TOPIC 7 MARK SCHEME SHIT Flashcards
Use your knowledge of succession to explain the increase in biomass during the first 20 years (3)
- Pioneer species
- Change in abiotic conditions/less hostile/more habitats/niches
- Increase in number/amount/diversity of species/plants/animals
Suggest reasons for conserving woodlands
- Conserving/protecting habitats/niches
- Conserving/protecting species/maintains/increases diversity
- Reduces global warming/climate change
- Source of medicines/chemicals/wood
- Reduces erosion/eutrophication
Explain the increase in the diversity of birds as the woodland developed (3)
- Greater variety/diversity of plants/insects/more plant/insect species
- More food sources/more varieties of food
- More habitats/niches
ALLOPATRIC SPECIATION 8 POSSIBLE POINTS
- Geographical isolation
- Separate gene pools / no interbreeding / gene flow (between populations);
Accept: reproductive isolation - Variation due to mutation;
- Different selection pressures / different abiotic / biotic conditions / environments / habitats;
- (Different/advantageous) ALLELE(S) passed on/selected
- Different(ial) reproductive success / selected organisms (survive and) reproduce
- Leads to change / increase in allele frequency
- (Eventually different species) cannot (inter)breed to produce fertile offspring
Mark release recapture (4)
- Capture / collect sample, mark and release;
- Method of marking does not harm lizard / affect survival / make it more visible to predators;
- Leave sufficient time for lizards to (randomly) distribute (on island) before collecting a second sample;
- (Population =) number in first sample × number in second sample divided by number of marked lizards in second sample / number
recaptured.
Use your knowledge of gene linkage to explain these results (4)
- GN and gn linked
- GgNn individual produces mainly GN and gn gametes
- Crossing over produces some/few Gn and gN gametes
- So few(er) Ggnn and ggNn individuals
Reasons why observed phenotype ratios are often not the same as expected ratios
- Random fertilisation of gametes
- Small sample size
- Lethal alleles/genotypes
- Linked genes
- Epistasis
Why use chi squared test?
Categorical data
Explain results in table - question hasn’t said if genes are linked (3)
- Genes are linked
- No crossing over
- Only GL and gl (gametes produced) / No Gl and no gL (gametes produced)
What is a gene pool? (1)
All the ALLELES present in a population
Explain why mutations cannot be spread from one species to another (4)
- Mutations are spontaneous/random
- Only the rate of mutation is affected by environment
- Different species do not interbreed/produce fertile offspring
- So mutation/gene/allele cannot be passed from one species to another
Explain why there was a time lag between the introduction of Bt crops and the appearance of the first insect species resistant to the Bt toxin (3)
- Initially one/few/ insects with favourable mutation/allele
- Individuals with (favourable) mutation/allele will have more offspring
- Takes many generations for (favourable) mutation/allele to become the most common allele (of this gene)
Describe how the behaviour of a species could result in sympatric speciation (3)
- NOT geographically isolated
- (Leading to) reproductive isolation/gene pools kept separate
- Changes in ALLELE FREQUENCIES
- Can’t breed/mate to produce fertile offspring
An island possesses two species of palm tree which have arisen via sympatric speciation. The two species diverged from each other after the island was formed 6.5 million years ago. The flowering times of the two species are different.
Using this info, suggest how these two species of palm tree arose by sympatric speciation (5)
- Occurs in the same habitat/environment/population
- Mutation/s cause different flowering times
- Reproductive separation/isolation OR no gene flow OR gene pools remain separate
- Different ALLELE/S passed on/selected OR change in ALLELE frequency
- DISRUPTIVE selection
- Eventually different species cannot (inter)breed to produce fertile offspring
Lactose is the main sugar in milk and is hydrolysed by the enzyme lactase. Lactase is essential to newborn mammals as milk is their only source of food. Most mammals stop producing lactase when they start feeding on other food sources. Humans are an exception to this because some continue to produce lactase as adults. The ability to continue producing lactase is known as lactase persistence (LP) and is controlled by a dominant allele. A number of hypotheses based on different selection pressures have been put forward to explain LP in humans.
One hypothesis for LP in humans suggests that the selective pressure was related to some human populations farming cattle as a source of milk. Describe how farming cattle as a source of milk could have led to an increase in LP. (4)
- LP/allele due to mutation
- Milk provides name nutrient (ignore sugar & lactose)
- Individuals with LP more likely to survive AND reproduce/individuals with advantageous ALLELE more likely to survive AND reproduce
- Directional selection
- Frequency of ALLELE increases (in the offspring/next generation)