Biology: The Dynamic Science (MindTap Course List)
4th Edition
ISBN: 9781305389892
Author: Peter J. Russell, Paul E. Hertz, Beverly McMillan
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Textbook Question
Chapter 24, Problem 8TYK
When systematists study morphological or behavioral traits to reconstruct the evolutionary history of a group of animals, they assume that:
a. similarities and differences in
b. the animals use exactly the same traits to identify appropriatemates.
c. differences in these traits caused
d. the adaptive value of these traits can be explained.
e. variations in these traits are produced by environmentaleffects during development.
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Which of the following most likely demonstrates that classification is the basis of evolutionary relatedness?
A. Organisms that share similar characteristics are impliedly understood to have common ancestors, thus having an evolutionary relationship.
B. Classification is to organize organisms into groups based on their differences and similarities and evolutionary history, so as evolution changes, classification will also change
C. Classification based on evolutionary relatedness always infer that all organisms that evolved similarly shares the same history.
D. Homologous structures among organisms depicts the same evolutionary history or paths.
Select the taxon that MOST CLOSELY applies to each of the statements below regarding anthropoids. Each term may be used once or not at all.
Hominin genus with small head and oval birth canal.
a. Homo sapiens
+ Species with a brain mass approximately three times larger than that of b. Homo heidelbergensis
other extant hominins.
c. Homo floresiensis
* Species that comparative genomics suggests hybridized with Homo
sapiens.
d. Gigantopithecus
e. Aegyptopithecus
+ Small-statured species found in Indonesia up to about 50,000 years ago.
f. Homo neanderthalensis
+ Genus conjectured by some to have been responsible for the Yeti myth
in southeast Asia.
g. Homo
h. Homo erectus
i. Ardipithecus ramidus
j. Proconsul
k. Homo habilis
1. Australopithecus
m. Australopithecus afarensis
All of the following are true about phylogenies, EXCEPT:
a.
They are considered an unbiased reconstruction of evolutionary relationships.
b.
We use them to predict the emergence of traits in the fossil record.
c.
They are, at best, a hypothesis about the relationships among extant species.
d.
We use the rule of parsimony to reconstruct evolutionary history.
Chapter 24 Solutions
Biology: The Dynamic Science (MindTap Course List)
Ch. 24.1 - How does the system of binomial nomenclature...Ch. 24.1 - Prob. 2SBCh. 24.2 - What is the difference between a phylogenetic tree...Ch. 24.2 - What are the differences between a monophyletic...Ch. 24.3 - Prob. 1SBCh. 24.3 - Prob. 2SBCh. 24.3 - Prob. 3SBCh. 24.4 - Prob. 1SBCh. 24.5 - How does outgroup comparison facilitate the...Ch. 24.5 - Prob. 2SB
Ch. 24.5 - Prob. 3SBCh. 24.6 - What assumption underlies the use of genetic...Ch. 24.6 - Prob. 2SBCh. 24.7 - Prob. 1SBCh. 24.7 - Prob. 2SBCh. 24 - The evolutionary history of a group of organisms...Ch. 24 - Prob. 2TYKCh. 24 - Which of the following does not help systematists...Ch. 24 - In a cladistic analysis, a systematist groups...Ch. 24 - Prob. 5TYKCh. 24 - Prob. 6TYKCh. 24 - Prob. 7TYKCh. 24 - When systematists study morphological or...Ch. 24 - Which of the following pairs of structures are...Ch. 24 - To construct a phylogenetic tree by applying the...Ch. 24 - Prob. 11TYKCh. 24 - Prob. 12TYKCh. 24 - Prob. 13TYKCh. 24 - Prob. 14TYKCh. 24 - Imagine that you are a systematist studying a...Ch. 24 - Design an Experiment Imagine that you are trying...Ch. 24 - Prob. 17TYKCh. 24 - The phylogenetic tree for 12 cat species (Felidae)...
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