CHAPTER 19
Catastrophism, meaning the regular occurrence of geological or
meteorological disturbances
(catastrophes), was Cuvier's
attempt to explain the existence of
A) evolution.
B) the
fossil record.
C) uniformitarianism.
D) the origin of new
species.
E) natural selection.
the fossil record.
What was the prevailing belief prior to the time of Lyell and
Darwin?
A) Earth is a few thousand years old, and populations are
unchanging.
B) Earth is a few thousand years old, and populations
gradually change.
C) Earth is millions of years old, and
populations rapidly change.
D) Earth is millions of years old,
and populations are unchanging.
E) Earth is millions of years
old, and populations gradually change.
Earth is a few thousand years old, and populations are unchanging.
During a study session about evolution, one of your fellow students
remarks,"The giraffe
stretched its neck while reaching for
higher leaves" its offspring inherited longer necks as
a
result." Which statement is most likely to be helpful
in correcting this student's misconception?
A)
Characteristics acquired during an organism's life are generally not
passed on through genes.
B) Spontaneous mutations can result in
the appearance of new traits.
C) Only favorable adaptations have
survival value.
D) Disuse of an organ may lead to its eventual
disappearance.
E) If the giraffes did not have to compete with
each other, longer necks would not have been
passed on to the
next generation.
Characteristics acquired during an organism's life are generally not passed on through genes.
Which of the following is the most accurate summary of
Cuvier's consideration of fossils
found in the vicinity
of Paris?
A) extinction of species yes; evolution of new species
yes
B) extinction of species no; evolution of new species
yes
C) extinction of species yes; evolution of new species
no
D) extinction of species no; evolution of new species no
extinction of species yes; evolution of new species no
In the mid-1900s, the Soviet geneticist Lysenko believed that his
winter wheat plants, exposed
to ever-colder temperatures, would
eventually give rise to ever more cold-tolerant winter
wheat.
Lysenko's attempts in this regard were most in
agreement with the ideas of
A) Cuvier.
B) Hutton.
C)
Lamarck.
D) Darwin.
E) Lyell.
Lamarck.
Charles Darwin was the first person to propose
A) that evolution
occurs.
B) a mechanism for how evolution occurs.
C) that
Earth is older than a few thousand years.
D) a mechanism for
evolution that was supported by evidence.
E) that population
growth can outpace the growth of food resources.
a mechanism for evolution that was supported by evidence.
Which of these conditions should completely prevent the occurrence of
natural selection in a
population over time?
A) All
variation between individuals is due only to environmental
factors.
B) The environment is changing at a relatively slow
rate.
C) The population size is large.
D) The population
lives in a habitat where there are no competing species present.
All variation between individuals is due only to environmental factors.
Natural selection is based on all of the following except
A)
genetic variation exists within populations.
B) the best-adapted
individuals tend to leave the most offspring.
C) individuals who
survive longer tend to leave more offspring than those who die
young.
D) populations tend to produce more individuals than the
environment can support.
E) individuals adapt to their
environments, and thereby evolve.
individuals adapt to their environments, and thereby evolve.
Which of the following represents an idea that Darwin learned from
the writings of Thomas
Malthus?
A) Technological innovation
in agricultural practices will permit exponential growth of
the
human population into the foreseeable future.
B)
Populations tend to increase at a faster rate than their food supply
normally allows.
C) Earth changed over the years through a series
of catastrophic upheavals.
D) The environment is responsible for
natural selection.
E) Earth is more than 10,000 years old.
Populations tend to increase at a faster rate than their food supply normally allows.
Given a population that contains genetic variation, what is the
correct sequence of the
following events, under the influence of
natural selection?
1. Well-adapted individuals leave more
offspring than do poorly adapted individuals.
2. A change occurs
in the environment.
3. Genetic frequencies within the population
change.
4. Poorly adapted individuals have decreased
survivorship.
A) 2 → 4 → 1 → 3
B) 4 → 2 → 1 → 3
C) 4 →
1 → 2 → 3
D) 4 → 2 → 3 → 1
E) 2 → 4 → 3 → 1
2 → 4 → 1 → 3
A biologist studied a population of squirrels for 15 years. During
that time, the population
was never fewer than 30 squirrels and
never more than 45. Her data showed that over half of
the
squirrels born did not survive to reproduce, because of both
competition for food and predation.
