf Version
Cengage Advantage Books: Biology: The Dynamic Science, Loose-leaf Version
4th Edition
ISBN: 9781305655911
Author: Peter J. Russell, Paul E. Hertz, Beverly McMillan
Publisher: Brooks Cole
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Chapter 21, Problem 14TYK

Apply Evolutionary Thinking Captive breeding programs for endangered species often have access to a limited supply of animals for a breeding stock. As a result, their offspring are at risk of being highly inbred. Why and how might zoological gardens and conservation organizations avoid or minimize inbreeding?

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A population of interbreeding birds has been split by a geological event after which the isolated part of the population started to evolve into an incipient species with different mating rituals. Due to a recent environmental change the two populations are now able to potentially mate again in what is called a hybrid zone. Mating does take place every now and then but the hybrid offspring appear less able to survive. As a consequence, mating rituals start to diverge even further. We call this process of continued divergence? O Fusion O Behavioral isolation Reinforcement O Postzygotic isolation O Stability
Consider the following hypothetical scenario involving giraffes. A population of giraffes is composed of individuals of varying neck lengths, i.e., some giraffes have long necks, others have short necks, and some are in-between. Neck length in giraffes is a heritable trait, i.e., offspring have necks similar to their parents due to them inheriting genes from their parents. Within this population, there is competition for resources (leaves to eat). Long-necked giraffes are able to consume more leaves than short or medium-necked giraffes because they can reach leaves that are higher up in the canopy. Therefore, long-necked giraffes, in the current generation, have begun to survive and reproduce more often than giraffes with short or medium necks. https://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange1/current/lectures/selection/selection.html (you can also search “natural selection Michigan” to find this helpful website) If you read between the lines…the above paragraph tells…
Threatened species often have small, isolated populations where mating between relatives occurs. Let's assume one of these threatened species has a disease controlled by a gene that has two alleles A and a. Only individuals with two copies of the "a" allele have the disease and die before reproducing.  Question:  What are the effects of inbreeding on the frequency of the "a" allele, and the frequency of the disease in the population?

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Cengage Advantage Books: Biology: The Dynamic Science, Loose-leaf Version

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