BIO 1406/07 BK/LAB/CODE PREPACK
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781265538590
Author: Raven
Publisher: MCG
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Textbook Question
Chapter 20.7, Problem 1LO
Define and contrast disruptive, directional, and stabilizing selection.
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We have learned that the response to selection is equal to the selection differential times the narrow-sense heritability, and that the narrowsense heritability includes only the additive genetic variance. Why aren’t the dominance genetic variance and the gene interaction variance included? Why don’t they contribute to the genetic variation that is acted on by selection?
How is the response to selection related to narrow-sense heritability andthe selection differential? What information does the response toselection provide?
Chapter 20 Solutions
BIO 1406/07 BK/LAB/CODE PREPACK
Ch. 20.1 - Define evolution and population genetics.Ch. 20.1 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.2 - Explain the HardyWeinberg principle.Ch. 20.2 - Describe the characteristics of a population that...Ch. 20.2 - Prob. 3LOCh. 20.3 - Define the five processes that can cause...Ch. 20.3 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.4 - Prob. 1LOCh. 20.4 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.4 - Demonstrate how the success of different...
Ch. 20.5 - Prob. 1LOCh. 20.5 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.5 - Prob. 3LOCh. 20.6 - Define frequency-dependent selection, oscillating...Ch. 20.6 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.7 - Define and contrast disruptive, directional, and...Ch. 20.7 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.8 - Explain how experiments can be used to test...Ch. 20.9 - Prob. 1LOCh. 20.9 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20.10 - Prob. 2LOCh. 20 - If all white cats died, what proportion of the...Ch. 20 - Assuming that the values on the x-axis represent...Ch. 20 - Prob. 3DACh. 20 - Prob. 4DACh. 20 - Examine the index of copper tolerance on nonmine...Ch. 20 - Prob. 6DACh. 20 - Why are rare alleles particularly likely to be...Ch. 20 - Prob. 2IQCh. 20 - Prob. 3IQCh. 20 - Prob. 4IQCh. 20 - Prob. 5IQCh. 20 - Prob. 6IQCh. 20 - Prob. 7IQCh. 20 - Prob. 8IQCh. 20 - Prob. 9IQCh. 20 - Assortative mating a. affects genotype frequencies...Ch. 20 - When the environment changes from year to year and...Ch. 20 - Many factors can limit the ability of natural...Ch. 20 - Stabilizing selection differs from directional...Ch. 20 - Founder effects and bottlenecks are a. expected...Ch. 20 - Relative fitness a. refers to the survival rate of...Ch. 20 - For natural selection to result in evolutionary...Ch. 20 - Prob. 8UCh. 20 - In a population of red (dominant allele) or white...Ch. 20 - Genetic drift and natural selection can both lead...Ch. 20 - Prob. 3ACh. 20 - Prob. 4ACh. 20 - In Trinidadian guppies a combination of elegant...Ch. 20 - On large, black lava flows in the deserts of the...Ch. 20 - Based on a consideration of how strong artificial...
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- How does the concept of artificial selection is applied in the creation and domestication of chihuahuas out of wolves? Explain in an explicit way.arrow_forwardBriefly describe the differences between directional selection, overdominance, and underdominance. Describe the effect of each type of selection on the allelic frequencies of a population.arrow_forwardCreate a fictional trait that Selection is acting against and describe: 1) What the trait consists of (i.e. a disorder, a physical characteristic, a behavior, etc). 2) The genotype or genotypes that express the trait 3) How the trait affects individuals with genotypes that do not express the trait (100 words minimum; no sources required)arrow_forward
- The effect(s) of the environment on the variation seen in phenotypes include: influencing the heritability of the phenotype influencing the phenotype's response to selection allowing continuous phenotypic variance from a discrete genetic basis all of the above a) and b) only O a) and c) only b) and c) onlyarrow_forwardPlease helparrow_forwardIn a system that meets the requirements for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium 25% of individuals exhibit the recessive phenotype for a trait. What is the allele frequency of the dominant allele?arrow_forward
- Explain the directional selection effects on the phenotypic mean and the amount of phenotypic variation present in a population.arrow_forward1) In a general genetic bottleneck, the population is reduced because of massive death. True or False 2) It is possible for a response to selection to happen if the trait is NOT heritable. True or Falsearrow_forwardWhat is concordance? For a polygenic or multifactorial trait such as behavior, why are identical (monozygous) twins studied? What is the advantage of studying identical twins reared apart? What should be the concordance in identical twins raised apart if a trait is purely genetic with no environmental influence? What are some genetic conditions or chromosomal abnormalities that cause changes in behavior?For example, Huntington disease; Fragile X syndrome. What is schizophrenia and why is it considered multifactorial? What is autism? Major depression? Bipolar disorder? What is: the purpose of our immune system? Our first line of defense against infection? • What are some differences between our innate immune system, and our adaptive immune system? What is an antigen? An antibody? Which cells make antibodies? What is a memory B cell? How do vaccines work? Why must HLA be matched for a successful organ transplant? Why is it difficult to find a good match?arrow_forward
- In behavioral genetics research, a gene already known to be related to some behavior is referred to as a(n): Group of answer choices Candidate gene Polygenic gene Warrior gene Evocative genearrow_forwardWhy are some types of traits are highly heritable and other types of traits are not as highly heritable? Some traits are morphology, life history, behavior, and physiology.arrow_forwardYou observe some bark beetles with different feeding behaviors. You find that the behavioral phenotypes you observed are closely associated with the following genotypes. genotype phenotype number observed BB feeds under bark 60 Bb feeds on top of bark 24 bb feeds on leaves 16 a) What are the allele frequencies and the expected number (out of 100 beetles) of genotypes? b) Calculate the Chi-Squared value (c2). Then look up the p-value using this Chi-squared calculator: https://www.mathsisfun.com/data//chi-square-calculator.html Enter “1” for Degrees of Freedom. (There are 3 genotype categories, but only 1 DF because they are not fully independent—calculated from just 2 allele frequencies). The p-value is the probability that you would see the deviance you observed by chance, assuming the null hypothesis is true). Report both values. Is the population in H-W equilibrium? c) If you answered “No” to b): Provide at least three biologically…arrow_forward
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