Instant Evolution: Polyploidy Quiz Dynamics

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1. What is polyploidy and why is it particularly common as a speciation mechanism in plants compared to animals?

Explanation

Polyploidy is the condition of having three or more complete sets of chromosomes. It is especially common in plants because plants tolerate whole-genome duplication more readily than most animals, partly due to their developmental flexibility, cell totipotency, and frequent capacity for self-fertilization. Polyploidy in plants can produce instant reproductive isolation from the diploid parent population, making it one of the fastest known speciation mechanisms. It is estimated that 70 percent or more of flowering plant species have polyploidy in their evolutionary history.

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About This Quiz
Instant Evolution: Polyploidy Quiz Dynamics - Quiz

This assessment explores the concept of polyploidy, a key mechanism in plant evolution. It evaluates understanding of polyploidy types, significance in biodiversity, and its role in speciation. Engaging with this material is essential for students and researchers in genetics, botany, and evolutionary biology, providing insights into how polyploidy drives adaptation... see moreand innovation in ecosystems. see less

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2. What distinguishes autopolyploidy from allopolyploidy?

Explanation

Autopolyploidy arises when the genome of a single species is duplicated, producing an organism with multiple copies of its own genome. An autotetraploid has four copies of each chromosome derived from one ancestral species. Allopolyploidy arises from hybridization between two different species followed by genome duplication, combining two distinct genomes in one nucleus. Allopolyploids often have greater evolutionary novelty and fertility than autopolyploids because each genome type can pair with its homologs during meiosis, producing balanced gametes.

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3. A newly formed allopolyploid plant is immediately reproductively isolated from both of its parent species because it has a different chromosome number and cannot produce fertile hybrids with either parent.

Explanation

Allopolyploidy can create instant reproductive isolation. A new allopolyploid has a chromosome number that is the sum of the two parent species. When it attempts to hybridize with either parent species, the resulting offspring have an odd number of chromosome sets and cannot undergo normal meiosis, producing infertile gametes. Within the allopolyploid population itself, chromosomes pair correctly and normal fertile seeds are produced. This instant reproductive isolation makes polyploidy among the fastest mechanisms for generating new biological species.

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4. Which of the following is a classic example of natural allopolyploidy in plants?

Explanation

Common bread wheat, Triticum aestivum, is a hexaploid with six sets of chromosomes, genome formula AABBDD, formed by two sequential hybridization and polyploidy events. The first hybridization between diploid emmer ancestors produced a tetraploid. A subsequent hybridization with Aegilops tauschii followed by genome duplication produced the hexaploid. Each ancestral genome contributes a distinct pair of chromosome sets. Bread wheat is one of the most economically important allopolyploids and a primary example cited in discussions of polyploidy in plant evolution and crop domestication.

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5. Which of the following correctly describe mechanisms by which polyploidy contributes to plant speciation?

Explanation

Polyploidy creates immediate reproductive isolation because polyploid offspring cannot produce fertile hybrids with diploid parents due to chromosomal imbalances. Allopolyploidy generates novel genomic combinations that may confer new adaptive potential. Genome duplication provides extra copies of genes, masking the effects of deleterious recessive alleles and allowing gene copies to accumulate mutations and potentially evolve new functions. Polyploid plants are frequently highly fertile and vigorous; many important crop plants including wheat, cotton, and strawberry are polyploids that produce seeds successfully.

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6. Colchicine, a chemical derived from the autumn crocus plant, is used in plant breeding to artificially induce polyploidy by inhibiting spindle fiber formation during cell division, causing chromosomes to fail to separate.

Explanation

Colchicine inhibits tubulin polymerization, preventing formation of the mitotic spindle apparatus. When applied to dividing plant cells, chromosomes duplicate normally during S phase but cannot be pulled to opposite poles during mitosis, resulting in a single cell with double the normal chromosome number. Plant breeders have used colchicine since the 1930s to artificially produce polyploid varieties of crops and ornamental plants. Many commercially important polyploid crop varieties and disease-resistant cultivars have been created or improved using colchicine-induced chromosome doubling techniques.

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7. Why are allopolyploids often more fertile than autopolyploids despite both having multiple chromosome sets?

Explanation

Meiotic pairing is the key difference. In an autopolyploid with four identical chromosome sets, any chromosome can pair with any homolog, creating complex multivalent configurations that often lead to unbalanced chromosome segregation and infertile gametes. In an allopolyploid, the genomes from each parent species are sufficiently different that each pairs preferentially or exclusively with its own homolog, forming bivalents just as in diploid meiosis. This produces balanced gametes with complete haploid sets from each parental genome, resulting in high fertility.

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8. What is genome duplication and why is it considered a form of sympatric speciation?

Explanation

Genome duplication can occur spontaneously during mitosis or meiosis and produces a new chromosome number in the offspring. Because the new polyploid is reproductively isolated from its diploid parents, speciation can occur instantaneously within a single generation in the same geographic location, making it a prime example of sympatric speciation. This is the fastest known speciation mechanism and contrasts sharply with allopatric speciation, which requires accumulation of changes over many generations of geographic isolation before reproductive isolation is achieved.

