a. An experiment on the butterflies shows that they are unable to detect yellow-green or blue colors. | ||
b. A locally sprayed pesticide has covered up the olfactory signals in this region. | ||
c. A recent chemical fire has altered the light spectrum in this region, blocking UV rays. | ||
d. An experiment on the butterflies shows that they are unable to respond to vibrations. |
a. The squirrels were present long ago on both sides of the mountains but geographic shifts separated them, leaving one population "stranded" on the western side. | ||
b. The squirrels were brought across the geographic boundary of the Rockies by anthropogenic (human) influences and established themselves in a western habitat. | ||
c. The squirrels can travel in and across the Rockies near the area in which the western population is found, and some individuals happened to settle in the western habitat. | ||
d. The squirrels were historically present only on the western side, but once anthropogenic (human) influences brought them over they flourished on the eastern side. |
a. There should be very high genetic divergence between the eastern and western populations of squirrels, suggesting long-term genetic isolation. | ||
b. There should be very little genetic divergence between the eastern and western populations of squirrels, suggesting incomplete genetic isolation. | ||
c. The mating calls of western populations should differ from those of eastern populations. | ||
d. Mark-and-recapture studies should find squirrels from either population having moved to areas within the Rockies. |
a. Exoskeleton extensions, like horns, designed for fighting | ||
b. A complex life cycle (i.e., one that involves metamorphosis) | ||
c. A complex nervous system | ||
d. A highly efficient digestive system |
a. "There is no excuse for digestive inefficiency, and, frankly, the singe-sac body plan is just sloppy." | ||
b. "Say all you want about your new-fangled traits, but nothing succeeds like cellular organization and a good use of water flow." | ||
c. "Your radial symmetry may be cute, but I am a-head of you! (Get it? Get it?)" | ||
d. "I am stung by your words! And, I will sting you, too!" |
a. "There is no excuse for digestive inefficiency, and, frankly, the singe-sac body plan is just sloppy." | ||
b. "Say all you want about your new-fangled traits, but nothing succeeds like cellular organization and a good use of water flow." | ||
c. "Your radial symmetry may be cute, but I am a-head of you! (Get it? Get it?)" | ||
d. "I am stung by your words! And, I will sting you, too!" |
a. "There is no excuse for digestive inefficiency, and, frankly, the singe-sac body plan is just sloppy." | ||
b. "Say all you want about your new-fangled traits, but nothing succeeds like cellular organization and a good use of water flow." | ||
c. "Your radial symmetry may be cute, but I am a-head of you! (Get it? Get it?)" | ||
d. "I am stung by your words! And, I will sting you, too!" |
a. An aquatic lifestyle | ||
b. Limbs that have become fins | ||
c. Giving life birth | ||
d. Heterodont (having different kinds of teeth) |
a. 3 and 4 | ||
b. 1 and 4 | ||
c. 2 and 3 | ||
d. 2 and 4 |
a. Phanerozoic | ||
b. Archaean | ||
c. Mesozoic | ||
d. Proterozoic |
a. compression fossil | ||
b. cast | ||
c. trace fossil | ||
d. body fossil |
a. Chitons (Polyplacophora) | ||
b. Bivalves | ||
c. Gastropods | ||
d. Cephalopods |
a. Hemichordates | ||
b. Urochordates | ||
c. Cephalochordates | ||
d. Vertebrates |
a. Hemichordates | ||
b. Urochordates | ||
c. Cephalochordates | ||
d. Vertebrates |
a. Hemichordates | ||
b. Urochordates | ||
c. Cephalochordates | ||
d. Vertebrates |
a. Pinhole eye | ||
b. Pit (or cup) eye | ||
c. Lens eye | ||
d. Vesicular eye |
a. Pinhole eye | ||
b. Pit (or cup) eye | ||
c. Lens eye | ||
d. Vesicular eye |
a. A mold fossil | ||
b. A petrifaction fossil | ||
c. A trace fossil | ||
d. None of the above |
a. Complex cephalization | ||
b. A strong tegument (outer layer or skin) | ||
c. A well-developed digestive system | ||
d. Specialized segmentation |
a. Mammals | ||
b. Birds | ||
c. Amphibians | ||
d. Both A and B |
a. Their limbs are held lateral to the body. | ||
b. They lay eggs. | ||
c. They do not produce milk. | ||
d. Both A and B |
a. Turbellaria | ||
b. Cestoda | ||
c. Trematoda | ||
d. Nematoda |
a. Nematoda | ||
b. Platyhelminthes | ||
c. Echinodermata | ||
d. Chordata |
a. Nematodes | ||
b. Cestodes | ||
c. Trematodes | ||
d. Turbellarians |
a. The ability to re-form from fragmented cells | ||
