ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781260406092
Author: HARTWELL, Leland, HOOD, Leroy, Goldberg, Michael
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education/stony Brook University
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Textbook Question
Chapter 21, Problem 36P
A cladogram (not drawn to scale) for the taxonomic family Hominidae is shown here. The numbers 1–10 represent evolutionary lineages or events. The letters A–F represent entries from the following list:
Homo neanderthalensis
Pan troglodytes (chimpanzees)
Homo sapiens (African Bantu)
Homo sapiens (European Danish)3
Homo sapiens (Native American Hopi)
Homo sapiens (Asian Uighurs)
a. | Match the entries in the preceding list with an appropriate letter from the cladogram. Two of the groups in the list are equivalent on this diagram; either possibility is correct. |
b. | One evolutionary divergence is indicated with a small arrow. Describe this divergence and estimate how many years ago it occurred based on Fig. 21.19. |
c. | Six SNPs (α, β, γ, δ, Ɛ, and ζ) are sequenced in several individuals in each of the six groups; the allele frequencies are given in the table that follows. At the bottom of each column in the table, write a number from 1 to 10 (corresponding to a red number on the figure) that indicates where along the cladogram a mutation occurred that changed the allele in the common ancestor of all humans and chimps to a derived allele. One blank can be filled by either of two numbers; you only need to show one. Also indicate (in the last row at the bottom) the identity of the allele found in the common ancestor, or write can’t tell |
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Chapter 21 Solutions
ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
Ch. 21 - Choose the best matching phrase in the right...Ch. 21 - When an allele is dominant, why does it not always...Ch. 21 - A population with an allele frequency p of 0.5 and...Ch. 21 - In a certain population of frogs, 120 are green,...Ch. 21 - Which of the following populations are at...Ch. 21 - A dominant mutation in Drosophila called Delta...Ch. 21 - A large, random mating population is started with...Ch. 21 - Prob. 8PCh. 21 - Alkaptonuria is a recessive autosomal genetic...Ch. 21 - Two hypothetical lizard populations found on...
Ch. 21 - It is the year 1998, and the men and women sailors...Ch. 21 - a. Alleles of genes on the X chromosome can also...Ch. 21 - In 1927, the ophthalmologist George Waaler tested...Ch. 21 - The equation p2 2pq q2> = 1 representing the...Ch. 21 - A gene has two alleles A frequency = p and a...Ch. 21 - Some people can taste the bitter compound...Ch. 21 - Androgenetic alopecia pattern baldness is a...Ch. 21 - The following figure shows the FBI-style analysis...Ch. 21 - Why is the elimination of a fully recessive...Ch. 21 - Tristan da Cunha is a group of small islands in...Ch. 21 - Small population size causes genetic drift because...Ch. 21 - Three basic predictions underlie genetic drift in...Ch. 21 - A mouse mutation with incomplete dominance t =...Ch. 21 - In Drosophila, the vestigial wings recessive...Ch. 21 - In a population of infinite size, three loci A, B,...Ch. 21 - You have identified an autosomal gene that...Ch. 21 - In Europe, the frequency of the CF allele causing...Ch. 21 - An allele of the G6PD gene acts in a recessive...Ch. 21 - Explain why evolutionary biologists monitor...Ch. 21 - Tiny foxes live on the Channel Islands off the...Ch. 21 - What is the most straightforward evidence at the...Ch. 21 - In March 2013, the American Journal of Human...Ch. 21 - If you go back 40 generations into your biological...Ch. 21 - In Fig. 21.17, to what part of the world does...Ch. 21 - Predict the DNA sequences at the four nodes...Ch. 21 - A cladogram not drawn to scale for the taxonomic...Ch. 21 - As noted in Fig. 21.22, humans now living in...Ch. 21 - As of this writing in 2016, no Neanderthal-derived...
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