Campbell Biology, Books a la Carte Plus Mastering Biology with eText -- Access Card Package (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN: 9780133922851
Author: Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 53.4, Problem 3CC
Summary Introduction
To explain: The reproductive trade off in mice that abandon their young ones in the situation of stress.
Concept introduction: Trade-off is a situational decision that involves losing or retreating one quality, quantity or property in order to gain the other aspects. In the evolutionary prospect the trade-off, in which the process of natural and sexual selection are in reference as the definitive critical factors.
In the case of mice that experiences stress such as food shortage. In such situation they abandon their offspring.
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Chapter 53 Solutions
Campbell Biology, Books a la Carte Plus Mastering Biology with eText -- Access Card Package (10th Edition)
Ch. 53.1 - DRAW IT Each female of a particular fish species...Ch. 53.1 - Prob. 2CCCh. 53.1 - Prob. 3CCCh. 53.2 - Explain why a constant per capita rate of growth...Ch. 53.2 - Prob. 2CCCh. 53.2 - Prob. 3CCCh. 53.3 - Explain why a population that fits the logistic...Ch. 53.3 - WHAT IF? Given the latitudinal differences in...Ch. 53.3 - Prob. 3CCCh. 53.4 - Prob. 1CC
Ch. 53.4 - Prob. 2CCCh. 53.4 - Prob. 3CCCh. 53.5 - Prob. 1CCCh. 53.5 - WHAT IF? Suppose you were studying a species that...Ch. 53.5 - Prob. 3CCCh. 53.6 - How does a human population's age structure affect...Ch. 53.6 - Prob. 2CCCh. 53.6 - Prob. 3CCCh. 53 - Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) gather each...Ch. 53 - Suppose one population has an r that is twice as...Ch. 53 - Prob. 53.3CRCh. 53 - Prob. 53.4CRCh. 53 - Density-dependent factors regulate population...Ch. 53 - The human population is no longer growing...Ch. 53 - Population ecologists follow the fate of same-age...Ch. 53 - A population's carrying capacity (A) may change as...Ch. 53 - Scientific study of the population cycles of the...Ch. 53 - Analyzing ecological footprints reveals that (A)...Ch. 53 - Prob. 5TYUCh. 53 - The observation that members of a population are...Ch. 53 - According to the logistic growth equation...Ch. 53 - Prob. 8TYUCh. 53 - During exponential growth, a population always (A)...Ch. 53 - Which of the following statements about human...Ch. 53 - Prob. 11TYUCh. 53 - Prob. 12TYUCh. 53 - Prob. 13TYUCh. 53 - Prob. 14TYUCh. 53 - WRITE ABOUT A THEME: INTERACTIONS In a short essay...Ch. 53 - SYNTHESIZE YOUR KNOWLEDGE Locusts (grasshoppers in...
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- Answer Plz.arrow_forwardplease give an example and picture i will upvotearrow_forwardch * W S Adapoids and Omomyoids divided food type resources as a way to avoid competion, driving species development further away from each other. This is seen as what? 01. Early use of tools to hunt and eat meat 2. A precursor to bipedalism 3. An example of a selective pressure that may have favored the strepsirhine and haplorhine split 04. A response to the geologic transition to open Savannahs Click Save and Submit to save and submit. Click Save All Answers to save all answers. ? E hp ts * 3 # X E D $ O IOI 4 R C % 5 F 40 ^ T 6 17 4- & 7 Y G H V B fa + * 8 U J N O 1 O K M Save All 69°F Sunny <arrow_forward
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- INTERPRET DATA Look at the two graphs in Figure 52-21. In which experiment did the parentals in the experimental group guard the eggs more closely? In which experiment did the experimental parentals guard the young more closely? Account for these differences. RESULTS: Experiment 1: As indicated on the y-axis, which measures level of parental care, parentals reduced their level of guarding the eggs. Eight of the males in the experimental group abandoned their nests, and egg defense was significantly lower in this group compared with that in the control group. However, after eggs hatched, there was little difference in parental care of the young between the two groups. Experiment 2: During the egg phase, there was little difference in level of parental care between experimental and control groups. However, after eggs hatched, the experimental parentals significantly decreased their level of guarding the nest. CONCLUSION: Male bluegill sunfish adjust their level of parental care according to their level of perceived paternity. In Experiment 1, parentals provided less care when they perceived that the eggs may have been fertilized by sneaker males. After the eggs hatched, olfactory cues indicated that the offspring were indeed their own, and their level of care increased. In Experiment 2, parentals cared for the eggs even though some had been swapped. However, after they hatched, olfactory cues from the offspring indicated that they were not the parentals own offspring. The level of parental care decreased significantly. SOURCE: B.D. Neff, Nature, Vol. 422 (April 17, 2003): 716719. Figure 52-21 Decisions about parental carearrow_forwardWhy would predation on small individuals lead to a population with delayed sexual maturity? Group of answer choices The delay reduces the likelihood of senescence The delay leads to higher fecundiy The delay allows more resources to be devoted into growing to a larger size that is less likely to be eaten The delay increases experience and improves parental carearrow_forwardUse the concept of coevolution to explain the abundance of large mammals in Africa after the rise of humans but their rapid demise in the Americas after the arrival of humans?arrow_forward
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