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BIO152 Module 1 Test Bank Study Guide Exam Prep Practice Questions Answer Key with Solution 2025/ 2026 Edition

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BIO152 Module 1 Test Bank Study Guide Exam Prep Practice Questions Answer Key with Solution 2025/ 2026 Edition

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BIO152 - Module 1




BIO152 - Module 1 |2025-2026 LATEST UPDATED| REAL EXAM QUESTIONS

AND ANSWERS | 100% RATED CORRECT | 100% VERFIED | ALREADY

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Why is evolution considered to be the central theory of biology? How does it shape scientist's work in forming and

testing hypotheses? (22.1) - (answer)This is because the evolution of many different organisms, and the natural causes

(mechanisms) of evolution, over time have had many implications on the observations that we make about life, and

therefore, has raised new questions that would lead to new hypotheses and observations to be analyzed and tested.




Why can evolution be directly observed in bacteria, but not in humans? (22.1) - (answer)This is because bacteria

reproduce at a much faster rate than humans do, and so mutations that can cause allele frequency changes in a bacterial

population are much more frequent, and thus easier to observe.




What are the steps in the process of evolution? (22.1) - (answer)This process occurs in a series of natural events caused

by outside forces (mechanisms) that can or will cause the observed change in a species. In this way, we are able to

explain and connect the observations we make about the living world.




How does fossil evidence support the theory of evolution? (22.1) - (answer)This essentially spotlighted the idea that slow

but gradual change in the physiological/anatomical structures of species happened over time, causing the phenomenon

that we know as "evolution". It was the idea that deeper strata (which were older) would reveal fossils that were older

than the more shallow (and younger) strata, and that the differences between these fossils would prove that evolution of

species existed.




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What are the Galapagos finches? How did they diverge from one another? Why are island chains a good place to observe

evolutionary change? (22.1) - (answer)They are a diverse set of finches that are found only on the many islands of the

Galapagos chain. I would assume that they have diverged from one another because the different islands in the chain had

different foods available to them, and so the organisms honed out anatomical features that would be optimal to consume

the food available to them in that island. Island chains are a good place to observe evolutionary change because the area

to cover is very small, and there are multiple islands with probably different geography in a given chain as well, so that

would encourage rapid adaptation of a given species to that environment that can be observed in one's lifetime.




What were Darwin's observations and inferences made in the Galapagos Islands? (22.1) - (answer)He theorized that the

adaptations of the finches were caused by an idea called "natural selection", in which organisms with certain traits have a

better chance of surviving and reproducing than others, specifically because of said traits.




How is evolutionary theory relevant to healthcare? (22.1) - (answer)A prime example of this theory in this setting is the

emergence of drug-resistant bacteria, and this is concerning because there is only so many medications that we can make

before there are strains that are resistant to most, if not all, drugs. Bacteria also have the ability to exchange genes with

other bacterial species, and so resistance to a given drug is built up really quickly across rapidly breeding generations.




What is the role of mutation in evolution? (23.1) - (answer)These ensure that genetic variation will exist so that the

population can continue to evolve and adapt to their environments.




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What does it mean to say that evolution happens to populations rather than to individuals? (23.1) - (answer)This happens

to populations rather than to individuals because there are individuals with varying genetics in a given population, and if

those genetics are better suited for the environment that the population is in, then those individuals will survive and

reproduce in higher frequencies, changing the population dynamic.




How is the Hardy-Weinberg equation useful for understanding evolutionary change? (23.1) - (answer)This equation

measures the allele frequencies for a certain allele in a population, and thus if these frequencies do change over time, we

can conclude that the population is "evolving". Thus, this equilibrium helps us figure out which populations were

evolving over time, versus which populations have stayed the same.




What is genetic drift? (23.2) - (answer)This is a phenomenon where events of any sort or nature that can happen

randomly can throw allele frequencies in a population in flux (typically it affects smaller populations more profoundly).




What is the founder effect? What is the bottleneck effect? How does the bottleneck effect affect endangered species?

(23.2) - (answer)This is a phenomenon where an event of any sort or nature causes a few members of a population (and

their alleles) to be isolated from the rest, causing the emergence of a new species with a very different gene pool. The

other phenomenon is something in which a chance event significantly reduces the size of a population, causing allele

frequencies to change (in which some may be unfairly represented). This effect can wipe out certain alleles in

endangered species, that can make them even more unsuited to the environment they have adapted to for millennia,

causing the extinction of that species.




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What is Gene Flow? How does it relate to human evolution? (23.2) - (answer)This is the idea that genetic differences

across two species can be reduced in subsequent generations through movement of fertile individuals (and thus alleles)

between them. This is becoming an ever more important idea because of the fact that the human species is very

interconnected, and so mating between ethnicities with little shared history in the past is more common, and thus reduces

genetic difference between humans.




What factors make an individual "fit" for an environment? (23.3) - (answer)These factors really depend on the

environment itself, and what it entails in order for the organism to survive. Some traits allow an organism to exercise

greater relative fitness than others.




How did an understanding of evolution help scientists discover why sickle cell disease became widespread among certain

human populations? (23.3) - (answer)Scientists understood that the phenomenon of heterozygote advantage (where

people who are heterozygous for an allele have the upper hand) existed, and so they concluded that in malaria-prone

regions like Africa, people who were heterozygous and had both a sickle-cell and a normal allele for said locus will avoid

the worst of malaria (another major killer in these regions), and not be prone to clogging of vessels by sickle-shaped

cells.Natural Selection uses random genetic changes, it cannot anticipate future needs. - (answer)True




How did Darwin explain the differences in beak shape among Galapagos finches? - (answer)as adaptations to eating

different foods




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