Biology
Biology
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780134813448
Author: Audesirk, Teresa, Gerald, Byers, Bruce E.
Publisher: Pearson,
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Chapter 26.1, Problem 1TC
Summary Introduction

To determine:

Why hasn’t natural selection eliminated the foster parent’s disadvantageous innate behavior.

Introduction:

Natural selection is defined as the different types of survival and reproduction of different organisms due to difference in their phenotype. It is the main cause of evolution along with mutation, migration and genetic drift. It causes variation among individuals in a population.

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Students have asked these similar questions
Which research question does not refer to proximate causes of behavior?   a.) How do rhesus macaques find their food? b.) how do pigeons that are experimentally displaced find their way back to their home loft? c.) How does dispersal affect the survival of Belding's ground squirrels? d.) Do mother goats learn the odor of their offspring? e.) How do hummingbirds “know” when it is time to return to their overwintering grounds?
A. Explain what imprinting is (use an example if that would help, but you can't use Geese and Konrad Lorenze or any other bird). B. How does imprinting combine both instinct and learning? C. How might imprinting be affecting the selection of mates in humans and (D) the evolution of racial differences in humans?
Nursing bees take care of the queen and newly hatched bees. However, nursing bees themselves do not reproduce. How could natural selection act upon such behavior? Because this behavior does not directly benefit the nursing bee itself, it is not favored by natural selection. Because this behavior increases the number of surviving offspring that share genes with the nursing bee, it is favored by natural selection. Because this behavior selectively decreases the number of offspring harboring non-similar genes with the nursing bee, it is favored by natural selection. Because this behavior does not increase the number of surviving offspring that are identical in genes with the nursing bee, it is not favored by natural selection.
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