Biology: The Unity and Diversity of Life (MindTap Course List)
14th Edition
ISBN: 9781305073951
Author: Cecie Starr, Ralph Taggart, Christine Evers, Lisa Starr
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Chapter 45, Problem 1DAA
Summary Introduction
To determine: The variation in
Introduction: Biological control agents are natural enemies (like predation, parasitism, and other methods) that are used to control pests (like weeds, insects, mites, nematodes and so on) in order to generate a pest-free yields. A biological control agent such as Thelohania solenopsae is a natural enemy of red imported fire ants. These microsporidians can decline the ant’s colony by infecting and shrinking the ovaries of the queen (the female, reproducing ants).
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Chapter 45 Solutions
Biology: The Unity and Diversity of Life (MindTap Course List)
Ch. 45 - The type of physical environment in which a...Ch. 45 - Which cannot be a symbiosis? a. mutualism b....Ch. 45 - Prob. 3SQCh. 45 - ______ can lead to resource partitioning. a....Ch. 45 - Prob. 5SQCh. 45 - Prob. 1DAACh. 45 - Prob. 2DAACh. 45 - Testing Biological Control Ant-decapitating phorid...Ch. 45 - Prob. 4DAACh. 45 - Lizards that eat flies they catch on the ground...
Ch. 45 - Prob. 7SQCh. 45 - With ______, one species evolves to look like...Ch. 45 - Growth of a forest in an abandoned corn field is...Ch. 45 - Prob. 10SQCh. 45 - If you remove a species from a community, the...Ch. 45 - Prob. 12SQCh. 45 - Prob. 13SQCh. 45 - Prob. 14SQCh. 45 - Prob. 15SQCh. 45 - With antibiotic resistance rising, researchers are...Ch. 45 - Flightless birds on islands often have relatives...
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- True or false? Some protists start out life with no nucleus.arrow_forwardMitochondria most likely evolved by ___________ . a photosynthetic cyanobacterium cytoskeletal elements endosymbiosis membrane proliferationarrow_forwardTesting Biological Control Biological control agents are used to battle red imported fire ants. Researchers have enlisted the help of Thelohania solenopsae, a natural enemy of the ants. This microsporidian (Section 23.4) is a parasite that infects ants and shrinks the ovaries of the colony's egg-producing female (the queen). As a result, a colony dwindles in numbers. Are these biological controls useful against imported fire ants? To find out, USDA scientists treated infested areas with either traditional pesticides or pesticides plus biological controls (both flies and the parasite). The scientists left some plots untreated as controls. FIGURE 45.16 shows the results. FIGURE 45.16 A comparison of two methods of controlling red imported fire ants. The graph shows the numbers of red imported fire ants over a 28-month period. Orange triangles represent untreated control plots. Green circles are plots treated with pesticides alone. Black squares are plots treated with pesticide and biological control agents (parasitoid flies and a microsporidian parasite). How did population size in the two types of treated plots change during this same interval?arrow_forward
- Testing Biological Control Biological control agents are used to battle red imported fire ants. Researchers have enlisted the help of Thelohania solenopsae, a natural enemy of the ants. This microsporidian (Section 23.4) is a parasite that infects ants and shrinks the ovaries of the colony's egg-producing female (the queen). As a result, a colony dwindles in numbers. Are these biological controls useful against imported fire ants? To find out, USDA scientists treated infested areas with either traditional pesticides or pesticides plus biological controls (both flies and the parasite). The scientists left some plots untreated as controls. FIGURE 45.16 shows the results. FIGURE 45.16 A comparison of two methods of controlling red imported fire ants. The graph shows the numbers of red imported fire ants over a 28-month period. Orange triangles represent untreated control plots. Green circles are plots treated with pesticides alone. Black squares are plots treated with pesticide and biological control agents (parasitoid flies and a microsporidian parasite). If this study had ended after the first year, would you conclude that biological controls had a major effect?arrow_forwardSubject: Microbiology The author of a general biology textbook writes in reference to the development of antibiotic resistance, “The speed at which bacteria reproduce ensures that sooner or later a mutant bacterium will appear that is able to resist the poison.” How might this mutant bacterial cell appear? Do you agree with the statement? Does this bode ill for the future use of antibiotics?arrow_forward( double-checking this to make sure it's okay) Draw the pathway new viruses must use to exit the cell. Start with the virus near the nucleus and end with the virus at the plasma membrane. Label the following in your drawing:-microtubules-specific motor proteins-plus and minus ends-nucleus-plasma membrane-anterograde or retrograde movementarrow_forward
- Cytokinesis in Plant Cellsarrow_forward12. Flagella in the cells __________ -two alternatives are correct -are found in the trachea to move dust particles away -are used in movement of the cell -are found in the lining of the intestinearrow_forwardIn a classic episode of Star Trek, a gigantic amoeba engulfs an entire starship. Spock blows the cell to bits before it has a chance to reproduce. Think of at least one problem a biologist would have with this particular scenario.arrow_forward
- Testing Biological Control Ant-decapitating phorid flies are just one of the biological control agents used to battle imported fire ants. Researchers have also enlisted the help of Thelohania solenopsae, another natural enemy of the ants. This microsporidian (Section 23.4) is a parasite that infects ants and shrinks the ovaries of the colony's egg-producing female (the queen). As a result, a colony dwindles in numbers and eventually dies out. Are these biological controls useful against imported fire ants? To find out, USDA scientists treated infested areas with either traditional pesticides or pesticides plus biological controls (both flies and the parasite). The scientists left some plots untreated as controls. FIGURE 45.28 shows the results. FIGURE 45.28 A comparison of two methods of controlling red imported fire ants. The graph shows numbers of imported fire ants over a 28-month period Orange triangles represent untreated control plots. Green circles are plots treated with pesticides alone Black squares are plots treated with pesticide and biological control agents (phorid flies along with a microsporidian parasite). 3. If this study had ended after the first year, would you conclude that biological controls had a major effect?arrow_forwardThree differences in archael and bacterial cell envelope membranes and 2 differences in the cell wallarrow_forwardTHE PERMEABILITY OF THE CELL MEMBRANE (shell-less eggs) What could cause such changes in the egg? Is there any chance you could still return the eggs to its original form? How can you do this?arrow_forward
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