Phet Natural Selection Repaired
Phet Natural Selection Repaired
Phet Natural Selection Repaired
Pre-Lab Questions
1. What variables can you influence in this lab?
Brown Fur, Long Teeth, Long Tail
Adding Wolves and food
2. Define what a genetic mutation is. How do genetic mutations happen? How often?
Genetic mutation is a mutation that randomly happens to improve or hinder a species
survival, randomly through generations
3. What do the terms fitness and adaptation mean? What is the difference between the two?
Fitness means the health of an organism while adaptation is where one is able to adjust
itself in a different environment.
4. What selection factors might effect an animal population besides the ones used in this lab?
Climate control, radiation from the sun, predators, food supply, and competition against
other animals.
***You must make at least one hypothesis for each of the three different types of phenotype
mutations***
For each experiment you must have a control (no mutation) and fill in the following chart
Experiment
and
Hypothesis
Pheno
type
Selective
Factor
CONTR
OL
Group
Initial
Populatio
n at F3
CONTROL
Group
Final
Population
Experiment
Group
Initial
Population
at F3
Experiment
Group
Final
Population
Conclusion/
Observation
Long
teeth
none
Long teethed
rabbits survive
longer than
normal rabbits
Long Tail
Food
Long tailed
rabbits survive
longer than
normal rabbits
Brown
Fur
Wolves
Brown Furred
Rabbits survive
longer than
normal rabbits
in the Equator
Normal
Wolves,
Arctic,
Brown
Fur
Normal Rabbits
survive longer
than Brown
Furred Rabbits
in the Arctic
For each of the experiments, begin by adding a friend and a mutation. Wait until the F3
generation before adding the selective factor. After adding the selective factor let the
simulation run for another 3 or 4 generations.
Use the population numbers from the chart to get you numbers for the table, remember
you can zoom in and out on the chart to get more accurate reads.
Repeat for experiments 2, 3 and 4
Post-Lab Questions
1. Based upon your evidence from the simulation what conclusion are you able to make
about each of the three different types of phenotypes in rabbits?
2. What happens to animals that cannot compete as well with other animals in the wild?
They die, either by starvation, lack of offspring, or eaten by wolves
3. Sometimes animals that are introduced into an area that they never lived in before, outcompete and endanger resident species, why do you think this happens?
Because the animals that were introduced adapted and managed to out-compete the
animals that were resident in that area
4. If only one species is considered the "fittest", why do we still have so many variations
among species. Why do some birds have very long pointy beaks, while other birds have
short flat beaks?
Because the birds consume different types of food thats why they require different
beaks, same thing as other species, if they have different needs then their variety
increases
6. How does this simulation mimic natural selection? In what ways does this simulation fail to
represent the process of natural selection?
tomeitfailsduetothelimitedadditionofmutationsthatcanoccur
Experiment
and
Hypothesis
Pheno
type
Selective
Factor
CONTROL
Group
Initial
Population
at F3
CONTROL
Group
Final
Population
Experiment
Group
Initial
Population
at F3
Experiment
Group
Final
Population
Conclusion/
Observation
2. Two parent rabbits are both heterozygous for the trait. Create Punnet squares for the
original experiment and the new experiment (with the changed alleles). What are the
phenotype ratios of the Punnet squares? Does this evidence support your finding? and
how?
3. If this new experiment were to run longer would the end result be the same or different
from the original experiment?
Extension- Working with Pedigrees- Switch from the population chart to the
pedigree chart
Begin by adding a friend and a mutation. Wait until the F5 generation. Copy the Pedigree for two
rabbits (described below) using the key. Assume that male rabbits are on the left and female
rabbits are on the right.
4. How accurate are the pedigrees used in this lab? Did each couple only have one baby?