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Evolution Practice Questions www.njctl.org Slide 3 / 78 1 - - PDF document
Evolution Practice Questions www.njctl.org Slide 3 / 78 1 - - PDF document
Slide 1 / 78 New Jersey Center for Teaching and Learning Progressive Science Initiative This material is made freely available at www.njctl.org and is intended for the non-commercial use of students and teachers. These materials may not be
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2 What is an adaptation?
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3 Explain how competition can help drive the process of evolution.
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4 Suppose you are studying a population of bacteria in a lab. Some of the bacteria are born with a mutation that provides them resistance to
- antibiotics. Explain how competition in this
population can lead to evolution and make a prediction of how this evolution will occur.
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5 Pick an animal and provide an example of an adaptation that makes it more fit for its environment.
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6 Explain why competition exists between individuals in a population, or between individuals of different species.
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7 Explain the relationship between the genetic code and the origin of evolutionary adaptations.
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8 Explain the error in Lamarck’s theory of Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics.
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9 What is epigenetics?
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10 Explain why the Galapagos Islands proved to be an integral part of Darwin’s voyage.
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11 What distinguishing feature exists between finches of the Galapagos Islands? What environmental factor creates these differences?
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12 Suppose you are studying big cats around the
- world. How can you use their physical structures
to study evolutionary relationships? What is the term for this process?
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13 Using Darwinian terminology, explain why a bird would possess wings that are too small to allow it to fly.
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14 Explain why, at one point in our embryonic development, human beings have gill slits.
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15 According to Darwin’s theory of natural selection, what will happen to the frequency of an allele that allows an organism to successfully compete for resources in a population?
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16 Why is rRNA an especially useful tool when analyzing evolutionary relationships between
- rganisms?
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17 ‘Modern Synthesis’ combines the original work of what two revolutionary scientists?
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18 Explain how epigenetics proves that at least some
- f Lamarck’s theory was accurate.
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19 Pick one of the organisms Darwin studied in the Galapagos and explain how it helped him to develop his theory of evolution.
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20 How is comparative anatomy useful in determining evolutionary relationships?
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21 What is the evolutionary term used to describe the similarity between the structure of a bat wing and a human arm? How is this used to explain evolution?
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22 Provide an example of a vestigial structure in the human body. Explain, evolutionarily, why this structure exists.
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23 Explain, in evolutionary terms, why a fish, pig, chicken and human are virtually indistinguishable during their early developmental stages? What is the study of this process called?
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24 Scientists during Darwin’s era discovered that the Earth was many millions of years old (not a few thousand, as previously though) and that the Earth is constantly changing. How did this influence the development of Darwin’s theory?
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25 Briefly summarize the theory of natural selection.
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26 What role might fossils have played in the development of Darwin’s theory?
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27 Suppose humans share roughly 98% of our DNA with chimpanzees, 92% with mice and 44% with fruit flies. How would you use this information to help determine evolutionary relationships?
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28 What is speciation?
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29 Which traits in an environment would tend to be favored in stabilizing selection?
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30 Would more diversity exist in an environment that favors directional selection or disruptive selection?
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31 Suppose two species of plants are physically capable of interbreeding and their gametes are compatible, yet interbreeding cannot occur. Suggest a hypothesis for how this situation could arise.
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32 What is the difference between directional selection and stabilizing selection?
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33 Explain how the process of behavioral isolation can lead to speciation.
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34 What is temporal isolation?
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35 Suppose you are working as a caretaker at a zoo that has successfully bred a zebra with a giraffe, but the offspring itself is unable to reproduce. Provide an explanation to zookeepers to potentially explain this scenario.
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36 Suppose you are studying two populations of foxes that are of the same species, but have become geographically isolated due to
- deforestation. Over a decade, you suspect that
the two populations may have evolved into separate species. Explain how you could determine whether this is true.
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37 Is a group of sparrows and blue jays living in the same forest an example of a population? Why or why not?
