Biology: The Dynamic Science (MindTap Course List)
4th Edition
ISBN: 9781305389892
Author: Peter J. Russell, Paul E. Hertz, Beverly McMillan
Publisher: Cengage Learning
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Question
Chapter 56, Problem 10TYK
Summary Introduction
Introduction:
Degree of relatedness is the percentage of alleles that are common between two individuals.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
#4: In clown fish (chose one answer)
A. Individuals are protandrous.B. It is better to be male when you are small and a female when you are big.C. Everyone begins life as a male.D. All of the above
The twofold cost of sex model by John Mynard Smith explains how -
A. asexual females can become predominant in a population.
B. anisogamy results in sexual reproduction.
C. sexual individuals can produce genetically variant offspring.
D. asexual females invest as much in offspring as the sexual females.
Eusociality and haplo-diploidy, in ants and bees, are often (though not always) correlated because…
Group of answer choices:
A. having twice as many genes allows queens to be far more capable of controlling other individuals.
B. being able to control the sex of offspring allows parents to regulate the amount of cooperation.
C. a worker can have more of her genes passed on in a new sister than in an offspring of her own.
D. males have fathers but females don’t.
E. it allows high levels of inbreeding to evolve without negative effects.
Chapter 56 Solutions
Biology: The Dynamic Science (MindTap Course List)
Ch. 56.1 - Prob. 1SBCh. 56.1 - Prob. 2SBCh. 56.1 - Prob. 3SBCh. 56.1 - Prob. 4SBCh. 56.2 - Prob. 1SBCh. 56.2 - Prob. 2SBCh. 56.2 - Prob. 3SBCh. 56.2 - Prob. 4SBCh. 56.3 - What is the difference between piloting, compass...Ch. 56.3 - Prob. 2SB
Ch. 56.4 - Prob. 1SBCh. 56.4 - Prob. 2SBCh. 56.5 - Prob. 1SBCh. 56.5 - Prob. 2SBCh. 56.5 - Prob. 3SBCh. 56.6 - Prob. 1SBCh. 56.6 - Prob. 2SBCh. 56.6 - Prob. 3SBCh. 56.7 - Prob. 1SBCh. 56.7 - Prob. 2SBCh. 56.7 - Prob. 3SBCh. 56 - Prob. 1TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 2TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 3TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 4TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 5TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 6TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 7TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 8TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 9TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 10TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 11TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 12TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 13TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 14TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 15TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 16TYKCh. 56 - Prob. 1ITD
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, biology and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Trivia: In every beehive, there is one queen bee who lays all the eggs. If an egg is not fertilized, it hatches into a male bee, called a drone. If an egg is fertilized, it hatches into a lady worker bee, which does not lay any eggs.a. Consider a drone. How many parents, grandparents, great grandparents, great-great-grandparents, great-great-great-grandparents, great-great-great-great grandparents does it have?b. Write a mathematical sentence that can be used to represent the number of grandparents a drone has during a particular generation.arrow_forwardThis diagram illustrates a type of reproductive process in an organism. Parent Offspring A Based on this information, what conclusion about the offspring labeled "A" is supported? O It has acquired traits in response to its environment. O It has a lower mass of genetic material than offspring B. O It has the same genetic material as its parent. O It has half as much genetic material as its parent. INTL 01 https://student.masteryconnect.com/#arrow_forwardThe outcome of an individual’s traits is controlled bya. genes.b. the environment.c. both genes and the environment.d. neither genes nor the environment.arrow_forward
- The potential for social interactions among individuals should be maximized when individuals a. are randomly distributed in their environment. b. are uniformly distributed in their environment. c. have a clumped distribution in their environment. d. None of the choices is correct.arrow_forwardAmong the Great Apes, yet unlike our chimpanzee and bonobo 'cousins', as humans we combine a unique evolutionary blend of different physical and behavioral traits commonly identified with either 'pair-bonding' or 'tournament' species. Which of the following options below inaccurately matches our shared characteristics with each type? Select one: a. moderate to high degree of sexual dimorphisms - tournament b. moderate to highly monogamy in coupled relationships - tournament c. male mate pickiness - pair bonding d. high parental investment - pair bonding e. females selecting mates for parenting skill - pair bonding f. moderate to high variability in male reproductive success & aggression - tournamentarrow_forwardBirds are more likely to form pair-bonds than mammals because … Group of answer choices: A. Bird reproductive physiology makes it easier to judge paternity certainty B. Flight makes it easier to find mates C. Bird species are unable to defend critical resources the way mammals can D. Male mammals have higher levels of testosterone making them more likely to fight E. Either bird parent can sit on the nest or feed chicks while the chicks are too young to flyarrow_forward
- The graph below shows values for body size in parents and offspring. The data shown are consistent with which of the following situations. ANSWER CHOICES A. variation in body size is completely due to variation in the environment (heritability is 0) B. most of the variation in body size is due to variation in the environment but there is a small effect of genes (heritability is around 0.2) C. variation in body size is completely due to variation in genes (heritability is 1.0) D. most of the variation in body size is due to variation in genes but there is some effect of the environment (heritability is about 0.8)arrow_forwardThis hypothesis suggests that a resulting association of female preference and male display trait can lead to a positive feedback cycle of ever stronger preference and greater display trait. A. Fisher-Zahavi process. B. Fisher's runaway model. C.Good genes process. D.Bateman's principle.arrow_forwardIn some cases, males or females do care for young of their own species that are not their own, as when certain male fish take over and protect egg masses being brooded by other males or when female ducks acquire ducklings that have just left someone else’s nest. Propose alternative hypotheses to explain this phenomenon. Under what circumstances might adoptions actually raise the caregiver’s reproductive success? Under what other circumstances might adopters help nongenetic offspring as a cost of achieving some other goal? Don't write from any online source..arrow_forward
- The theory that is based on four principles that describe how organisms who are well-adapted to their environment survive to produce offspring is calledarrow_forwardThe survival and reproduction of young Lazuli buntings (birds) depends on the brightness of their feathers, which range from dull brown to bright blue. Juvenile birds with dull brown feathers are not attacked by adult birds and are able to obtain high quality territories and reproduce more. Juvenile birds with bright blue feathers are more attractive to mates and reproduce more when they become adults. However, birds with intermediate plumage are often attacked by adults and usually fail to reproduce. This is an example of what type of selection? Stabilizing Directional Disruptive Frequency-dependent Artificialarrow_forwardThis hypothesis assumes that among male variation in the expression of ornaments reliably signals individual differences in overall quality of the males. It predicts that choosy females will produce offspring with higher survivorship or in better condition than those of less choosy females. A. Good genes process B. Bateman's principle C. Fisher-Zahavi process D. Fisher's runaway modelarrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you