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9. Spartina anglica, a cordgrass species found in European salt marshes, is a naturally formed allopolyploid that arose in the nineteenth century through hybridization between a native European species and an introduced North American species.

Explanation

Spartina anglica is one of the best-documented cases of recent natural allopolyploidy. It arose through hybridization between the native European Spartina maritima and the introduced North American Spartina alterniflora in British salt marshes in the late 1800s. The initial sterile hybrid underwent chromosome doubling to produce the fertile allopolyploid Spartina anglica, which rapidly spread and colonized extensive intertidal mudflats across Europe. This recent speciation event, observable within historical time, provides compelling real-world evidence for polyploidy as a mechanism of instantaneous speciation.

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10. Which crop plant is a commercially important example of an allotetraploid formed by hybridization between two wild diploid cotton species?

Explanation

Upland cotton, Gossypium hirsutum, the world's most widely cultivated cotton species, is an allotetraploid formed by ancient hybridization between an African-Asian diploid cotton species and an American diploid cotton species followed by genome doubling. The resulting tetraploid combines genomes designated A and D. This allopolyploid origin gave upland cotton a combination of traits from both ancestral species that contributed to its superior fiber quality and agricultural productivity compared to its diploid progenitors. It is among the most economically significant allopolyploid crop plants in the world.

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11. Which of the following are correct statements about the evolutionary significance of polyploidy in plants?

Explanation

Polyploidy is estimated to have occurred in the ancestry of at least 70 percent of all flowering plant species, making it a dominant force in angiosperm evolution. Duplicated genes produced by polyploidy can diverge in function through neofunctionalization or subfunctionalization, contributing to genomic and phenotypic novelty. Allopolyploidy combines traits from two species in a single organism, potentially enabling colonization of new habitats. Polyploid plants do not always have larger cells or bodies; while increased cell size is common in some polyploids, the relationship between ploidy level and overall body size is not universal across all species.

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12. What is the role of epigenetic changes following allopolyploidy and why are they important for the establishment of new allopolyploid species?

Explanation

When two different genomes are brought together in a new allopolyploid, rapid epigenetic changes occur including alterations in DNA methylation patterns and activation of small RNA pathways such as siRNA-mediated silencing. These changes help silence transposable elements that may be activated by genome shock during hybridization, regulate the relative expression of homeologous gene copies from each ancestral genome, and stabilize the new polyploid genome. These rapid epigenetic adjustments are thought to be critical for the establishment and long-term viability of new allopolyploid species.

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13. Triploid plants, which have three sets of chromosomes, are typically sterile because their chromosomes cannot pair evenly during meiosis, but they can often be propagated vegetatively and may show useful agricultural traits such as seedlessness.

Explanation

Triploid plants arise when a diploid and a tetraploid cross, producing offspring with three chromosome sets. During meiosis, the chromosomes cannot form proper pairs because the third set has no matching partner for regular bivalent pairing, resulting in highly irregular chromosome segregation and largely infertile gametes. Despite their sterility, triploids can be propagated vegetatively and are commercially valuable. Seedless watermelons, seedless bananas, and many ornamental triploid cultivars exploit this sterility to produce fruit without seeds while still achieving large vegetative growth.

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14. How does the phenomenon of gene fractionation following polyploidy contribute to the long-term evolutionary divergence of polyploid species from their diploid ancestors?

Explanation

Following polyploidy, the genome does not remain simply doubled indefinitely. Over evolutionary time, one copy of many duplicated gene pairs is silenced through epigenetic mechanisms and eventually lost through deletion, a process called gene fractionation or diploidization. This reduces genome size back toward the diploid state and creates an asymmetric pattern of gene retention and loss between the two ancestral sub-genomes in allopolyploids. Differentially retained genes in different polyploid lineages contribute to their long-term divergence and the distinct biological characteristics they develop over millions of years of independent evolution.

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15. What is the significance of subfunctionalization following whole genome duplication in plants?

Explanation

Subfunctionalization is one of the main fates of duplicated genes following whole genome duplication. When a gene with multiple expression domains or protein functions is duplicated, each copy can evolve to retain only a subset of the original functions. Together the two copies preserve the full repertoire of the ancestral gene, but each is now specialized for a particular tissue, developmental stage, or biochemical role. Subfunctionalization reduces the likelihood that either copy will be lost by purifying selection and is a major mechanism by which polyploidy generates long-term increases in genomic and functional complexity in plants.

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What is polyploidy and why is it particularly common as a speciation...
What distinguishes autopolyploidy from allopolyploidy?
A newly formed allopolyploid plant is immediately reproductively...
Which of the following is a classic example of natural allopolyploidy...
Which of the following correctly describe mechanisms by which...
Colchicine, a chemical derived from the autumn crocus plant, is used...
Why are allopolyploids often more fertile than autopolyploids despite...
What is genome duplication and why is it considered a form of...
Spartina anglica, a cordgrass species found in European salt marshes,...
Which crop plant is a commercially important example of an...
Which of the following are correct statements about the evolutionary...
What is the role of epigenetic changes following allopolyploidy and...
Triploid plants, which have three sets of chromosomes, are typically...
How does the phenomenon of gene fractionation following polyploidy...
What is the significance of subfunctionalization following whole...
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