BIOLOGY
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781260169614
Author: Raven
Publisher: RENT MCG
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Textbook Question
Chapter 55, Problem 4S
Refer to figure 56.7. Examine the pattern of beak size distributions of two species of finches on the Galápagos Islands. One hypothesis that can be drawn from this pattern is that character displacement has taken place. Are there other hypotheses? If so, how would you test them?
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Scientists tracked the year populations of two species of bush cricket were first
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C.
1.0-
1.0
0.8-
2 0.8-
0.6-
0.6-
0.4-
0.4-
0.2-
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1920
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1960
2000
1920
1960
2000
year of first record
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Chapter 55 Solutions
BIOLOGY
Ch. 55.1 - Prob. 1LOCh. 55.1 - Prob. 2LOCh. 55.2 - Prob. 1LOCh. 55.2 - Prob. 2LOCh. 55.2 - Explain how the presence of other species can...Ch. 55.3 - Prob. 1LOCh. 55.3 - Prob. 2LOCh. 55.4 - Explain the different forms of symbiosis.Ch. 55.4 - Prob. 2LOCh. 55.4 - Explain how the occurrence of one ecological...
Ch. 55.5 - Prob. 1LOCh. 55.5 - Describe how early colonizers may affect...Ch. 55.5 - Prob. 3LOCh. 55 - Prob. 1DACh. 55 - Prob. 2DACh. 55 - Prob. 1IQCh. 55 - Prob. 2IQCh. 55 - Prob. 3IQCh. 55 - Prob. 4IQCh. 55 - Prob. 5IQCh. 55 - Prob. 6IQCh. 55 - Prob. 7IQCh. 55 - Studies that demonstrate that species living in an...Ch. 55 - Prob. 2UCh. 55 - According to the idea of coevolution between...Ch. 55 - In order for mimicry to be effective in protecting...Ch. 55 - Which of the following is an example of...Ch. 55 - A species whose effect on the composition of a...Ch. 55 - When a predator preferentially eats the superior...Ch. 55 - Prob. 8UCh. 55 - Prob. 1ACh. 55 - The presence of a predatory species a. always...Ch. 55 - Resource partitioning by sympatric species a....Ch. 55 - Parasitism differs from predation because a. the...Ch. 55 - The presence of one species (A) in a community may...Ch. 55 - Competition is traditionally indicated by...Ch. 55 - Refer to figure 56.9. If the single prey species...Ch. 55 - Prob. 3SCh. 55 - Refer to figure 56.7. Examine the pattern of beak...Ch. 55 - Is it possible that some species function together...
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- We have documented many examples of this type of speciation occurring. Darwin’s finches are the most famous example. View the model shown. Discuss what kind of geographic barriers would have led to the finch speciation in the Galapagos.arrow_forwardConsider this example. Shorebirds on the Eastern coast of North America feed on the mollusks and tiny crabs along the shore. Birds with tougher beaks are better adapted to crack open the shells of the mollusks, and birds with sharper beaks are better adapted to pierce the shells of crabs. Over time, the shorebirds become two separate species that no longer breed with one another. What type of speciation has occurred? A. Sympatric speciation B. Adaptive speciation C. Microevolution speciation D. Allopatric speciationarrow_forwardWhich of the following statement(s) is/are true? Select the best overall answer. a. Kenward et al. reported that for each paired bird with eggs, there were three floaters in a European population of Common Buzzards b. in Complete Migration, there is predictable, seasonal movement of individuals between a breeding range and a non-breeding range (and back again) with no geographic overlap of these two ranges. The Broad-winged Hawk is an example of a species that exhibits Complete Migration. c. A paper by Bednarz et al. published in 1990, demonstrated with observational tallies of migrating raptor species that populations declined in migratory counts during the DDT era. d. all of the above e. only b and carrow_forward
