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McMaster Bio 1M03 Exam Questions with 100% Correct Answers Latest Version 2024 Verified

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Why might Pasteur's experiment be inconclusive? - The swan-necked flask broth may not support cell growth, or the broth was poisoned. Experiment did not confirm hypothesis that all cells come from pre-existing cells Why are replicates important in experiments? - To ensure that results were not a...

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McMaster Bio 1M03 Exam Questions
with 100% Correct Answers | Latest
Version 2024 | Verified
Why might Pasteur's experiment be inconclusive? - ✔✔The swan-necked flask broth may not support
cell growth, or the broth was poisoned. Experiment did not confirm hypothesis that all cells come from
pre-existing cells



Why are replicates important in experiments? - ✔✔To ensure that results were not achieved by random
chance



What is the definition of a replicate? - ✔✔Unit that shares a common thing (4 mice in one cage = 1
replicate)



What does the law of succession suggest? - ✔✔As one species disappears, a similar one appears.
Suggests ancestors and descendants



What is the difference between vestigial traits and transitional features? - ✔✔vestigial - useless features
similar to useful features in related species (eg, coccyx in humans, tail in monkeys)

transitional - intermediate feature seen in fossil species, between ancestral and descended species (eg,
aquatic animal fins, tetrapod limbs)



List potential outcomes of the bottleneck effect - ✔✔- Potential high frequency of deleterious alleles that
were previously at low frequency in source population

- Different allele frequencies from source population, could lead to speciation

- Strong genetic drift due to small population size



Explain how the tuberculosis bacteria underwent natural selection during and after drug therapy -
✔✔Variation: different strains → some resistant to drugs, some died

Heritability: drug-resistant bacteria passed drug-resistant gene to daughter cells

Differential fitness: bacteria that survived produced offspring

,Selection: drug-resistant allele had higher chance of survival through drug therapy



Give three types of homologies. Provide an example for each - ✔✔Genetic: similarity in RNA, DNA,
amino acids (eg, AUG start codon shared with many living organisms)

Developmental: similarities in embryonic form or developmental processes (eg, embryos of human,
chicken, cat)

Structural: similarity in adult features (eg, neck bone structure shared between giraffes and humans)



What is the difference between acclimatization and adaptation? - ✔✔Acclimatization: organism's
response to the environment

Adaptation: heritable trait that increases the fitness of an individual. Acclimatization does not change
alleles, therefore it is not heritable.



How are the Galapagos finches an example of directly observed evolution? - ✔✔Beak morphology and
body size is heritable, and changes due to the environment. Since evolution = ∆ in allele frequencies,
selection for deeper beaks kills medium beaks. ∆ in food source selects for smaller beaks, which changes
allele frequencies again.



How does the Galapagos finches exhibit non-Lamarckian evolution? - ✔✔Lamarckian evolution says
evolution is goal directed. Bidirectional evolution (deeper to smaller) goes against this; if it was goal, it
would've gone in a single direction.



`Provide examples where evolution is not goal-directed - ✔✔- Parasites lose complex digestive systems

- Finch beaks get larger, then smaller



Why can humans not fly? What constraints are in place? - ✔✔- Historical constraints: since all traits
come from previous traits, if we don't have a prior trait for flying, we won't develop flight

- Genetic: we lack the necessary genes that would give us wings, flight, etc.



Individuals with genotype XX have same phenotype as genotype XY. Which allele is dominant, and what
are individuals with intermediate phenotypes called? - ✔✔X is dominant, Y is recessive. Incompletely
dominant.

, What is evolution driven by? Of the four, which one introduces new alleles? - ✔✔Natural selection, gene
flow, genetic drift, mutation. Mutation is the only one that introduces new alleles into populations (other
than gene flow)



For a given population, there is more observed heterozygotes than predicted in HWE. What are some
reasons this might occur? - ✔✔- Non-random mating → subconsciously prefer heterozygotes

- Natural selection → heterozygotes have an advantage over homozygotes (higher fitness)



In order for HWE to proceed, what assumptions must be made? - ✔✔- random mating → gametes
combine randomly

- no natural selection → parent generation survives and donates gametes

- no genetic drift → population is infinitely large **why does genetic drift affect small populations?

- no gene flow → no alleles lost by migration

- no mutation → no new alleles



Why is low genetic variation bad? - ✔✔If pathogen comes and affects those certain alleles, it can
eradicate entire population since no individuals will be able to survive and reproduce.



How might a population come under directional selection? - ✔✔- Facing selection to develop
characteristics that reinforce sexual isolation

- Develop traits that provide edge over competing species for resources



Obese babies can have trouble breathing, while tiny babies are prone to pneumonia and other
complicating affectations. What type of selection are babies likely under? - ✔✔Stabilizing selection →
selection for intermediate phenotype, elimination of extremes



How can inbreeding lead to accelerated natural selection? - ✔✔Inbreeding often results in deleterious
recessive alleles. Recessive alleles are under purifying selection



What can cause a species living in sympatry to diverge? What must it overcome? - ✔✔Disruptive
selection, gene flow

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