TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 11851


The greatest number of four digits which is divisible by 15, 25, 40 and 75 is :

#General Aptitude
  1. 9000 
  2. 9400
  3. 9600 
  4. 9800
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TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4715

#Section 2: Evolution

Claytonia virginica is a woodland spring herb with flowers that vary from white, to pale pink, to bright pink. Slugs prefer to eat pink-flowering over white-flowering plants (due to chemical differences between the two), and plants experiencing severe herbivory are more likely to die. The bees that pollinate this plant also prefer pink to white flowers, so that Claytonia with pink flowers have greater relative fruit set than Claytonia with white flowers. A researcher observes that the percentage of different flower colors remains stable in the study population from year to year. Given no other information, if the researcher removes all slugs from the study population, what do you expect to happen to the distribution of flower colors in the population over time?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4716

#Section 2: Evolution

Which of the following is correct match?

A

Wallace

I

Changes in allele frequency due

to random genetic drift

B

Sewall Wright

II

Evolution by natural selection

C

Carl Woese

III

hybrid sterility

D

Haldane’s rule

IV

DNA sequencing led to molecular phylogenetics

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4717

#Section 2: Evolution

 If Darwin had been aware of genes and their typical mode of transmission to subsequent generations, with which statement would he most likely have been in agreement?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 15717

#Section 2: Evolution

 In The Origin of Species, Darwin propounded two major hypotheses:

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 15718

#Section 2: Evolution

Christians interpreted the biblical account of Genesis literally and concluded that each species had been created individually by God in the same form it has today. This belief is known as

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 15719

#Section 2: Evolution

Carolus Linnaeus (1707–1778), who established the framework of modern taxonomy in his Systema Naturae (1735), won worldwide fame for his exhaustive classification of plants and animals, undertaken in the hope of discovering the pattern of the creation. Linnaeus classified,