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38 Scientists often refer to a population that exhibits a high level of genetic variability as being ‘elastic’ or ‘flexible.’ Explain why these terms are used in this context.
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39 Can the Hardy-Weinberg Equation be used to analyze multiple populations at one time? Why or why not?
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40 Identify three things that using the Hardy- Weinberg Equilibrium Equation can be used to determine about a population.
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41 Suppose you are studying a population in which 16% of the individuals are homozygous recessive (bb). Using the Hardy-Weinberg equation, what is the frequency of the recessive allele in the population?
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42 Referring to the question above, what is the frequency of heterozygous individuals in the population?
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43 Suppose you are studying a population of sunfish in which long dorsal fins (L) are completely dominant over short dorsal fins. You find that the population consists of exactly 30% short finned
- fish. Calculate the frequency of homozygous
dominant individuals in the population.
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44 Referring to question above, what is the frequency of the recessive allele in this population?
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45 Why is the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium model more of a theoretical process than a truly concrete procedure?
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46 According to the requirements for Hardy- Weinberg Equilibrium, are humans evolving? Why or why not?
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47 What is the relationship that exists between genetic variability in a population and ability to respond to environmental changes?
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48 For what purpose do scientists utilize the Hardy- Weinberg Equation?
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49 What is the Hardy-Weinberg Equation?
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50 Suppose you are studying a population of squirrels in which gray hair is completely dominant over black hair. The frequency of homozygous dominant individuals in the population is 41%. What is the frequency of the dominant allele in the population?
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51 Referring to question #50, what is the frequency
- f heterozygous individuals in the population?
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52 Suppose a population contains 10% homozygous recessive individuals. Using the Hardy-Weinberg equation, what is the frequency of the dominant allele in this population?
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53 Identify three of the factors that need to be met in
- rder for the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium
Equation to be effectively utilized.
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54 Utilizing the Hardy-Weinberg equation, how can scientists determine whether or not a population is evolving?
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55 What is genetic drift?
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56 Explain how genetic drift can reduce, or even eliminate variation from a population.
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57 Can genetic drift eliminate variation from a population where there was a consistently changing set of environmental conditions? Explain your answer.
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58 Suppose you are studying an isolated population
- f elk in Canada that is under intense hunting
- pressure. Provide an explanation from a genetic
standpoint why strict hunting regulations should be enacted for this area. Be sure to use appropriate vocabulary.
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59 What is the ‘Founder Effect?’
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60 Explain why it is important that populations maintain a certain degree of genetic diversity.
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61 Explain how is it possible that 99% of all species that have ever existed are now extinct.
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62 Using the finches of the Galapagos Islands, explain the process of adaptive radiation.
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63 Both cacti (North America) and a group of plants called euphorbs (Africa) have developed adaptations for surviving drought-like conditions, but they are not believed to be closely related. Explain how this could possibly occur and the name for the process.
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64 In western North America, there is a species of flowering plant that has an exceptionally long, deep flower, as well as a species of moth that has an exceptionally long tongue. Explain how evolutionary theory could likely explain the seemingly coincidental occurrence of these two species.
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65 Explain how a rapid environmental change could lead to punctuated equilibrium.
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66 Does genetic drift tend to have a more drastic impact on large or small populations? Explain your answer.
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67 What effect does a population bottleneck have on the genetic diversity of a population?
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68 Explain why a group that has endured a population bottleneck may be more vulnerable to disease in the future.
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69 Suppose you are a marine biologist working to repopulate the Atlantic bluefin tuna in the Gulf of Mexico after years of overfishing. Explain why it is important that you choose a genetically diverse group of tuna for your repopulation. If you failed to do this, what situation could possible occur?
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70 Using what you know about genetic diversity, explain why consanguineous marriages are frowned upon in most cultures.
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71 Explain how population bottleneck and founder effect may contribute to the extinction of a species.
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72 Is extinction a natural process? Explain your answer.
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73 What role does the environment play in the process of adaptive radiation?
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