Step 1: Understand Darwinian fitness.
Fitness is most directly measured by the number of viable offspring an individual produces that survive to reproduce. This is known as lifetime reproductive success.
Step 2: Evaluate options.
- Option (A): Adult body size may correlate with fitness but is not a direct measure of reproductive success.
- Option (B): Lifetime reproductive success is the most direct measure, as it directly quantifies the number of offspring produced.
- Option (C): Lifespan alone does not indicate reproductive success. An individual may live long but produce few offspring.
- Option (D): Maximum sprint speed is unrelated to overall reproductive success or fitness in terms of gene contribution.
Step 3: Conclusion.
The most direct measure of Darwinian fitness is lifetime reproductive success, making option (B) the correct answer.
Eight students (P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, and W) are playing musical chairs. The figure indicates their order of position at the start of the game. They play the game by moving forward in a circle in the clockwise direction.
After the 1st round, the 4th student behind P leaves the game.
After the 2nd round, the 5th student behind Q leaves the game.
After the 3rd round, the 3rd student behind V leaves the game.
After the 4th round, the 4th student behind U leaves the game.
Who all are left in the game after the 4th round?

Here are two analogous groups, Group-I and Group-II, that list words in their decreasing order of intensity. Identify the missing word in Group-II.
Abuse \( \rightarrow \) Insult \( \rightarrow \) Ridicule
__________ \( \rightarrow \) Praise \( \rightarrow \) Appreciate
The 12 musical notes are given as \( C, C^\#, D, D^\#, E, F, F^\#, G, G^\#, A, A^\#, B \). Frequency of each note is \( \sqrt[12]{2} \) times the frequency of the previous note. If the frequency of the note C is 130.8 Hz, then the ratio of frequencies of notes F# and C is: