1407Final Test 2
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.
Answer: A
Within six months of effectively using methicillin to treat S. aureus
infections in a community, all new infections were caused by MRSA. How
can this result best be explained?
A) S. aureus can resist
vaccines.
B) A patient must have become infected with MRSA from
another community.
C) In response to the drug, S. aureus began
making drug-resistant versions of the protein targeted by the drug.
D) Some drug-resistant bacteria were present at the start of
treatment, and natural selection increased their frequency.
E)
The drug caused the S. aureus DNA to change.
Answer: D
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
Answer: C
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.
Answer: C
What must be true of any organ that is described as vestigial?
A) It must be analogous to some feature in an ancestor.
B)
It must be homologous to some feature in an ancestor.
C) It must
be both homologous and analogous to some feature in an ancestor.
D) It need be neither homologous nor analogous to some feature
in an ancestor.
Answer: B
12) Which of the following is a true statement concerning genetic
variation?
A) It is created by the direct action of natural
selection.
B) It arises in response to changes in the
environment.
C) It must be present in a population before
natural selection can act upon the population.
D) It tends to be
reduced by the processes involved when diploid organisms produce
gametes.
E) A population that has a higher average
heterozygosity has less genetic variation than one with a lower
average heterozygosity.
Answer: C
25) Swine are vulnerable to infection by bird flu virus and human flu
virus, which can both be present in an individual pig at the same
time. When this occurs, it is possible for genes from bird flu virus
and human flu virus to be combined, thereby producing a genetically
distinctive virus, which can subsequently cause widespread disease.
The production of new types of flu virus in the manner
described above is most similar to the phenomenon of
A)
bottleneck effect.
B) founder effect.
C) natural
selection.
D) gene flow.
E) sexual selection.
Answer: D
17) 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.
Answer: C
23) 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
Answer: E
24) 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.
Answer: B
6) In modern terminology, diversity is understood to be a result of
genetic variation. Which of the following is a recognized source of
variation for evolution?
A) mistakes in translation of
structural genes
B) mistakes in protein folding
C) rampant
changes to the dictionary of the genetic code
D) binary fission
E) recombination by crossing over in meiosis
Answer: E
14) Whenever diploid populations are in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium at
a particular locus
A) the allele's frequency should not change
from one generation to the next, but its representation in homozygous
and heterozygous genotypes may change.
B) natural selection,
gene flow, and genetic drift are acting equally to change an allele's
frequency.
C) this means that, at this locus, two alleles are
present in equal proportions.
D) the population itself is not
evolving, but individuals within the population may be evolving.
Answer: A
15) In the formula for determining a population's genotype
frequencies, the 2 in the term 2pq is necessary because
A) the
population is diploid.
B) heterozygotes can come about in two
ways.
C) the population is doubling in number.
D)
heterozygotes have two alleles.
Answer: B
16) In the formula for determining a population’s genotype
frequencies, the pq in the term 2pq is necessary because
A) the
population is diploid.
B) heterozygotes can come about in two
ways.
C) the population is doubling in number.
D)
heterozygotes have two alleles.
Answer: D
18) In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that
are in equilibrium, the frequency of the allele a is 0.3. What is the
percentage of the population that is homozygous for this allele?
A) 0.09
B) 0.49
C) 0.9
D) 9.0
E) 49.0
Answer: D
19) In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that
are in equilibrium, the frequency of allele a is 0.2. What is the
percentage of the population that is heterozygous for this allele?
A) 0.2
B) 2.0
C) 4.0
D) 16.0
E) 32.0
Answer: E
20) In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that
are in equilibrium, the frequency of allele a is 0.1. What is the
frequency of individuals with AA genotype?
A) 0.20
B) 0.32
C) 0.42
D) 0.81
E) Genotype frequency cannot be
determined from the information provided.
Answer: D
39) The recessive allele that causes phenylketonuria (PKU) is
harmful, except when an infant's diet lacks the amino acid
phenylalanine. What maintains the presence of this harmful allele in a
population's gene pool?
A) heterozygote advantage
B)
stabilizing selection
C) diploidy
D) balancing selection
Answer: C
9) Two species of frogs belonging to the same genus occasionally
mate, but the offspring fail to develop and hatch. What is the
mechanism for keeping the two frog species separate?
A) the
postzygotic barrier called hybrid inviability
B) the postzygotic
barrier called hybrid breakdown
C) the prezygotic barrier called
hybrid sterility
D) gametic isolation
Answer: A
Theoretically, the production of sterile mules by interbreeding
between female horses (mares) and male donkeys (jacks) should
A)
result in the extinction of one of the two parental species.
B)
cause convergent evolution.
C) strengthen postzygotic barriers
between horses and donkeys.
D) weaken the intrinsic reproductive
barriers between horses and donkeys.
E) eventually result in the
formation of a single species from the two parental species.
Answer: C
18) The difference between geographic isolation and habitat
differentiation is the
A) relative locations of two populations
as speciation occurs.
B) speed (tempo) at which two populations
undergo speciation.
C) amount of genetic variation that occurs
among two gene pools as speciation occurs.
D) identity of the
phylogenetic kingdom or domain in which these phenomena occur.
E) the ploidy of the two populations as speciation occurs.
Answer: A
11) When male horses (stallions) and female donkeys (jennets) mate,
they produce a sterile hybrid called a hinny. Hinnies occur much less
frequently than do mules, but are just as healthy and robust as mules.
Logically, which of the following best accounts for the relative
rarity of hinnies, and what kind of prezygotic isolating mechanism is
at work here?
A) Most hinnies die during fetal development;
reduced hybrid viability.
B) Most hinnies die soon after being
born; hybrid breakdown.
C) Most hinnies are reproductively
sterile; reduced hybrid fertility.
D) Stallions and jennets are
choosier about their mating partners than are mares and jacks;
behavioral isolation.
E) Stallions and jennets are choosier
about their mating partners than are mares and jacks; gametic isolation.
Answer: D