crt study guide quarter 2

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CRT Study Guide Quarter 2. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2
Page 2: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A change in ocean current causes the climate on an island to become drier. As a result, the grasses that cover the island change from dark green to light brown. Over time, how might a species of grass toads that hide in the grasses and are subject to predation respond to these changes?

Page 3: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Their coloration will change to brown.

Page 4: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A river caused one population of giraffes to become separated into two populations. Members of these two populations were later brought together but were not able to breed. What is this an example of?

Page 5: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Speciation

Page 6: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A storm blew several butterfly-eating birds to a distant island. The island, which previously had no birds, was filled with butterflies of all colors. One year later, all of the butterflies were dark green and brown. What is likely the explanation for the change in the butterfly population.

Page 7: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

The surviving butterflies had a trait that protected them from the birds.

Page 8: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Over time, animals may change behavior or physical appearance in response to changes in the environment. What is this called?

Page 9: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Adaptation

Page 10: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What is the process by which individuals that are better adapted to their environment survive and reproduce more successfully than others do?

Page 11: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Natural Selection

Page 12: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

When an effective insecticide is used on a population of insects, most of the insects are killed. However, a few may survive due to genes that make them resistance to the insecticide. What is the BEST explanation of why this occur?

Page 13: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Insects that survived sprayings passed their resistance genes to their offspring.

Page 14: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

When penicillin was first developed it was hailed as a miracle drug. People said that bacterial diseases would be completely wiped out. However, over time many of these species of bacteria are no longer killed with penicillin. What is one likely cause of this phenomenon?

Page 15: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Rapid bacterial mutations due to environmental pressures

Page 16: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What are organisms that get energy by breaking down the remains of dead organisms called?

Page 17: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Decomposers

Page 18: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What is a biotic part of the a desert?

Page 19: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Anything Living

Page 20: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What is the environment in which an organism lives called?

Page 21: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Habitat

Page 22: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What symbiotic relationship is characterized by organisms that help other?

Page 23: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

mutualism

Page 24: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

How many chromosomes will be unable to do what?

Page 25: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Produce offspring

Page 26: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

How many chromosomes are presented in a normal human sex cell?

Page 27: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

23

Page 28: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

How would a gene be described?

Page 29: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

As the code instructions for a trait

Page 30: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

if the body cells of an organism have 10 chromosomes, then the sex cells produce during meiosis would have

Page 31: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

5 chromosomes

Page 32: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

On what structure are genes found?

Page 33: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

chromosomes

Page 34: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

The function of chromosomes is directly related to which of the following?

Page 35: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Passing trait

Page 36: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What is heredity?

Page 37: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Traits passing from parents to offspring

Page 38: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What makes up chromosomes?

Page 39: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Many genes joined together

Page 40: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

How can the process of meiosis be described?

Page 41: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Reducing the number of chromosomes by one half

Page 42: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Mitosis produces __________________while meiosis produces ________________.

Page 43: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Body cells

Sex cells

Page 44: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Unlike mitosis, what is the end result of meiosis?

Page 45: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Four genetically different cells are form

Page 46: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What is the haploid number of chromosomes for a human sperm or egg cell?

Page 47: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

23

Page 48: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What is the number of chromosomes for in a body cell (somatic) known as?

Page 49: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

diploid

Page 50: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What occurs in meiosis, but not in mitosis?

Page 51: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Gametes (sex cells) are made

Page 52: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

How is DNA like RNA? How is different?

Page 53: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Answers will vary

Page 54: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

If a scientist is trying to decide if a molecule is a RNA or DNA, for what should he test?

Page 55: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

thymine

Page 56: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

In DNA, what can be said about the amount of thymine (T) as compared to the amount of adenine (A) and the amount of cytosine (C) as compared to guanine (G)?

Page 57: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

There is an equal amount of thymine and adenine; there is an equal amount of cytosine as guanine. (A always pairs with T; G always pairs with C)

Page 58: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What type of mutations has occurred if a DNA sequence that initially reads ATTGCCGAT now reads ATTGCCAT after being copied?

Page 59: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Deletion

Page 60: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What type of mutation has occurred if a DNA sequence that initially reads ATTGCCGAT now reads ATTGCCAGAT after being copied?

Page 61: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Insertion

Page 62: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

When does a mutation occur?

Page 63: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

When there is a change in the order of the bases in an organism’s DNA

Page 64: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A per plant has alleles for green and yellow seed colors. According to Mendel’s law of segregation of characteristics, what must a gamete of the plant carry?

Page 65: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Only one allele

Page 66: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A pea plant has white flowers and yellow seeds. What does Mendel’s law of independent assortment say about these traits?

Page 67: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Inheritance of one trait does not affect the other.

Page 68: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A poodle with black fur (BB) is crossed with a poodle with brown fur (bb). Using a Punnett square, what is the probability that the offspring will be black?

Page 69: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

100%

Page 70: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

All characteristics are determined by what?

Page 71: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

A minimum of 2 genes.

Page 72: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Alleles for different traits are distributed to sex cells and offspring independently of one another. This is an example of which of Mendel’s laws?

Page 73: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Independent Assortment

Page 74: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

An organism with the geneotype Dd is crossed with an organism of the same geneotype. Using a Punnett square, what is the ratio of offspring displaying the recessive allele?

Page 75: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

During the formation of gametes, the two alleles responsible for a trait separate from each other. Alleles for a trait are then “recombined” at fertilization, producing the geneotype or the traits of the offspring. This is an example of which of Mendel’s laws?

Page 76: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Segregation

Page 77: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

If two first-generation self-pollinating plants are crossed, Pp by Pp, what is the probability that offspring plants will show the recessive trait, pp?

Page 78: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

1/4

Page 79: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

If you cross two rabbits that have the geneotype Bb, how many possible genotypes can be found in the offspring?

Page 80: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Three

Page 81: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

In a cross of parents that are pure for contrasting traits, only one form of the trait will appear in the next generation. Offspring that are hybird for a trait will have only the dominant trait in the phenotype. This is an example of which of Mendel’s laws?

Page 82: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

Dominance

Page 83: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

In a plant, tall (D) is the dominant allele. Short (d) is the recessive allele. Which GENOTYPE would a short offspring have?

Page 84: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

dd

Page 85: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

The likelihood that an offspring will have a genetic disorder, such as sickle cell disease, depends on what factors?

Page 86: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

The traits passed on by the parents

Page 87: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

What are the possible genotypes of the offspring if you cross a white flower( with the genotype pp) with a purple flower( with the genotype PP)?

Page 88: CRT Study Guide  Quarter 2

All Pp