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AP BIOLOGY REVIEW PRACTICE MULTIPLE CHOICE 2013  EVOLUTION

Multiple Choice
Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
 

 1. 

A population is a group of individuals of the same species.  According to the theory of natural selection, what is likely to happen to a population when a change occurs in its environment (for example, the amount of rainfall decreases or the temperature increases)?
a.
The individuals that have traits better suited to the changed environment would be more likely to survive and reproduce than those with less suitable traits.
b.
All of the individuals would try to develop new traits so that they could survive and reproduce in the changed environment.
c.
Some of the individuals would try to develop new traits so that they could survive and reproduce, and the other individuals would die.
d.
Because all individuals of the same species have the same traits, one individual would never have an advantage over another in its population.  They would either all survive or all die.
 

 2. 

A species of bird ate many types of seeds, each type coming from a different species of tree.  The birds' beaks varied in size, with some individuals having slightly smaller beaks and others having slightly larger beaks.
mc002-1.jpg
A few years went by without much rain, and the only species of tree that survived had large seeds.  Many generations later, almost all the birds had the slightly larger beaks.  How is this best explained?
a.
The birds with larger beaks were better at eating the large seeds than those with smaller beaks, so only the birds with larger beaks got enough food to survive, reproduce, and pass the trait of large beaks to the next generation.
b.
The birds with smaller beaks had to work harder than those with larger beaks to crack open the large seeds.  The more they used their beaks, the larger their beaks became, so they were able to get enough food to survive, reproduce, and pass the traits of large beaks to the next generation.
c.
The birds with smaller beaks grew their beaks so that they would be better able to eat the large seeds and get enough food to survive, reproduce, and pass the trait of larger beaks to the next generation.
d.
It was a chance occurrence that all the individual birds' beaks in the next generation were larger.  They were therefore able to eat the large seeds and get enough food to survive, reproduce, and pass the trait of large beaks to the next generation.
 

 3. 

Which of the following correctly describes what happens when a population of bacteria becomes resistant to an antibiotic?  Note: a bacterium is one individual in a group of bacteria.
a.
During treatment with an antibiotic, each individual bacterium tries to become resistant to the antibiotic.  Only some are able to willingly become resistant, and these individuals survive to pass this trait to their offspring.
b.
During treatment with an antibiotic, all of the bacteria gradually become more resistant to the antibiotic the more they are exposed to it.  They all survive and pass this trait to their offspring.
c.
During treatment with an antibiotic, a population of bacteria usually dies.  Sometimes by chance, all members of the population become resistant at once, survive, and pass their resistance to their offspring.
d.
During treatment with an antibiotic, only those individual bacteria that already have a trait that helps them survive the effects of the antibiotic will live.  Their offspring in the next generation will also have this trait. 
 

 4. 

A change in the relative frequencies of alleles in the gene pool of a population is called
a.
diversifying selection.
b.
evolution.
c.
genetic drift.
d.
directional selection.
e.
mutation.
 

 5. 

New alleles arise by
a.
mutation.
b.
migration.
c.
genetic drift.
d.
random mating.
e.
independent assortment.
 

 6. 

In the Hardy-Weinberg equation, the frequency of homozygous dominant individuals in a population are represented by
a.
p2.
b.
2pq.
c.
q2.
d.
q or p.
e.
None of the choices are correct.
 

 7. 

If the frequency of the recessive allele is 30 percent, the frequency of the heterozygous carrier would be what percent?
a.
42
b.
9
c.
27
d.
60
e.
80
 

 8. 

According to Darwin, adaptive traits will increase in frequency
a.
as the mutation rate increases due to environmental pressures.
b.
if they promote survival and reproduction.
c.
if the alleles that control them decrease competitiveness.
d.
as populations grow smaller.
e.
if the trait is recessive.
 

 9. 

Two individuals are members of the same species if they
a.
possess the same number of chromosomes.
b.
breed at the same time.
c.
are phenotypically indistinguishable.
d.
can mate and produce fertile offspring.
e.
are able to produce many offspring..
 

