Biology: Life on Earth
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780321729712
Author: Gerald Audesirk, Teresa Audesirk, Bruce E. Byers
Publisher: Benjamin Cummings
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Chapter 21, Problem 1AC
You are a geneticist working for a firm that specializes in plant
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Chapter 21 Solutions
Biology: Life on Earth
Ch. 21 - 1. Scientists hypothesize that the ancestors of...Ch. 21 - Plant adaptations to life on land include a(n)...Ch. 21 - 3. Seedless vascular plants must reproduce when...Ch. 21 - 4. Three groups of nonvascular plants are _______,...Ch. 21 - 1. What is meant by “alternation of generations”?...Ch. 21 - 2. Explain the evolutionary changes in plant...Ch. 21 - Describe evolutionary trends in the life cycles of...Ch. 21 - Prob. 4RQCh. 21 - List the structural adaptations necessary for the...Ch. 21 - The number of species of flowering plants is...
Ch. 21 - List the adaptations of gymnosperms that have...Ch. 21 - What is a pollen grain? What role has it played in...Ch. 21 - The majority of all plants are seed plants. What...Ch. 21 - You are a geneticist working for a firm that...Ch. 21 - 1. Prior to the development of synthetic drugs,...Ch. 21 - 2. Only a few hundred of the more than 200,000...
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- In the early 1990s, Carolyn Napoli and her colleagues were working on petunias, attempting to genetically engineer a variety with dark purple petals by introducing numerous copies of a gene that encodes purple pigment in the flower petals . Their thinking was that extra copies of the gene would cause more purple pigment to be produced and would result in a petunia with an even darker hue of purple. However, much to their surprise, many of the plants carrying extra copies of the purple gene were completely white or had only patches of color. Molecular analysis revealed that the amount of mRNA produced by the purple gene was reduced 50-fold in the engineered plants compared with wild-type plants. Somehow, the introduction of extra copies of the purple gene silenced both the introduced copies and the plant’s own purple genes. Provide a possible explanation for how the introduction of numerous copies of the purple gene silenced all copies of the purple gene.arrow_forwardWhat are some of the impacts of biotechnology on crop plants in the United States?arrow_forwardGenetic engineering of plants provides an opportunity to alter their properties or performance in order to improve upon their utility. Such technology may be used to modify the expression of genes already present in the plants, or to introduce new genes of other species with which the plant cannot be bred conventionally. In fact, humans have engaged in genetic manipulation for millennia, producing plant and animal varieties through selective breeding and hybridization that significantly modify genomes of organisms. How has this technology created novel genetic information by specific alteration of cloned genes? (provide an example). Why do you think modern genetic engineering, has met with so much opposition? Should some forms of genetic engineering be of greater concern than others? Explain. In your response provide a specific example from literature to describe the implications of this technology (good or bad).arrow_forward
- Golden rice is a genetically modified crop plant where the incorporated gene is meant for what?arrow_forwardAfter numerous herbaceous plants had their genomes sequenced, a woody plant finally joined the group, Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood). Give and explain three reasons why this specific tree was chosen. Give and explain two reasons for the importance of adding a woody plant to the list of completed plant genome sequences.arrow_forwardHow would you devise a screen for mutations in Arabidopsis that result in female gametophyte lethality? How would you screen for mutations in Arabidopsis that result in male gametophyte lethality?arrow_forward
- Consider the following hypothetical gene a plant g&T produces a protein that impacts the stem length. There are two alleles for GT which produces long stem and tea little tea which results in short stint. Which of the following genome types above would have a different pheno type? And what would the phenotype be for the genotype?arrow_forwardHow has the wild version of a avocado plant been modified for human consumption ? what parts of the plants have been modified from the wild version, and how---selective breeding, genetic modification? Explain.arrow_forwardThe farmer finds that many of the tallest corn plants are also very susceptible to a particular disease. How would the farmer design an experiment to find out if the genes for height are linked to the genes for resistance to the disease?arrow_forward
- In the early 1990s, Carolyn Napoli and her colleagues were working on petunias, attempting to genetically engineer a variety with dark purple petals by introducing numerous copies of a gene that encodes purple pigment in the flower petals (C. Napoli, C. Lemieux, and R. Jorgensen. 1990. Plant Cell 2:279–289). Their thinking was that extra copies of the gene would cause more purple pigment to be produced and would result in a petunia with an even darker hue of purple. However, much to their surprise, many of the plants carrying extra copies of the purple gene were completely white or had only patches of color. Molecular analysis revealed that the amount of mRNA produced by the purple gene was reduced 50-fold in the engineered plants compared with wild-type plants. Somehow, the introduction of extra copies of the purple gene silenced both the introduced copies and the plant’s own purple genes. Provide a possible explanation for how the introduction of numerous copies of the purple gene…arrow_forwardthis is an example of biotechnology: In order to increase the yield of oil from canola, research focused on ways to reduce competition from competitor weed plants. Weeds can be controlled by spraying with a herbicide that interferes with biological processes, like amino acid anabolic reactions, in the plant cells. A mutant of canola that is resistant to herbicides is sometimes grown in fields that are sprayed with the herbicide. The majority of canola in Canada, though, is genetically modified to be resistant to herbicides. also use the link: https://youtu.be/VS3kcwgIwm0 Question: Evaluating Biotechnologies in Food Systems As we practice being able to describe choices in Biology you will use this consolidation task to organize details about the advantages and disadvantages of biotechnologies. In an ideal world, all solutions to improving our food system would have no negative consequences. But issues in Biology involve the interaction of many different factors and changes in one…arrow_forwardFor what the genetically modified brinjal has been developed in india?arrow_forward
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