In a single generation, 90%
of the squirrels that were born lived to reproduce, and the
population
increased to 80. Which inference(s) about this
population might be true?
A) The amount of available food may
have increased.
B) The parental generation of squirrels developed
better eyesight due to improved diet; the
subsequent squirrel
generation inherited better eyesight.
C) The number of predators
that prey upon squirrels may have decreased.
D) A and C could be
true.
E) A, B, and C could be true.
A and C could be true.
Which of the following must exist in a population before natural
selection can act upon that
population?
A) genetic variation
among individuals
B) variation among individuals caused by
environmental factors
C) sexual reproduction
D) Three of the
responses are correct.
E) Two of the responses are correct.
genetic variation among individuals
Which of Darwin's ideas had the strongest connection to
Darwin having read Malthus's essay
on human population
growth?
A) descent with modification
B) variation among
individuals in a population
C) struggle for existence
D) the
ability of related species to be conceptualized in "tree
thinking"
E) that the ancestors of the Galápagos finches
had come from the South American mainland
struggle for existence
If Darwin had been aware of genes, and of their typical mode of
transmission to subsequent
generations, with which statement
would he most likely have been in agreement?
A) If natural
selection can change one gene's frequency in a population over the
course of
generations, then, given enough time and enough genes,
natural selection can cause sufficient
genetic change to produce
new species from old ones.
B) If an individual's somatic cell
genes change during its lifetime, making it more fit, then it
will
be able to pass these genes on to its offspring.
C) If
an individual acquires new genes by engulfing, or being infected by,
another organism, then
a new genetic species will be the
result.
D) A single mutation in a single gene in a single gamete
will, if perpetuated, produce a new
species within just two generations.
If natural selection can change one gene's frequency in a population
over the course of
generations, then, given enough time and
enough genes, natural selection can cause sufficient genetic change to
produce new species from old ones.
The role that humans play in artificial selection is to
A)
determine who lives and who dies.
B) create the genetic variants,
which nature then selects.
C) choose which organisms breed, and
which do not.
D) train organisms to breed more
successfully.
E) perform artificial insemination.
choose which organisms breed, and which do not.
In a hypothetical environment, fishes called pike-cichlids are visual
predators of algae-eating
fish (in other words, they locate their
prey by sight). If a population of algae-eaters
experiences
predation pressure from pike-cichlids, which of the
following is least likely to be observed in the
algae-eater
population over the course of many generations?
A) selection for
drab coloration of the algae-eaters
B) selection for nocturnal
algae-eaters (active only at night)
C) selection for larger
female algae-eaters, bearing broods composed of more, and larger,
young
D) selection for algae-eaters that become sexually mature
at smaller overall body sizes
E) selection for algae-eaters that
are faster swimmers
selection for larger female algae-eaters, bearing broods composed of more, and larger, young
DDT was once considered a "silver bullet" that would
permanently eradicate insect pests.
Today, instead, DDT is
largely useless against many insects. Which of these would have
been
required for this pest eradication effort to be successful
in the long run?
A) Larger doses of DDT should have been
applied.
B) All habitats should have received applications of DDT
at about the same time.
C) The frequency of DDT application
should have been higher.
D) None of the individual insects should
have possessed genomes that made them resistant to
DDT.
E)
DDT application should have been continual.
None of the individual insects should have possessed genomes that
made them resistant to
DDT.
Which of the following statements best describes theories?
A)
They are nearly the same things as hypotheses.
B) They are
supported by, and make sense of, many observations.
C) They
cannot be tested because the described events occurred only
once.
D) They are predictions of future events.
They are supported by, and make sense of, many observations.
Currently, two extant elephant species (X and Y) are placed in the
genus Loxodonta, and a
third species (Z) is placed in the genus
Elephas. Thus, which statement should be true?
A) Species X and Y
are not related to species Z.
B) Species X and Y share a greater
number of homologies with each other than either does
with
species Z.
C) Species X and Y share a common ancestor
that is still extant (in other words, not yet extinct).
D)
Species X and Y are the result of artificial selection from an
ancestral species Z.
E) Species X, Y, and Z share a common
ancestor, but nothing more can be claimed than this.
Species X and Y share a greater number of homologies with each other
than either does with
species Z.