 10. 

Which of the following evolve?
a.
populations
b.
individuals
c.
couples
d.
families
e.
single cells in a body
 

 11. 

Directional selection occurs when
a.
the environment controls which organisms will survive.
b.
humans determine which organisms will survive.
c.
the extremes of the population have a lesser chance to survive.
d.
the extremes of the population have a better chance to survive.
e.
the organisms on one extreme of the population have a better chance to survive than do those on the other extreme.
 

 12. 

Speciation occurs
a.
after populations diverge and become reproductively isolated.
b.
when mutations generate observable differences.
c.
when transitional forms develop between different populations.
d.
when natural selection pressures reach their maximum.
e.
when humans intervene and establish new breeds.
 
 
Answer the following questions based on this diagram:

nar001-1.jpg
 

 13. 

Which of the three types of natural selection is most likely to lead to speciation in a single environment?
a.
Diagram A
b.
Diagram B
c.
Diagram C
d.
All types of selection can equally lead to speciation
e.
Natural selection cannot lead to speciation
 

 14. 

Which of the following statements is false?
a.
Because there are more than two shades of coat color, the trait must be determined by a single gene with two alleles inherited in basic Mendelian patterns.
b.
In the type of selection represented in diagram (a), the most common phenotypic variation of the original population have the highest chance of survival and reproduction.
c.
In the type of selection represented in diagram (b), one extreme phenotypic variation of the original population has the highest rate of survival and reproduction.
d.
In the type of selection represented in diagram (c), the two extreme phenotypic variations of the original population has the highest rate of survival and reproduction.
e.
None of the statements is false; all statements are true.
 
 
Answer the following questions based on this diagram:

nar002-1.jpg
 

 15. 

The diagram represents the effects of:
a.
Natural selection selecting for traits favorable in a industrial environment.
b.
Natural selection selecting for traits favorable in a desert environment.
c.
Natural selection selecting for traits favorable in a farm environment.
d.
Artificial selection selecting for traits allowing the plants to better survive in the natural environment.
e.
Artificial selection selecting for traits favored by human breeders.
 

 16. 

The type of selection used to produce the vegetables be best described as:
a.
directional selection.
b.
stabilizing selection.
c.
diversifying/disruptive selection.
d.
gene flow.
e.
genetic mutations.
 

 17. 

Which of the following statements is false?
a.
The vegetables listed here are able to interbreed.
b.
The vegetables belong to different species.
c.
Cabbage did not evolve into broccoli... just like monkeys did not evolve into humans.
d.
The Brassica oleracea is the common ancestor to all shown vegetables.
e.
None are false; all statements are true.
 

 18. 

Which of the following statements related to the above diagram is false?
a.
Small variations in the original population can be selected over many generations to enhance the favorable characteristic.
b.
Artificial selection can lead to the breeding of many organisms beneficial to humans.
c.
Such selection would be more difficult if starting with a population that is genetically identical to each other.
d.
Artificial selection and natural selection are identical forces except for  what/who determines what phenotypes are “fit”.
e.
All statements are true.  None of them are false.
 
 



The following image shows a large island with smaller associated islands. Island 1 and 2 are somewhat similar in rain fall, plant life and geography,  whereas island 3 has constant warm temperatures with plentiful rainfall. Island 3 is also the oldest of the three associated islands by over 2 million years.
The letters represent populations of a species of lizard.  C is the original population of lizard for this species. The development of the mountain range  segregated the lizard populations C and B though they can successfully breed when introduced. Due to currents and prevailing winds B gave rise to population A and C gave rise to D.  Population E is phenotypically very different from from all other populations. There is significant differences in size, mating behavoirs, and habitats.

nar003-1.jpg
 

 19. 

