TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 3305


Co-evolution is related to

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior
  1. the mating order in the harem of a Polygamous male.

  2. the elimination by deleterious mutations by sexual reproduction.

  3. mate selection process by a female in a lek.

  4. the evolutionary arms race between the host and the parasite

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TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 8293

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

The importance of computers and of computer software to modern systematics s is most closely linked to advances in ________.

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 8294

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

The common ancestors of birds and mammals were very early (stem) reptiles, which almost certainly possessed three-chambered hearts (two atria, one ventricle). Birds and mammals, however, are alike in having four-chambered hearts (two atria, two ventricles). The fourchambered hearts of birds and mammals are best described as ________.

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 8295

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

Imagine that a phylogeny was developed for a group of mammals based on bone structure. Which of the following statements would be a reasonable prediction about a phylogeny for the same group of species based on similarities and differences in the structure of a particular enzyme?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 8296

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

Giardia intestinalis can cause disease in several different mammalian species, including humans. Giardia organisms (G. intestinalis) that infect humans are similar morphologically to those that infect other mammals, thus they have been considered a single species. However, G. intestinalis has been divided into different subgroups based on their host and a few other characteristics. In 1999, a DNA sequence comparison study tested the hypothesis that these subgroups actually constitute different species. The following phylogenetic tree was constructed from the sequence comparison of rRNA from several subgroups of G. intestinalis and a few other morphologically distinct species of Giardia. The researchers concluded that the subgroups of Giardia are sufficiently different from one another genetically that they could be considered different species.


According to the phylogenetic tree in the figure above, G. intestinalis constitutes a ________ group.

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 8680

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

Giardia intestinalis can cause disease in several different mammalian species, including humans. Giardia organisms (G. intestinalis) that infect humans are similar morphologically to those that infect other mammals, thus they have been considered a single species. However, G. intestinalis has been divided into different subgroups based on their host and a few other characteristics. In 1999, a DNA sequence comparison study tested the hypothesis that these subgroups actually constitute different species. The following phylogenetic tree was constructed from the sequence comparison of rRNA from several subgroups of G. intestinalis and a few other morphologically distinct species of Giardia. The researchers concluded that the subgroups of Giardia are sufficiently different from one another genetically that they could be considered different species


By examining the phylogenetic tree diagrammed in the figure above, what conclusion can you draw about the species G. microti?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 8682

#Unit 9. Diversity of Life Forms

Giardia intestinalis can cause disease in several different mammalian species, including humans. Giardia organisms (G. intestinalis) that infect humans are similar morphologically to those that infect other mammals, thus they have been considered a single species. However, G. intestinalis has been divided into different subgroups based on their host and a few other characteristics. In 1999, a DNA sequence comparison study tested the hypothesis that these subgroups actually constitute different species. The following phylogenetic tree was constructed from the sequence comparison of rRNA from several subgroups of G. intestinalis and a few other morphologically distinct species of Giardia. The researchers concluded that the subgroups of Giardia are sufficiently different from one another genetically that they could be considered different species


Which of the following changes would a modern systematist be most likely to make after learning of the results of the rRNA analyses?