Animal Behavior - Biology 4200/5430

Bowling Green State University, Fall 2009

Sample Exam 3

This page contains sample short-answer questions from a previous semester and illustrates what type of questions you should expect. Materials contained in the lecture notes and reading assignments are fair game. With adequate preparation and an open mind in lecture you will undoubtedly do well. I have indicated the amount of time that each questions should take you in order to indicate the level of detail I expect for your answers. Answers may contain bullet lists, fully formulated sentences, or a combination of both. If you are not successful in communicating your answers, I must assume that you do not know the answer. A total of 100 points can be achieved in this exam towards the total of 300 points for the lecture and 500 points for the entire course.

Multiple-choice Questions

You will be presented with 35 multiple-choice questions. Each problem will be worth 2 points. You should plan on spending an average of 1 minutes per question. The essay problem following this section is worth 30 points. You should plan on saving around 15 minutes for it. Below are a few questions which serve as examples. They do not match questions in the exam, they are solely meant to give you an opportunity to practice and they illustrate the level of detail I expect from you.

  1. This explanation for the evolution of ornate male signals propsoses that the presence of a particular morphological characteristic in males alligns with a preference for it in females. Iindividuals with that characteristic will thus have greater fitness.

      a. Zahavi's Strategic Choice Handicap Theory
      b. Fisher’s Runaway selection
      c. Good Genes Hypothesis
      d. Passive Attraction Theory
      e. none of the above

Essay Problems:

One of these problems will actually appear on your mid-term examination. The problem will be worth 30 points. If you desire you may work with a classmate to answer the questions outside of class. Neither your instructor nor teaching assistants for the course will discuss your answers to the problems prior to the examination. You should plan on spending around 15 minutes on this section.

  1. Should parental investment of males and females differ between species with internal and external fertilization? Why would you expect that?
  2. Describe the process of natural selection. What factors are likely to determine the rate at which natural selection produces genetic change within a population?
  3. Contrast natural and sexual selection. What do they have in common? What are the differences?
  4. What is the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium and what can it tell us about mating behavior in the population?
  5. What are MHC genes and illustrate their significance in mate choice?

last modified: 11//6/09
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