Phenotypic And Genotypic Variation Flashcards

1
Q

What is incomplete dominance?

A

Incomplete dominance is a situation where neither gene is completely dominant and so in heterozygous individuals containing both alleles there will be a resulting medium. Red flower crossed with white flower = pink flower

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2
Q

What is plasticity?

A

Unlike animals plants cannot move and thus have to adapt to environments. This adaption is called plasticity

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3
Q

What does the term ecad mean?

A

A variant showing adaptation to a particular habitat and in which the adaptive characters are not genetically determined, but are imposed by environmental factors.

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4
Q

Give an example of an experiment done on phenotypic plasticity.

A

Miner et al. 2005
Morphological plasticity in tadpoles
Predator exposure results in large colourful tail
Lack of predators results in relatively small and less colourful tail

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5
Q

Give an example of phenotypic changes in plant structure

A

Leaves may become narrower in environmental extremes. This results in a reduced surface area and therefore reduced water loss and heat load required to maintain temperature close to air temperature.
Leaf orientation is another method the plant may use

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6
Q

What are the 2 divisions of environmental factors and what is meant by each?

A

Biotic factors - effects of other living organisms, including those of the same species
Abiotic factors - physical parameters of the environment

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7
Q

Give examples of abiotic factors that can affect plants

A
Radiation 
Temperature
Water
Gasses
Minerals
Mechanical effects (wind, burial, snow etc.)
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8
Q

Give examples of biotic factors that can affect plants

A

Other plants
Micro organisms
Animals
Anthropogenic factors (pollution, agrochemicals etc.)

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9
Q

What is heterophylly?

A

An example of plasticity in which fluctuating water levels in an environment can cause phenotypic changes in the plant.
Eg. Water crowfoot (Ranunculus aquatilis) has different leaves dependent on water level - submerged leaves offer less resistance to water currents floating leaves much wider

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10
Q

What is an ecotype?

A

Genetically distinct geographic population (race) within a species, adapted to specific environmental conditions. Typically exhibit phenotypic differences stemming from environmental heterogeneity and are capable of interbreeding with other geographically adjacent ecotypes

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11
Q

What is an ecocline?

A

Consists of ecotypes or forms of species that exhibit gradual phenotypic and/or genetic differences over a geographical area, typically as a result of environmental heterogeneity

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12
Q

Example of industrial melanism?

A

Peppered moth (Biston betularia)

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13
Q

What does plasticity effect?

A

All levels of ecological organisation - demographic parameters, direct and indirect species interactions (competition, predation, coexistence) and ultimately carbon and nutrient cycles

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14
Q

Give examples of plasticity in individual environments

A

East Africa - herbivory by elephants and giraffes induce longer and more numerous protective spines on Acacia drepanolobium
Barnacles exposed to greater water velocities produce shorter feeding appendices (Marchinko 2003)
Plants alter roots

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15
Q

Give an example of plasticity having indirect actions on another organism

A

Peacor and Werner (2001) - presence of dragonfly larvae reduced foraging behaviour by tadpoles and subsequently increased algae population

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16
Q

Give an example of phenotypic plasticity

A

Miner et al., 2005
Tadpole morphology
High predators = larger tails, smaller bodies and reduced foraging
Low predators = opposite

17
Q

Give an example of an abiotic indirect action

A

Increased CO2
Increased plant size
Decreased nutrition
Effects herbivores feeding behaviour, growth rate and predation risk

18
Q

Give an example of how plasticity can affect local biodiversity

A

Schmitz, 2003
Presence of spiders in New England field caused herbivorous prey to seek refuge in largest and subsequently most dominant species of plant. This caused dominant plants to decrease due to feeding by insects and thus allowed weaker species to thrive