b. The ability to reproduce asexually | ||
c. Asymmetrical body shape | ||
d. A lack of cephalization |
a. Many primitive mollusks are segmented like annelids. | ||
b. Chitons and polychaetes share many similar features. | ||
c. The larvae of some annelids and mollusks are very similar. | ||
d. Members of both phyla are primarily hermaphroditic. |
a. Coelomates have body cavities while pseudocoelomates do not. | ||
b. In pseudocoelomates the body cavity is formed when the organism is an adult, while in coelomates it is formed during a pre-adult stage. | ||
c. In coelomates the body cavity is lined with mesodermal cells, while in pseudocoelomates the cavity is not formed by mesoderm. | ||
d. In pseudocoelomates the body cavity and gut are the same, while in coelomates these are different. |
a. It provided the basis for the Cell Theory. | ||
b. It contradicted the argument for spontaneous generation. | ||
c. It allowed zoologists to see objects which were invisible to the naked eye. | ||
d. Both A and C |
a. Both have a sac-like body plan. | ||
b. Both lack true tissues. | ||
c. Both are capable of sexual and asexual reproduction. | ||
d. All of the above |
a. They belong to the class Anthozoa, along with anemones. | ||
b. They experienced a mass extinction near the end of the Devonian. | ||
c. They are the only group of cnidarians to lack cnidocytes. | ||
d. They exist solely in a polyp form, without a medusa stage. |
a. Lobe-finned fishes and amphibians | ||
b. Amphibians and sea turtles | ||
c. Lobe-finned fishes and sea turtles | ||
d. Hagfish and lobe-finned fishes |
a. Fossils have been found of feathered dinosaurs that could not fly. | ||
b. Emus, ostriches, and other flightless birds have feathers. | ||
c. Feathers have been shown to be important in mating rituals. | ||
d. Pterosaurs (dinosaurs that flew) did not have feathers. |
a. The earliest marsupial fossils are similar to those of North American opossums. | ||
b. The young of placental mammals are less vulnerable at birth than the young of marsupials. | ||
c. The fossil record shows evidence of a variety of marsupial saber-toothed "cats" and "wolves" in South America and Australia. | ||
d. Australia, which has few native placental mammals, is the only continent with many extant marsupial species. |
a. An ancient skull fragment | ||
b. A piece of petrified wood | ||
c. The impression of a shell in ancient rock | ||
d. The burrow of an ancient worm |
a. A head that contains many sensory organs | ||
b. The reproductive system | ||
c. The digestive system | ||
d. The nervous system |
a. An ancient skull fragment | ||
b. A piece of petrified wood | ||
c. The impression of a shell in ancient rock | ||
d. The burrow of an ancient worm |
a. The more ommatidia they have, the better the resolution of the image they see. | ||
b. They have essentially the same shape as vertebrate eyes but with the position of photoreceptors reversed. | ||
c. The resolution of images in even the best arthropod eyes is considerably worse than that of vertebrates like humans. | ||
d. The detection of movement, because of the "flicker effect," is much better in arthropod eyes than vertebrate eyes. |
a. Bilateral symmetry | ||
b. A water vascular system | ||
c. Radial symmetry | ||
d. Tube feet |
a. Both demonstrate the evolution of multicellularity. | ||
b. Both demonstrate tremendous cell-type diversity. | ||
c. Both demonstrate the evolution of organisms from water to land. | ||
d. Both demonstrate the evolution of organisms from land back to water. |
a. They are both triploblastic (have three tissue layers). | ||
b. They both have tube-within-a-tube body plans. | ||
c. Both groups contain parasitic species. | ||
d. Both A and C are true of both groups. |
a. Radial symmetry | ||
b. Biradial symmetry | ||
c. The sac-like body plan | ||
d. Bilateral symmetry |
a. In cephalopods the photosensitive cells point outwards, while in vertebrates they point backwards. | ||
b. Vertebrate eyes have a blind-spot, while cephalopod eyes do not. | ||
c. Both cephalopods and vertebrates have ciliar muscles that move the lens back and forth to focus. | ||
d. Both cephalopods and vertebrates use the light-sensitive molecule opsin. |
a. By fixing the placement of eyes in eye sockets, they allow for stereoscopic vision. | ||
b. The group of craniates that includes mammals is referred to as the "synapsids." | ||
c. More primitive craniates groups tend to have simplified skulls, while more derived groups' skulls are characterized by greater complexity and number of bones. | ||
