GENETIC ANALYSIS: AN INTEG. APP. W/MAS
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781323142790
Author: Sanders
Publisher: Pearson Custom Publishing
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Textbook Question
Chapter 22, Problem 15P
What is inbreeding depression? Why is inbreeding depression a serious concern for animal biologists involved in species-conservation breeding programs?
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What is inbreeding depression and why is it particularly a concern for conservation biology?
A) It is a chemical imbalance in the brain of animals forced into close quarters, such as those rescued from the wild and placed in zoos.
B) It is a situation where the frequency of an allele over time depends greatly upon its initial frequency, as such if populations are too small, the present alleles are at risk of being lost.
C) It is a situation where offspring of genetic relatives have increased fitness, this occurs when populations of animals are large and they mate freely.
D) It is a situation where offspring of genetic relatives have reduced fitness, this occurs when populations of animals become too small and they are thus likely to mate with closely related individuals.
Why is inbreeding necessary in animal husbandary?
You 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…
Chapter 22 Solutions
GENETIC ANALYSIS: AN INTEG. APP. W/MAS
Ch. 22 - 20.1 Compare and contrast the terms in each of the...Ch. 22 - In a population, what is the consequence of...Ch. 22 - 20.3 Identify and describe the evolutionary forces...Ch. 22 - Describe how natural selection can produce...Ch. 22 - Thinking creatively about evolutionary mechanisms,...Ch. 22 - 20.6 Genetic drift, an evolutionary process...Ch. 22 - Over the course of many generations in a small...Ch. 22 - Catastrophic events such as loss of habitat,...Ch. 22 - 20.9 George Udny Yule was wrong in suggesting that...Ch. 22 - 20.10 The ability to taste the bitter compound...
Ch. 22 - Figure 20.6 illustrates the effect of an ethanol ...Ch. 22 - 20.12 Biologists have proposed that the use of...Ch. 22 - 20.13 Two populations of deer, one of them large...Ch. 22 - 20.14 Directional selection presents an apparent...Ch. 22 - 20.15 What is inbreeding depression? Why is...Ch. 22 - 20.16 Certain animal species, such as the...Ch. 22 - Genetic Analysis 20.1 predicts the number of...Ch. 22 - 20.18 In a population of rabbits, and . The...Ch. 22 - Sickle cell disease (SCD) is found in numerous...Ch. 22 - 20.20 Epidemiologic data on the population in the...Ch. 22 - The frequency of tasters and nontasters of PTC...Ch. 22 - Tay-Sachs disease is an autosomal recessive...Ch. 22 - 20.23 Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common...Ch. 22 - 20.24 In the mouse, Mus musculus, survival in...Ch. 22 - 20.25 In a population of flowers growing in a...Ch. 22 - Assume that the flower population described in the...Ch. 22 - 20.27 ABO blood type is examined in a Taiwanese...Ch. 22 - 20.28 A total ofmembers of a Central American...Ch. 22 - 20.29 A sample offield mice contains individuals...Ch. 22 - Prob. 30PCh. 22 - Albinism, an autosomal recessive trait...Ch. 22 - Prob. 32PCh. 22 - 20.33 Evaluate the following pedigree, and answer...Ch. 22 - Evaluate the following pedigree, and answer the...Ch. 22 - The following is a partial pedigree of the British...Ch. 22 - Draw a separate hypothetical pedigree identifying...Ch. 22 - Prob. 37PCh. 22 - 20.38 Achromatopsia is a rare autosomal recessive...Ch. 22 - 20.39 New allopolyploid plant species can arise by...
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- You 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 only using this Chi-squared calculator: https://www.mathsisfun.com/data//chi-square-calculator.html Clear all the values in the box at upper right, enter the Chi Square value that you obtain FROM YOUR CALCULATIONS in the Chi-Square box, and enter 1 for the degrees of freedom. Is the population in H-W equilibrium? c) If you answered “No” to b): Provide at least three biologically valid reasons why the observed beetle population may not be in equilibrium. If you answered “Yes” to b): Why do you think this…arrow_forwardWhat is procedure in practice of kin selection work?arrow_forwardHow does group selection theory explain the altruistic behavior of animals and why is this explanation problematic for advocates of inclusive fitness theory?arrow_forward
- The two figures below show scatter plots for body size in two populations of gold fish 19) What estimate does the slope of these plots give you? a) Narrow sense heritability b) Broad sense heritability c) Selection coefficient d) Additive genetic variation e) Total genetic variation Paront Parent Offspring Offspringarrow_forwardHow in practice does kin selection work?arrow_forwardWhat is the evolutionary stable strategy (ESS) for the payoff matrix below? Cat challenger versus cat opponent = 7 Cat challenger versus dog opponent = 15 Dog challenger versus cat opponent = 10 Dog challenger versus dog opponent = 3arrow_forward
- Earlier explanations of altruistic behavior as a form of group selec-tion have been supplanted by Hamilton’s hypothesis of kin selection. What distinguishes kin selection and how does it accord with the no-tion of inclusive fitness, the relative number of an individual’s alleles that pass to the next generation?arrow_forwardJBS Haldane (allegedly) once said, “I would lay down my life for two brothers or eight cousins.” Let’s assume that “laying down” one’s life results in a 99% probability of death, which can be considered a 99% fitness cost. Also assume that the service to Haldane’s kin increases their survival by 1% (i.e., the benefit is 1%). a) Given these parameterizations, what is the benefit to Haldane for “laying down his life” for one brother (2FB)? b) Given these parameterizations, what is the benefit to Haldane for “laying down his life” for one cousin (2FB)? c) Given these parameterizations, does it make sense for Haldane to “lay down his life” for eight cousins?arrow_forward(select ALL answers that apply) which of the following would increase the possibility that inbreeding depression may be a concern in a population? a) when Ne is very small b) when Fis is very large c) when He is almost zero d) when Fst is negative e) when p + q does NOT equal 1arrow_forward
- Joe is breeding cockroaches in his dorm room. He finds that the average wing length in his population of cockroaches is 4 cm. He chooses the six cockroaches that have the largest wings; the average wing length among these selected cockroaches is 10 cm. Joe interbreeds these selected cockroaches. From earlier studies, he knows that the narrow-sense heritability for wing length in his population of cockroaches is 0.6. a. Calculate the selection differential and expected response to selection for wing length in these cockroaches. b. What should be the average wing length of the progeny of the selected cockroaches?arrow_forwardBelow is a diagram showing decreased fitness before and after a hypothetical bottleneck in which all of the inbreeding depression is due to increased homozygosity for deleterious recessive alleles. The open circles show the average fitness of hypothetical 'mutant-free' individuals that have no deleterious alleles. The shaded circles show the average fitness of individuals produced by random mating. The dark circles show the average fitness of individuals with an Fof 0.25 (equivalent to full-sib matings). In the diagram on the right, imagine that 'before' refers to before genetic rescue has been instituted (that is, before managed gene flow into a small and isolated population). The circles are defined the same as above. Draw what the circles (unfilled, grey filling, and dark filling) would look like in the 'after' portion of the diagram, that is, after a single pulse of gene flow from a small number (~5) of translocated individuals, if fixed genetic load decreases in this population.…arrow_forwardProper selection of breeding stocks should always be considered. How important to you to know the bases in selecting breeder stocks?arrow_forward
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