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question 16 (multiple choice worth 4 points) (05.02 hc) a single female…

Question

question 16 (multiple choice worth 4 points)
(05.02 hc)
a single female frog can lay as many as 10,000 eggs in a breeding season, each egg carrying a unique combination of genes from its parents. of these, all but a few are eaten or otherwise killed before reaching adulthood. how might laying so many eggs affect the long - term survival of the frogs should the environment change?

  • since females can already lay large numbers of eggs, they would lay even more if the environment changed.
  • many of the females would die if there were a change for the worse in the environment.
  • changes in the environment would tend to favor the individuals with genetic combinations that made them bigger and more able to survive.
  • with so many genetic combinations, it is likely that a few individuals would have traits that would help them survive the changed environment.

question 17 (multiple choice worth 4 points)
(05.01 mc)
which of the following is the best example of evolution occurring?

  • some of the trees in places with harsh winters lose their leaves in the fall.
  • strains of bacteria can become immune to antibiotics that once killed them effectively.
  • viruses can attack single - celled organisms as well as multicellular organisms.
  • lions and cows both have hair covering their bodies and give birth to live offspring.

Explanation:

Response
Question 16
Brief Explanations
  • Option 1: No basis for females laying more eggs with environment change; the question is about survival, not egg - laying quantity increase.
  • Option 2: The question is about how laying many eggs affects survival, not about female death due to environmental change.
  • Option 3: The key is genetic variation from many eggs, not just size - related traits for survival.
  • Option 4: Laying many eggs creates a lot of genetic combinations. When the environment changes, it's probable that a few individuals with suitable traits (from this genetic variation) will survive. This option correctly links the large number of eggs (and thus genetic variation) to long - term survival in a changing environment.
Brief Explanations
  • Option 1: Trees losing leaves in fall is a seasonal adaptation, not evolution (evolution is a change in a population over time).
  • Option 2: Bacteria strains becoming immune to antibiotics means that the population of bacteria has changed over time (those with resistance survive and reproduce), which is evolution.
  • Option 3: This is just a statement about the host range of viruses, not evolution.
  • Option 4: Lions and cows having similar traits shows a common ancestry, not evolution occurring (evolution is a change in a population).

Answer:

D. With so many genetic combinations, it is likely that a few individuals would have traits that would help them survive the changed environment.

Question 17