The rise of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) can be
considered to be an
example of artificial selection
because
A) humans purposefully raise MRSA in large fermenters in
an attempt to make the bacteria ever-
more resistant.
B) S.
aureus is cultivated by humans to replenish the soil with
nutrients.
C) humans synthesize methicillin and create
environments in which bacteria frequently come
into contact with
methicillin.
D) Humans are becoming resistant to bacteria by
taking methicillin.
humans synthesize methicillin and create environments in which
bacteria frequently come
into contact with methicillin.
Two plant species live in the same biome but on different continents.
Although the two
species are not at all closely related, they may
appear quite similar as a result of
A) parallel
evolution.
B) convergent evolution.
C) allopatric
speciation.
D) introgression.
E) gene flow.
convergent evolution.
If the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus experiences a cost for
maintaining one or more
antibiotic-resistance genes, then what
should happen in environments from which antibiotics
are
missing?
A) These genes should continue to be maintained
in case the antibiotics ever appear.
B) These bacteria should be
outcompeted and replaced by bacteria that have lost these
genes.
C) The bacteria should try to make the cost worthwhile by
locating, and migrating to,
microenvironments where traces of
antibiotics are present.
D) The bacteria should start making and
secreting their own antibiotics.
These bacteria should be outcompeted and replaced by bacteria that have lost these genes.
Of the following anatomical structures, which is homologous to the
bones in the wing of a
bird?
A) cartilage in the dorsal fin
of a shark
B) bones in the hind limb of a kangaroo
C)
chitinous struts in the wing of a butterfly
D) bony rays in the
tail fin of a flying fish
E) bones in the flipper of a whale
bones in the flipper of a whale
If two modern organisms are distantly related in an evolutionary
sense, then one should
expect that
A) they live in very
different habitats.
B) they should share fewer homologous
structures than two more closely related organisms.
C) their
chromosomes should be very similar.
D) they shared a common
ancestor relatively recently.
E) they should be members of the
same genus.
they should share fewer homologous structures than two more closely related organisms.
Structures as different as human arms, bat wings, and dolphin
flippers contain many of the
same bones, these bones having
developed from very similar embryonic tissues. How do
biologists
interpret these similarities?
A) by identifying the bones as
being homologous structures
B) by the principle of convergent
evolution
C) by proposing that humans, bats, and dolphins share a
common ancestor
D) Three of the statements above are
correct.
E) Two of the statements above are correct.
Two of the statements above are correct.
Over evolutionary time, many cave-dwelling organisms have lost their
eyes. Tapeworms
have lost their digestive systems. Whales have
lost their hind limbs. How can natural selection
account for
these losses?
A) Natural selection cannot account for losses,
only for innovations.
B) Natural selection accounts for these
losses by the principle of use and disuse.
C) Under particular
circumstances that persisted for long periods, each of these
structures
presented greater costs than benefits.
D) The
ancestors of these organisms experienced harmful mutations that forced
them to find new
habitats that these species had not previously used.
Under particular circumstances that persisted for long periods, each
of these structures
presented greater costs than benefits.
Which of the following pieces of evidence most strongly supports the
common origin of all
life on Earth?
A) All organisms require
energy.
B) All organisms use essentially the same genetic
code.
C) All organisms reproduce.
D) All organisms show
heritable variation.
E) All organisms have undergone evolution.
All organisms use essentially the same genetic code.
Logically, which of these should cast the most doubt on the
relationships depicted by an
evolutionary tree?
A) None of
the organisms depicted by the tree ate the same foods.
B) Some of
the organisms depicted by the tree had lived in different
habitats.
C) The skeletal remains of the organisms depicted by
the tree were incomplete (in other words,
some bones were
missing).
D) Transitional fossils had not been found.
E)
Relationships between DNA sequences among the species did not match
relationships
between skeletal patterns.
Relationships between DNA sequences among the species did not match relationships between skeletal patterns.
Which of the following statements most detracts from the claim that
the human appendix is a
completely vestigial organ?
A) The
appendix can be surgically removed with no immediate ill
effects.
B) The appendix might have been larger in fossil
hominids.
C) The appendix has a substantial amount of defensive
lymphatic tissue.
D) Individuals with a larger-than-average
appendix leave fewer offspring than those with
a
below-average-sized appendix.
E) In a million years, the
human species might completely lack an appendix.
The appendix has a substantial amount of defensive lymphatic tissue.