Instructions: From the list below, select the type of reproductive barrier used to maintain species for each of the provided examples. Be aware, some barriers may not be used at all and others may be used more than once. Do not make assumptions, read each example carefully. Hybrid Inviability Hybrid Infertility Spatial Behavioral Mechanical Temporal Gamete Incompability Hybrid Breakdown EXAMPLE BARRIER Two mules mate but never produce offspring Lions (Africa) and tigers (Asia) in the wild An owl (active at night) and a blue jay (active during the day) Why a plant cannot fertilize itself One fish species attracts a mate by humming and a second species by creating an patch of seaweed A goat and a sheep reproduce but the embryo never develops | The reproductive openings of one species are 3 mm apart but in a second species the are 7 mm apart

Human Anatomy & Physiology (11th Edition)
11th Edition
ISBN:9780134580999
Author:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Publisher:Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Chapter1: The Human Body: An Orientation
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1RQ: The correct sequence of levels forming the structural hierarchy is A. (a) organ, organ system,...
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**Instructions:**

From the list below, select the type of reproductive barrier used to maintain species for each of the provided examples. Be aware, some barriers may not be used at all and others may be used more than once. Do not make assumptions, read each example carefully.

- Hybrid Inviability
- Hybrid Infertility
- Spatial
- Behavioral
- Mechanical
- Temporal
- Gamete Incompatibility
- Hybrid Breakdown

| **EXAMPLE**                                                                                 | **BARRIER**                |
|---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|----------------------------|
| Two mules mate but never produce offspring                                                  |                            |
| Lions (Africa) and tigers (Asia) in the wild                                                |                            |
| An owl (active at night) and a blue jay (active during the day)                             |                            |
| Why a plant cannot fertilize itself                                                         |                            |
| One fish species attracts a mate by humming and a second species by creating a patch of seaweed |                            |
| A goat and a sheep reproduce but the embryo never develops                                  |                            |
| The reproductive openings of one species are 3 mm apart but in a second species they are 7 mm apart |                            |

There are no graphs or diagrams in this content. The table lists examples of reproductive barriers and provides a blank space for identifying the type of barrier associated with each example.
Transcribed Image Text:**Instructions:** From the list below, select the type of reproductive barrier used to maintain species for each of the provided examples. Be aware, some barriers may not be used at all and others may be used more than once. Do not make assumptions, read each example carefully. - Hybrid Inviability - Hybrid Infertility - Spatial - Behavioral - Mechanical - Temporal - Gamete Incompatibility - Hybrid Breakdown | **EXAMPLE** | **BARRIER** | |---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|----------------------------| | Two mules mate but never produce offspring | | | Lions (Africa) and tigers (Asia) in the wild | | | An owl (active at night) and a blue jay (active during the day) | | | Why a plant cannot fertilize itself | | | One fish species attracts a mate by humming and a second species by creating a patch of seaweed | | | A goat and a sheep reproduce but the embryo never develops | | | The reproductive openings of one species are 3 mm apart but in a second species they are 7 mm apart | | There are no graphs or diagrams in this content. The table lists examples of reproductive barriers and provides a blank space for identifying the type of barrier associated with each example.
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