3-3.e Hardy Weinberg Basics Quizizz

3-3.e Hardy Weinberg Basics Quizizz

9th Grade

15 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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3-3.e Hardy Weinberg Basics Quizizz

3-3.e Hardy Weinberg Basics Quizizz

Assessment

Quiz

Other, Biology, Science

9th Grade

Practice Problem

Hard

Created by

Christina Peralta

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15 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

Which Hardy-Weinberg equation represents the genotype frequencies in a population?

p + q = 1

p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

p2 + pq2 + q2 = 1

p + 2pq + q3 = 1

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which Hardy-Weinberg factor represents the frequency of heterozygous individuals in a population?

p2
2pq
q2
p2 + 2pq

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What do you call all of the genes in a population?

Gene pool
Relative Frequency
Genetic Drift
Allele pool

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

In the Hardy-Weinberg Equation, q2 is the frequency of what?

The recessive allele 
the dominant allele
the recessive genotype
the dominant genotype

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

The Hardy-Weinberg Model is...

available at local hobby stores and retailers throughout the Greater Tazewell area.

a mathematical tool that biologists can use to predict allele frequencies and determine whether or not microevolution is occurring within a population.

always occurring within individual organisms in nature.
only useful in the lab and cannot be practically applied to real-world populations of organisms.  

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

Why are advantageous traits more likely to be passed onto offspring?

Because they are more likely to survive and reproduce.

Because they come from dominant alleles.

Because they come from recessive alleles.

Because the organism knew it needed that trait, survives, and passes it on.

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

If a population experiences no migration, is very large, has no mutations, has random mating, and there is no selection, which of the following would you predict?

The population will evolve, but much more slowly than normal

The makeup of the population's gene pool will remain virtually the same as long as these conditions hold.

Dominant alleles in the population's gene pool will slowly increase in frequency while recessive alleles will decrease.

The population probably has an equal frequency of A and a alleles.

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