Kuadro - O MELHOR CURSO PRÉ-VESTIBULAR
Kuadro - O MELHOR CURSO PRÉ-VESTIBULAR
MEDICINAITA - IMEENEMENTRAR
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Questões de Inglês - FGV 2018 | Gabarito e resoluções

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Questão 44
2018Inglês

(FGV - 2018/1) GAMETES By Kristin A. Hook [1] Most sexual organisms be they bacteria, fungi, plants, or animals have only two mating types: females and males. Females are defined by their ability to produce eggs, males by their ability to produce sperm. In distinguishing between those two types of gametes, size matters most. The union of a sperm, the small gamete, with an egg, the large gamete, characterizes sexual reproduction. But how did these two gamete types come to be? [2]One theory suggests that before females or males existed, all gametes were the same type and size. What size? A larger gamete offers more nutrition to a developing offspring [prole], assuring a higher chance of survival. Natural selection would thus favor all gametes to be large. But this is not what happened. [3] Efficiency also pays off in the gamete world. Large gametes are less efficient at finding a mate precisely because their size obliges them to be fewer in number. On the other hand, the smaller gametes invest their resources into being more abundant. Occurring in greater numbers means they are much more likely to encounter their target. [4] Clearly, there are advantages for both large and small gametes. To reconcile how we ended up with both types, lets imagine the potential pairings of these different gamete types from the perspective of natural selection. In a remarkable achievement, suppose two large gametes find one another. Sure, the fusion of their genetic material will result in a mighty super-survivor offspring because of their investments being large, equal, and nutritious. Unfortunately for them, however, their big investments will come at the expense of being rare, so these unions will result in fewer offspring. Likewise, though the union of two small gametes would be more probable given their abundance, neither gamete can provide sufficient nutrition for the offspring to survive. Consequently, neither of these unions between like gametes would be favored over time. [5] Because of this disparity in size, sexual evolution also involves a story of parasitism. Heres how it works: by favoring both egg and sperm, natural selection ensured unequal contributions from the gametes to the offspring. While large gametes evolved for nourishment of the offspring, small gametes became lazy, so to speak, since they didnt have to provide any of the nourishment for the offspring. Just like a parasite, a sperm cell will exploit the resources of an egg. Adapted fromNatural History,November 2014. With respect to the hypothetical union of two small gametes (as presented in paragraph 4), which of the following isnotmentioned?

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