EP CAMPBELL BIO.FOCUS-MOD.MASTER.(18WK)
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780136781851
Author: Urry
Publisher: PEARSON CO
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Textbook Question
Chapter 30, Problem 13TYU
FOCUS ON EVOLUTION
With respect to sexual reproduction, some plant species are fully self-fertile, others are fully self-incompatible, and some exhibit a “mixed strategy” with partial self-incompatibility. These reproductive strategies differ in their implications for evolutionary potential. How might these three strategies fare in a small founder population
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Flowers whose throats (nectaries) are too long for hummingbirds to reach their nectar are unlikely to be pollinated (nectar reward isn't available) and therefore the flower is unlikely to reproduce. But if the nectaries are too short, hummingbirds can get their nectar without pollinating them because they don't reach in far enough to touch the pollen-carrying anthers, thus no reproduction for the flower. Flowers evolve with an intermediate length of nectaries. This is an example of what sort of selection?
Group of answer choices
Disruptive
Stabilizing
Directional
Sexual
Sexual reproduction in plants provides genetic variation. What are the benefits of this genetic
variation?
O If a population is presented with a rapid change in the environment or a chronic new pathogen or herbivore,
then genetic variability would increase the chances of survival of the population.
O Sexual reproduction produces less genetic variations which enables a population to co-evolve with other
organisms in it's ecosystem.
O Sexual reproduction reduces genetic variations which enables a population to take advantage of different
resources in it's ecosystem enabling it to exist in a the same niche as others that use the original resources.
O Sexual reproduction will always produce a more fit organism.
A
XE
A
AY9 Week9_ng....xlsx
Week 9 Pre-lab.pdf
10.7591 978150...
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MacBook Air
Copy of Lab 9 A....pdf
Course: Botany
In stable populations, ones that are neither increasing nor decreasing in abundance (e.g., there are a million trees now and there will be a million trees a thousand years from now), about how many of a plant’s seeds survive and grow to adulthood, being able to replace it when it dies? If during the plant’s lifetime it produces 100,000 seeds, how many do not survive, do not grow, and cannot replace it when it dies. (Hint: Do not think of humans, as we are an increasing population, not a stable one. Almost all our children survive, but that is not true of any other species.) Answer and explain briefly.
Chapter 30 Solutions
EP CAMPBELL BIO.FOCUS-MOD.MASTER.(18WK)
Ch. 30.1 - WHAT IF? If flowers had shorter styles, pollen...Ch. 30.1 - WHAT IF? In some species, sepals look like petals,...Ch. 30.1 - Prob. 3CCCh. 30.2 - Prob. 1CCCh. 30.2 - Prob. 2CCCh. 30.2 - Self-fertilization, or selfing, seems to have...Ch. 30.3 - Prob. 1CCCh. 30.3 - Why does Bt maize have less fumonisin than non-GM...Ch. 30.3 - WHAT IF? In a few species, chloroplast genes are...Ch. 30 - A seed develops from an A. ovum B. embryo. C....
Ch. 30 - A fruit is a A. mature ovary. B. B . mature ovule....Ch. 30 - Double fertilization means that A. flowers must be...Ch. 30 - Golden Rice A. is resistant to various herbicides,...Ch. 30 - Which statement concerning grafting is correct? A....Ch. 30 - Some dioecious species have the XY genotype for...Ch. 30 - A small flower with green petals is most likely A....Ch. 30 - The pollen produced by wind-pollinated plants is...Ch. 30 - The black dots that cover strawberries are...Ch. 30 - DRAW IT Draw a flower and label the parts.Ch. 30 - SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY Critics of GM foods have argued...Ch. 30 - SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY People have...Ch. 30 - FOCUS ON EVOLUTION With respect to sexual...Ch. 30 - FOCUS ON ORGANIZATION In a short essay (100-150...Ch. 30 - SYNTHESIZE YOUR KNOWLEDGE This colorized SEM shows...
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