- If you had measured a set of morphological traits (beak depth, wing length, leg length, tail length, body size) in both the parent and offspring generations, would it be useful to measure any changes in these traits in the parent generation after the drought killed the birds with shallower beaks? Could any such changes measure a correlated response to natural selection on beak depth? Why or why not?arrow_forward(b) There is a positive correlation between branch width of trees and hind limb length of the brown anole lizard: Wide branch diameter = long hind limbs Narrow branch diameter= short hind limbs A group of lizards becomes separated from the main group on Island A due to a catastrophic hurricane that carries this small group out to sea. A few lizards are able to make it to uninhabited, dry land (Island B) and breed over several generations separated from the lizards on Island A. Scientists, monitoring the lizard populations, record the change in hind limb length of these two new populations over time. The results are shown below: Island A Island B Linear (Island A) Linear (Island B) 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Figure 1: Change in hind limb length of brown anole lizards Page 2 CONT'D from Page 1 i. State the type of speciation event that has occurred and fully explain how this event could possibly give rise to a new species of anole lizard on Island B. ii. Based on the…arrow_forwardSuppose you have four species of lizard and you are interested in how leg length will change in a single generation of evolution under directional selection. Given the following parameters, which lizard do you predict will change the most in one generation? Species A: Heritability: 0.5, selection differential: 1.2 Species B: Heritability: 0.4, selection differential: -1.9 Species C: Heritability: 0.9, selection differential: -0.67 Species D: Heritability: 0.1, selection differential 3.2 Species A Species B Species C Species Darrow_forward
- Answer the following: This spectacular animal is a Lesser Bird of Paradise, Paradisea minor, from the highlands of Papua New Guinea. In the context of various evolutionary phenomena, why do you suppose: (a) This bird is confined to New Guinea and two nearby islands? Why would you not expect to find it in the mountains of Borneo? Explain in detail. (b) This spectacular tail presumably attracts predators; why hasn't natural selection acted to reduce it or camouflage it? Explain in detail.arrow_forwardDarwin’s finches have different beaks in terms of size and shape to be able to eat different food sources like insects, nectar, and seeds. Cactus finches have longer, more pointed beaks to probe cactus flowers compared to their relatives, the ground finches. If a plant disease killed a large portion of the cacti on the Galapagos islands, what would the future populations of finches look like in terms of beak size and shape? Use your knowledge of natural selection to determine which option is most likely. Ground finches would survive and pass on their shorter and wider beaks, so there would be a higher proportion of finches in future generations that have short and wide beaks. Ground finches would survive and pass on their beaks, but they would mate with the remaining cactus finches, creating a new hybrid that is somewhere between short versus long and narrow versus wide. Cactus finches would compete for food with ground finches and exhibit resource partitioning, so the beaks…arrow_forwardDo you believe that because insect beak length has changed in opposite directions in the Florida and the Texas populations that we have stronger evidence that natural selection was acting directly on beak length in these populations? Or is it equally likely that natural selection is only acting on a trait correlated with beak length in the Florida and Texas populations?arrow_forward
- Consider two species that diverged while geographically separated but resumed contact before reproductive isolation was complete. Predict the outcome over time if the two species mated indiscriminately and (a) hybrid offspring survived and reproduced more poorly than offspring from intraspecific matings or (b) hybrid offspring survived and reproduced as well as offspring from intraspecific matings.arrow_forwardLook at picture attached A) What does the phylogeny suggest about the evolutionary process that led to the trait differences by habitat? a. convergent evolution b. adaptive radiation c. phenotypic plasticity B) Choose different functional forms from two of the habitats shown in the collage and describe how one or more differences in form may represent an adaptation to their different environment. Example: compare plant form for lobeliads in montane bog to cloud forest understoryarrow_forwardThe graph in Figure 3 represents the beak sizes of the offspring of the birds that survived the drought of1977. (The survivors were represented by the black bars in Figure 2, and this graph shows the beak depth distribution of their offspring in 1978.) Explain the observed change in beak characteristics using the following concepts in your answer: competition, survival of the fittest, inheritance.arrow_forward
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