Sources of Variation
Environmental vs Genetic
Mutations I
Mutations II
HWE
100

This term describes the "raw material" for evolution, specifically referring to differences among individuals due to their genotypes.

Genetic Variation

100

You take two genetically identical samples from a single ivy plant. You grow one in a dark closet and the other on a sunny windowsill; the one in the sun grows thick, dark green leaves, while the one in the dark grows thin, pale leaves. What type of variation is responsible for the difference in leaf appearance?

Environmental variation

100

Original mRNA: 5' - AUG AAC UUU GGU UAA - 3'

Mutated mRNA: 5' - AUG AAG UUU GGU UAA - 3' 

What specific type of point mutation has occurred?

Silent mutation

100

These are homologous genes that diverge within the same genome of a single species as a result of a gene duplication event.

Paralogs

100

Calculate the allele frequency of B for the bat population (20 BB, 50 Bb, 30 bb).  

B = 0.45

200

While mutation creates new alleles, these three processes during sexual reproduction are responsible for most variation in each generation.

Crossing over, Independent assortment, and Random fertilization

200

You collect seeds from two different populations of sunflowers—one from a dry desert and one from a rainy forest—and grow them both in the exact same greenhouse with identical water and soil. Despite the shared environment, the desert-sourced sunflowers bloom much earlier than the forest-sourced ones. What type of variation does this result demonstrate?

Genetic variation

200

Original protein sequence: Met-Val-His-Leu-Ser-Gly

Mutated protein sequence: Met-Val-Pro-Leu-Ser-Gly

What point mutation has happened and why?

Missense

200

A horticulturist notices a single Primrose plant in her garden that is much larger than the others. While the normal plants have 18 chromosomes (2n = 18), this specific plant has 36 chromosomes. When she tries to cross the large plant with the normal ones, the seeds are sterile. Identify the type of mutation and why its offspring might be sterile?

Genome duplication. During meiosis, three sets of chromosomes (triploid) cannot pair up and segregate evenly, leading to non-viable gametes.

200

You find a new population where 100% of the individuals are heterozygous (Bb). What is the allele frequency of b?

b = 0.5

300

You observe a population of hydrangeas where some are blue and some are pink. If the color is due solely to soil pH, this is an example of what?

Phenotypic Plasticity

300

In a "common garden" experiment, Population A foxes always turn white in winter regardless of temperature, while Population B foxes only turn white if it is cold. Which population demonstrates phenotypic plasticity via a steep reaction norm?

Population B demonstrates plasticity because its phenotype changes based on environmental cues, whereas Population A’s fixed response shows its variation is purely genetic.

300

If the resulting protein reads just Met - STOP, what is the technical name for this mutation, and what is its most common effect on protein function?

Nonsense - nonfunctional protein

300

Scientists are studying a gene that controls eye development, known as PAX6. They find a version of this gene in mice and a nearly identical version in humans. Both versions perform the exact same function: triggering the formation of eyes during embryonic development. What is the relationship of these genes?

They are orthologs

300

In a population of 100 bats, 20 are genotype BB, 50 are Bb, and 30 are bb. What is the frequency of the BB genotype?

BB = 0.2
400

This enzyme can create a double-stranded DNA copy from a mature mRNA, which can then be inserted back into the genome as a duplicate gene.

Reverse transcriptase

400

Identical twins Jennifer and Karen both have a "fat-absorbing" gene, but only Karen becomes obese due to her diet. Explain this interaction. 

Karen's phenotype is highly influenced by environmental factors. 

400

Why are insertions and deletions (Indels) often more "evolutionarily significant" or damaging than simple substitutions?

Indels typically cause a frameshift ehich changes the entire reading frame of the sequence from the point of mutation onward completely altering every subsequent amino acid and often introducing a premature stop codon.

400

Researchers find that one group of sparrows always inherits a specific "package" of three traits together: aggressive behavior, bright plumage, and early nesting. Even though these genes are located far apart on the chromosome, they are never "shuffled" by crossing over. What mutation does this represent and why is crossing over inhibited?

Because the segment is flipped, it cannot properly align with a standard chromosome during meiosis. This prevents effective recombination, locking the genes together.

400

If a population has 50 diploid individuals, how many total alleles for a specific gene are present in the gene pool?

100 alleles

500

A plant has the genotype AaBb, with each gene located on a different chromosome pair. During Meiosis I, the maternal and paternal versions of these pairs can align in any orientation before being separated into different cells. Why can this plant produce "new" allele combinations in its pollen (like Ab) that were not present in its own parents?

Due to independent assortment - creating unique combinations of alleles in every gamete.

500

If a trait has a heritability of 1.0, what would the "Reaction Norm" look like on a graph of Trait vs. Environment?

A horizontal or flat line (no change across environments)

500

Why are most mutations in "junk" DNA or those that are "synonymous" considered neutral in terms of natural selection?

They do not change the phenotype or affect the fitness of the organism.

500

In a species of icefish, scientists discovered a gene that produces an "antifreeze" protein, allowing the fish to survive in sub-zero waters. Upon closer inspection, they found that this gene is nearly identical in sequence to an older digestive enzyme gene also present in the fish's genome. Identify the type of mutation and what type of homologous gene this might result in?

Gene duplication and it will result in a paralog.

500

Consider a population of bats where 51 out of 100 bats exhibit the dominant phenotype of having red spots. What is the genotypic frequency of bats who have white spots?

0.49

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