BIOLOGY Sem 2 Topic Test 2012 - REVISION
Use the following family tree for hemophilia, a sex linked trait,to answer question 1.
- Is the condition dominant or recessive? Give the evidence for your answer.
- Write down the genotypes for each individual. If it cannot be determined, write all possibilities.
- If individual III2 married a carrier female, what are the chances that they would produce an offspring that would suffer from hemophilia? What is the chance that a son would suffer? What is the chance that a daughter would suffer?
- The following list has the steps in natural selection jumbled. Un-jumble them into the correct order.
- The environment changes which causes some
individuals to die
- A greater proportion of the population
now contain the beneficial genes
- Mutations that occur in a species leads to
- If the environment changes in the same
way in the future as it did in the past then
less individuals of the population will die out
- A few individuals contain beneficial genes
that help them survive the environmental change
- Draw a labeled diagram to explain how cloning of an animal is achieved.
- What is gene splicing and how does it relate to the use of insulin for diabetics?
- What does IVF stand for?
- Name three issues relating to the use of IVF.
- Give the 5 steps required for a cycle of IVF treatment
- What does the term mutation mean?
- What are the two causes of mutations?
- Give three examples of mutations and state whether they are beneficial or detrimental
- What genetic disorder is caused by i) too many body chromosomes ii)having an extra X chromosome in a female and a male and iii) having only one X chromosome
- What is the cause behind the above disorders? Draw a diagram showing how these can occur in an individual.
- Rabbits are a pest in Australia. The rabbit proof fence was one attempt at controlling the spread of rabbits. What was the other?
- Describe why, after many generations, rabbits are now much more resistant to your answer to Q15.
- Show, using a graph how the population of rabbits would have changed over time, starting from just before the introduction of the control measure from Q15.
- Provide one argument for, and one against GM foods.
- What is meant by the term ‘genetic screening’ and how could it benefit parents?
- The above pedigree chart is for a dominant/recessive type of inheritance pattern. Is the shaded characteristic dominant or recessive? How can you tell?
- using G and g for the alleles, what is the genotype of individuals 5, 10 and 13
- Determine the genotypic ratio for the predicted offspring of individuals 3 and 4.
- Using a punnet square, determine the % chance of a married couple having a son.
Planet Boop is filed with lush pink plants. There lives a population of Babbits (which look like a rabbit, but have a few differences). Babbits are mostly blue, but some Babbits are pink. Most have short necks, but some have elongated necks. They have looked this way for thousands of years.
- Some Quolves (which look like wolves and eat Babbits) are introduced to the area the Babbits inhabit. How and why does the allele frequency change in the Babbit population?
- A flood washes away all the low lying pink grasses the Babbits generally eat. How and why does the allele frequency change in the Babbit population?
- A population of purely green Boths (which look like sloths) are also preyed upon by the introduced Quolves. Choose the most likely outcome of the Dares:
- They will mutate to have pink fur, camouflage and survive
- They will die out due to being easy and slow moving prey
- They will adapt by natural selection and survive
- Explain why the other two choices will not occur.