Supplemental Instruction
IowaStateUniversity / Leader: / Shelly
Course: / BIOL 101
Instructor: / Dr. Valenzuela
Date: / 3/24/15
- Bone marrow stem cells make:
- Bone cells
- Neural cells
- Cardiac cells
- Blood cells
- What is the turnover rate for the epidermis?
- Never replaced
- 120 days
- 2-3 weeks
- 15 years
- True/False: Your skin cells and your brain cells have the same genes.
- A zygote is an example of
- Pluripotent cell
- Multipotent cell
- Totipotent cell
- What are three possible multipotent stem cells?
Bone marrow, neural, mesenchymal
- Place the following in order from smallest to largest: tissues, organs, cells, systems
Cells, tissues, organs, systems
- Which of the following statements applies to tissues? Circle all that are correct.
- Only one cell type is present
- Multiple cell types are present
- Each tissue has a specific function
- Cells within a tissue cooperate
- All of the above
- What are the differences between embryonic and somatic stem cells?
Embryonic stem cells are less specific than adult stem cells.
- Name four regenerative medicine example:
Therapeutic drugs
Stem cells stimulated outside the body
Biodegradable materials used for support
Biodegradable scaffolds
Pg. 290-291
- What is a blastocyst?
- A fertilized egg
- A ball of 8 duplicating cells
- Hollow ball of cells
- Does not lead to cell differentiation
- What is the cloning process called?
Somatic cell nuclear transfer
- How do bacteria reproduce?
- Meiosis
- Mitosis
- Sexually
- Binary fission
- What are two ways bacterial populations can acquire genetic variation?
mutations and gene transfer
- True/False: Individuals evolve and populations are selected.
- It is advantageous for flowers to be medium length because short flowers don’t get enough sunlight, tall flowers have wind damage. What type of selection is this?
- Stabilizing
- Directional
- Diversifying
- Name three ways you can prevent antibiotic resistant bacteria
Wash your hands
Don’t use antibiotics for virus
Reduce antibiotics in livestock
- What does MRSA refer to?
- S. aureus bacteria that are resistant to many antibiotics
- A collection of skin and other infections caused by a type of bacteria
- S. aureus bacteria that are found only in humans with certain types of skin infections
- S. aureus bacteria that are normal residents of human skin in the vast majority of the human population
- All bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics
- Over time, natural selection leads to ______.
- Genetic variation
- Adaptation
- Evolution
- Fitness
- The evolution of antibiotic resistance is an example of
- Directional selection
- Diversifying selection
- Stabilizing selection
- Random selection
- Steady selection
- What is the environmental pressure in the case of antibiotic resistance?
- The growth rate of bacteria
- How strong or weak the bacterial cell walls are
- The relative fitness of different bacteria
- The presence or absence of antibiotics in the environment
- The temperature of the environment
- Natural selection is
- Nonadaptive, increases genetic diversity
- Nonadaptive, decreases genetic diversity
- Adaptive, increases genetic diversity
- Adaptive, decreases genetic diversity
- What is genetic drift?
- Allele frequencies change due to chance events
- Alleles move from one population to another
- New alleles are created randomly
- Individuals with favorable alleles reproduce
- Explain bottleneck effect and founder effect.
Bottleneck- population suddenly reduced
Founder- small group leaves a population to start a new one
Pg 336
- Genetic drift (reduces/increases) genetic diversity. Gene flow (increases/decreases) genetic diversity.
- What is the Hardy-Weinberg equation?
Pg 342
- Explain seven ways species are reproductively isolated: pg 346
Ecological isolation
Temporal isolation
Behavioral isolation
Mechanical isolation
Gametic isolation
Hybrid inviability
Hybrid infertility
- Genetic diversity is measured in terms of allele frequencies. A population of 3,200 mice has 4,200 dominant G alleles and 2,200 recessive g alleles. What is the frequency of g alleles in the population?
2,200/6,400
- Which population has the highest genetic diversity? Each has 1,000 members.
1)70% have A1/A1, 25% have A1/A2, 5% have A1/a
2)50% have A1/A1, 20% have A2/A2, 10% have A1/A2, 10% have A2/a, and 10% have a/a
3)80% have A1/A1, 20% have A1/a
- A bottleneck is best described as
- An expansion of a population from a small group of founders
- A small number of individuals leaving a population
- A reduction in the size of an original population followed by an expansion in size as the surviving members reproduce
- The mixing and mingling of alleles by mating between members of different populations
- An example is natural selection
- A population of ants on a median strip has 12 different alleles, A through L, of a particular gene. A drunk driver plows across the median strip, destroying most of the median strip and 90% of the ants. The surviving ants are all homozygous for allele H.
What is the impact of this event on the frequency of alleles A through L?
What type of event is this? Genetic drift
All alleles except the H ones will equal 0. H alleles would equal 100%
- Which is true of non-evolving populations?
- Allele frequencies don’t change over generations
- Genotype frequencies don’t change over time
- Individuals choose mates with whom they share many alleles
- All of the above
- A and B
- Why is inbreeding detrimental to a population?
Passes on the recessive alleles and reduces the heterozygous alleles.
- The biological species concept defines a species
- On the basis of similar physical appearance
- On the basis of close genetic relationships
- On the basis of similar levels of genetic diversity
- On the basis of the ability to mate and produce fertile offspring
- On the basis of recognizing one another’s mating behaviors
- Hardy- Weinberg practice
- A bird with a mating dance only attracts species of its kind, what type of reproductive isolation is this?
- Mechanical
- Gametic
- Temporal
- Behavioral
- A mule is a cross between a horse and a donkey, and it cannot produce offspring. What type of reproductive isolation is this?
- Temporal
- Ecological
- Hybrid in viability
- Hybrid infertility
- Which of the following is most likely to leave a fossil?
- Jellyfish
- Worm
- Wolf
- Sea sponge
- All of the above
- You are examining a column of soil that contains vertebrate fossils from deeper to shallower layers. Would you expect a fossil with four limbs with digits to occur higher or lower in the soil column relative to a standard fish? Why?
Fossil with limbs would be the fossil of recent organism standards. Fish would be deeper.
- Which of the following features of Tiktaalik is not shared with other bony fishes?
- Scales
- Teeth
- Mobile neck
- Fins
- None of the above
- What are the similarities between an eagle wing with the structure and function of a human arm:
Same bones and structure. Human arms have more fine motor movement.
- What are four characteristics to a tiktaalik?
Ribs are long and sturdy to support the body on land
Pectoral fins can support their body weight
Mobile neck
Head is long and flat