If alleles are exchanged regularly between populations A and B and rarely between A and C, which of the following is/are logical conclusions?
a.
There is significant gene flow between all three populations.
b.
There is NO gene flow between all three populations.
c.
Gene flow occurs between A and B and genetic drift occurs in all three populations.
d.
Gene flow occurs between A and B and there is no gene flow between A and C.
e.
A, B, C have identical allelic frequency.
 

 20. 

The  extreme divergence of population E may have due to
a.
the Founder Effect
b.
Microevolution
c.
the effects of genetic drift
d.
a change in allelic  frequency
e.
all of the above are true.
 

 21. 

In 1999, Island 2 had 100 individuals with 4 out of the population showing the homozygous recessive phenotype but in 2010 the population grew to 112 individuals with 3 showing the homozygous recessive phenotype. Is the population in Hardy Weinberg equilibrium or are we seeing microevolution? Which of the following supports your conclusion?
a.
We cannot tell from this information.
b.
We need the frequency of alleles from the surrounding islands.
c.
Yes, there is a change in the frequency of alleles.
d.
No, there is no change in the frequency of alleles.
 

 22. 

The Hardy-Weinberg formula
a.
is useful in determining the extent to which a sexually reproducing population is evolving.
b.
is used to predict when genetic drift will occur in a sexually reproducing population.
c.
is useful in determining the extent to which polyploidy is occurring in specific plant populations.
d.
is used to predict when specific groups of organisms will become extinct.
e.
all of these
 

 23. 


mc023-1.jpg
Based on the above which of the following is true?
a.
The lesser panda and the giant panda are very closely related
b.
The lesser panda is more closely related to the raccoon than to the giant panda
c.
The dog and the giant panda have the most recent common ancestor.
d.
The dog is partly like a bear.
e.
All of the above are true
 
 


Seagull Saga- The following page of questions is all related to the seagull saga. Read carefully and refer back to other questions as needed.

A species of seagulls exists as a large number of different populations on separate islands of the Azores archipelago. Each population contains 100 individuals. Every generation, 5 individuals from each population disperse to other islands in the archipelago. In the following months, 5 seagulls migrate into each population from other islands in the archipelago.
 

 24. 

Which of the following is true?
a.
There is a reproductive barrier between this group of populations and therefore no gene flow.
b.
There is some gene flow between populations.
c.
There is a post-zygotic mechanism in place to prevent hybridization between the populations
d.
Since populations are so small genetic drift will NOT affect populations
 

 25. 

In the population above, the black-colored seagull is due to a dominant allele. Mm and MM individuals are black, and mm individuals are white. In each population, 81 individuals are white-colored, with 19 black colored individuals. Assuming Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, what is the approximate frequency of the (M) allele in each population?
a.
.81
b.
.19
c.
.90
d.
.10
e.
.044
 

 26. 

During a storm, two males and two females are blown 300 miles due West, to a new isolated island uninhabited by seagulls. They reproduce and found a new population. They cannot disperse back to the original habitat, nor can any new seagulls cross to the new island. By chance, all four original colonists were white-colored gulls. What is the new frequency of the recessive (m) allele?
a.
1.0
b.
.19
c.
0.0
d.
.81
e.
.31
 

 27. 

Still considering the sea gulls, the difference in color between the newly formed population and the old populations is due to ---.
A) Stabilizing selection            B) Mutation           
C) Founder Effect                  D) Allopatric speciation
a.
Stabilizing selection
b.
Mutation
c.
Allopatric speciation
d.
Founder Effect
e.
Sympatric speciation
 

 28. 

Over the course of the next 200 years, these New Island gulls evolved mating displays that differ from those of the parent population.
When television producers introduce the original Azores archipelago gulls
to the new island gulls, the two kinds of gulls find each other’s mating behavior objectionable, and do not interbreed. What type of isolation mechanism keeps the two species of gulls from interbreeding?
a.
Mechanical Isolation
b.
Temporal isolation
c.
Ecological Isolation
d.
Behavioral Isolation
e.
Microevolution
 



 
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