Plant and Animal Breeding Flashcards

1
Q

State 4 things breeders look to develop in crops and animals.

A
  1. higher food yield
  2. higher nutritional value
  3. pest and disease resistance
  4. ability to thrive in particular environmental conditions
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2
Q

What is the purpose of inbreeding?

A

Selected related plants/animals are bred for several generations until the population breeds true to the desired type.

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3
Q

What is eliminated by inbreeding?

A

heterozygotes

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4
Q

What is inbreeding?

A

Fusion of gametes from 2 close relatives

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5
Q

What is outbreeding?

A

Fusion of gametes from 2 unrelated members of the same species.

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6
Q

What causes inbreeding depression?

A

When the genotypes that result are homozygous for an accumulation of recessive, deleterious alleles.

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7
Q

What is the result of inbreeding depression?

A

Individuals will do less well at surviving to reproduce.

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8
Q

What is an advantage of cross breeding?

A

Individuals from different breeds may produce a new crossbreed with improved characteristics.

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9
Q

What must be maintained to continually produce crossbreeds?

A

The two parent breeds

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10
Q

What are the advantages of F1 hybrids in plants?

A

Usually increased vigour and yield

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11
Q

What is the genetic make-up of the F1 hybrids?

A

Relatively uniform heterozygous crop

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12
Q

In inbreeding animals and plants, why are F1 hybrids not usually bred together?

A

The F2 population produced shows too much variation.

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13
Q

What has resulted desirable genes being identified and then used in breeding programmes?

A

Genome sequencing

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14
Q

How can recombinant DNA technology be used to improve crops?

A

Where one or more genes are inserted into the genome with improved characteristics.

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15
Q

What is a cultivar?

A

A plant variety produced from selective breeding

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16
Q

State 3 things field trials are used for.

A
  1. Compare the performance of different cultivars under the same conditions
  2. Compare different treatments on the same cultivars
  3. evaluate GM crops
17
Q

State 3 requirements for a field trial.

A
  1. change only one thing
  2. randomisation
  3. appropriate number of replicates
18
Q

What is the reason for randomisation?

A

to prevent bias

19
Q

Why are several replicates needed in a field trial?

A

To take account of variability within the sample.

20
Q

Why is it important only one thing is changed?

A

So a fair comparison can be made