Cards (16)

    • What is selection?
      The process by which organisms that are better adapted to their environment tend to survive and breed.
    • What is directional selection?

      Selection that favours phenotypes that vary in one direction from the mean of the population, producing a gradual change in allele frequency.
    • What is stabilising selection?
      Selection that favours average phenotypes and preserves the characteristics and alleles of a population.
    • What is more than one gene called?
      Polygene.
    • What do different characteristics favour?

      Different characteristics in the population.
    • What are most characteristics influenced by?
      More than one gene.
    • What are characteristics influenced by more than one gene more influenced by?
      The environment.
    • What does the effect of the environment have on polygenes?
      It produces individuals in a population that vary about the mean.
    • What graph can we plot to show the variation between individuals effected by the environment?
      A normal distribution curve.
    • What is a phenotype?

      The observer physical and biochemical characteristics of an organism.
    • What does it mean in directional selection if the individuals fall to either the left or right of the mean?
      They will possess a phenotype more suited to the new conditions and will be more likely to survive and breed, contributing more offspring and their alleles.
    • What are selection pressures?
      Environmental factors that affect the chance of survival of an organism.
    • What is an example of a selection pressure?
      High competition for food between predators.
    • What is an example of directional selection?

      Antibiotic-resistant bacteria strains becoming more common.
    • What is an example of stabilising selection?
      Very low and very high birth weight in humans are selected against leading to the maintenance of the intermediate weight.
    • What adaptations may natural selection result in?
      Anatomical, physiological, and behavioural.
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