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Test your basic knowledge |
Recombinant Dna Technology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
health-sciences
,
genetics
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Comparing an unknown sample of DNA to a known sample by using Gel Electrophoresis; used in crime scenes - paternity tests - and remains identification
Embryology
DNA fingerprinting
Sexual reproduction
Mate choice/non - random mating
2. Way more offspring are produced than by sexual reproduction
Asexual reproduction
Stabilizing
Bottleneck effect
Directional selection
3. The change in a populations genetics
Genetic drift
Stabilizing
Microevolution
Descent with Modification2
4. The more common a trait becomes the more likely it will be selected against
Microevolution
Disruptive selection
Frequency dependent selection
Lamarck
5. Can make large quantities of product; infection free; less expensive than a natural source
Frequency dependent selection
Advantages of Recom. DNA tech
Intrasexual selection
'Pharm' animals
6. Another method designed to sort female sperm form male sperm; goes by size of sperm; females are bigger than male sperm
Descent with Modification
Reproductive fitness
Embryology
Micro - sort
7. Humans selecting certain traits in domestic organisms
plasmid
Advantages of Recom. DNA tech
Intrasexual selection
Artificial selection(breeding)
8. Distribution of organisms related to evolution; different organisms play the same roles on different continents; island organisms resemble organisms on nearby mainland
Directional selection
Reproductive cloning
Diploiding
Biogeography
9. Capable of asexual reproduction; most are not
Ericson Method
Population
Most organisms are...
plasmid
10. An accumulation of genetic charges over a certain amount of time
Gene flow
Descent with Modification
Mutation
Stem cells
11. One extreme is selected over the other
Theory
Sexual dimrphism
Directional selection
Heterozygote Advantage
12. A group of interbreeding organisms living in the same place at the same time
Reproductive cloning
Ericson Method
Theory
Population
13. Recessive traits persistent to a certain population; recessive alleles hide from selection
Neutral Variation
Germinal choice
Diploiding
Lamarck
14. All species on earth are fixed; no changes - no new species - no extinction
Neutral Variation
Stabilizing
Historical Context of evolution
Evolution
15. The process of sperm sorting; separating the male sperm from the female sperm; difference told by swimming speed; boy sperm swim faster than girl sperm; Theory might have flaws in it though - only works 50% of the time
Ericson Method
plasmid
Modes of Selection
Theory
16. Results in a genetically identical inidvidual
Sexual selection
Advantages of Recom. DNA tech
Stabilizing
Reproductive cloning
17. Theory of a stable - nonevolving population in which frequency of alleles do not change; only occurs in large - isolated populations with random mating - and no natural selection or mutations
Genetic drift
Sexual dimrphism
Hardy- Weinberg equilibrium
Biogeography
18. The movement of genes between two populations e.g. migration - immigration
Most organisms are...
Biogeography
Lyell
Gene flow
19. Taking good genes to replace bad genes; almost never works; has unintended side effects; sometimes just doesn't work; protein becomes degraded - etc
Descent with Modification2
Micro - sort
Gene Therapy
Phenotypic variation
20. Cells that can become only a few different types of cells; mostly adult stem cells; found in bone marrow - the skin epidermis - etc; can sometimes be turned into Totipotent stem cells
Hutton
Pluripotent stem cells
Natural selection
Neutral Variation
21. Cells that can become any cell in the body; found in the embryo
Totipotent stem cells
Stem cells
Bottleneck effect
Heterozygote Advantage
22. Selects for the extremes and against the middle
Disruptive selection
Frequency dependent selection
Natural selection
Artificial selection(breeding)
23. Scientific explanation of how life changes over time - science is based off of evidence - science is obtained with observation and testing - science is always open to question
Diploiding
Evolution
Hardy- Weinberg equilibrium
Cuvier
24. Came up with the term catastrophism(sudden events that lead to extinction - but not in todays time)
Gene flow
Embryology
Recombinant DNA technology
Cuvier
25. Results in a tissue or an organ that is identical to the DNA donor
'Pharm' animals
Recombinant DNA technology
Microevolution
Theraputic cloning
26. Sexual partners chosen based on some characteristics
Natural selection does not make perfect individuals
Mutation
Mate choice/non - random mating
Sexual dimrphism
27. Change in alleles due to random chance
Population
Genetic drift
Hardy- Weinberg equilibrium
Preimplantation Genetic diagnosis (PGD)
28. Selection fro or against environment; leads to evolution only if variation has genetic components
Gene Therapy
Phenotypic variation
Cuvier
Advantages of Recom. DNA tech
29. Number of offspring in the next generation; your contribution to the gene pool
Asexual reproduction
Natural selection does not make perfect individuals
Sexual reproduction
Reproductive fitness
30. A process to help separate DNA fragments using an electrical current; helps to compare DNA samples by fragment pattern
Gel Electrophoresis
Recombinant DNA technology
Frequency dependent selection
DNA fingerprinting
31. Set sail on the HMS Beagle to travel the islands and areas for signs of evolution; First book written in 1839 'voyage of the Beagle'; Second book published in 1859 'The Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection
Gene flow
Modes of Selection
Asexual reproduction
Charles Darwin
32. Heterozygous chromosomes have an affect on an individuals genetics/alleles
Population
Heterozygote Advantage
Adaptation
Gene flow
33. Invented the binomial method(naming of species); also believed that life was fixed
Linnaeus
Diploiding
Embryology
Bottleneck effect
34. Change in the DNA sequence of an individual; the only true way to get a new allele; the source of all heritable variation
Micro - sort
Phenotypic variation
Mutation
'Pharm' animals
35. Cells that can turn into other cells
Stem cells
Totipotent stem cells
Sexual reproduction
'Pharm' animals
36. The screening of embryos for genetic disorders; done in In Vitro fertilization(fertilization in a petri dish); PGD removes one cell from the embryo and screens it genetically; embryos with disorders are discarded - ones without are kept and implanted
Microevolution
Descent with Modification
Preimplantation Genetic diagnosis (PGD)
Micro - sort
37. Subset of natural selection that increases the likelihood of mating specifically
Bottleneck effect
Theory
Intrasexual selection
Sexual selection
38. A subset of a population colonizes a new area
Evolution
Lamarck
Heterozygote Advantage
Founder effect
39. When a population becomes smaller and a few individuals survive the event
Heterozygote Advantage
Cuvier
Bottleneck effect
Mate choice/non - random mating
40. Takes the gene from a needed product - puts it into another organism (usually bacteria) and it will make duplicates of the product
Mate choice/non - random mating
Intersexual selection
Recombinant DNA technology
Disruptive selection
41. Believed that change was gradual;Gradualism(the mechanisms of the world - then - are the same today)
Restriction enzymes
Frequency dependent selection
Descent with Modification2
Hutton
42. Forms that show how an organisms anatomy change over time
Transitional forms
Frequency dependent selection
Theraputic cloning
Restriction enzymes
43. 1.edits existing variation by using the material it has(variation that exists in population/ no new traits created by natural selection) 2. Has historical constraints(change in old structures) 3. Adaptations are compromises (good for one thing - bad
Natural selection
Natural selection does not make perfect individuals
Genetic drift
Intrasexual selection
44. Mutation - Natural selection - Genetic drift - Bottleneck effect - Founder effect - Gene flow - and Mate choice/non - random mating
DNA fingerprinting
Mechanisms of Microevolution
Molecular similarity
Natural selection
45. Form of reproduction more used because it creates Variation
Sexual reproduction
Linnaeus
Mechanisms of Microevolution
Ericson Method
46. Direct competition for mates with the same sex
Theraputic cloning
Molecular similarity
Intrasexual selection
Mutation
47. Directional selection - Disruptive selection - Stabalizing
Hutton
Modes of Selection
Neutral Variation
Historical Context of evolution
48. A widely accepted idea with lots of evidence
Theraputic cloning
Theory
Evolution
Sexual reproduction
49. Traits that are neither advantageous nor disadvantageous; there is no selection
Molecular similarity
Neutral Variation
Phenotypic variation
Evolution
50. Pharmaceutical animals; cloned animals used ot produce products for humans
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