d. Certain types of organisms, such as carnivores and rodents, have developed typical skull traits that identify them. |
a. The skin of amniotes like reptiles is made up of scales called odontodes, tooth-like scales also found in vertebrate ancestors. | ||
b. Its specific adaptations and traits allowed for the evolution of modified structures, such as hair and feathers. | ||
c. The evolution of hair and feathers came about as a means of maintaining heat. | ||
d. It contains a layer of cells filled with keratin that protect these organisms from water loss. |
a. They are both diploblastic (have two tissue layers). | ||
b. They both have stinging cells (cnidocytes). | ||
c. They both have rows of fused cilia. | ||
d. None of the above is true of both groups. |
a. There were so many fewer amniotes early in their evolution that it is merely an artifact of these organisms' rarity. | ||
b. The eggs of early amniotes were much less mineralized than later eggs, making them less likely to become fossilized. | ||
c. Early amniotes produced many fewer eggs than later amniotes. | ||
d. Early amniotes still laid eggs near water, and hydrogeological changes destroyed those fossils. |
a. This is the eon during which animals evolved. | ||
b. This is the eon during which animals evolved hard body parts (i.e. hard shells). | ||
c. The geological shifts during this eon created the conditions for more compression fossils. | ||
d. It is the eon during which complex life forms first developed. |
a. Because of the evolutionary constraints on the development of photoreceptors in the eye | ||
b. Because the shape and thickness of lenses filters out a portion of the spectrum before it reaches the photoreceptors | ||
c. Because eyes first evolved in water-dwelling animals and water filters out most of the spectrum | ||
d. Because the "blind spot" (the place where the optic nerve passes through the retina) constrains the placement of color-sensitive photoreceptors |
a. It allows for the development of specialized structures within particular segments. | ||
b. It only occurs in complex organisms. | ||
c. It is correlated with greater genetic variation. | ||
d. It allows for the development of asexual reproduction by budding and fission. |
a. Thomas Henry Huxley | ||
b. Albertus Magnus | ||
c. Su Song | ||
d. Shen Kuo |
a. The workers cannot respond to trail pheromone. | ||
b. The queen is not producing sex-attractant pheromone. | ||
c. The drones are not producing sex-attractant pheromone. | ||
d. The queen is not producing mandibular pheromone. |
a. Lobster | ||
b. Snail | ||
c. Anemone | ||
d. Mouse |
a. A vertebrate | ||
b. A primary consumer | ||
c. A secondary consumer | ||
d. A primary producer |
a. Allopatric speciation | ||
b. Sympatric speciation | ||
c. Parapatric speciation | ||
d. Adaptive radiation |
a. Crocodiles | ||
b. Mammals | ||
c. Birds | ||
d. Fishes |
a. ovoviviparous | ||
b. viviparous | ||
c. oviparous | ||
d. monecious |
a. chemoreceptor | ||
b. electromagnetic receptor | ||
c. mechanoreceptor | ||
d. thermoreceptor |
a. Away from the equator rather than near the equator | ||
b. On a coral reef than in the open ocean | ||
c. In the tropics than in the tundra | ||
d. In the grasslands than in the desert |
a. The removal of goose barnacles from an area leads to an increase in the density, number of offspring, and growth rate of acorn barnacles. | ||
b. Acorn barnacles are present in the high intertidal area of a beach and goose barnacles occupy the same niche in the lower intertidal. | ||
c. When raised alone, goose and acorn barnacles are each present in lower densities than when raised together. | ||
d. When goose barnacles are removed from an area, the range of acorn barnacles within that area increases. |
a. Carbon dioxide | ||
b. Nitrous oxide | ||
c. Methane | ||
d. Hydroflourocarbons |
a. Altitudinal migrants | ||
b. Reproductive migrants | ||
c. Removal migrants | ||
d. Irruptive migrants |
a. Altitudinal migrants | ||
b. Reproductive migrants | ||
c. Removal migrants | ||
d. Irruptive migrants |
a. Uric acid | ||
b. Ammonia | ||
c. Urea | ||
d. Urine |
a. It is not terrestrial. | ||
b. It is not hermaphroditic. | ||
c. It is not a fish. | ||
d. It is not dioecious. |
a. Small carnivores | ||
b. Small colon fermentors | ||
c. Small cecum fermentors | ||
d. Small ruminants |
a. The population's carrying capacity | ||
b. The population's period of exponential growth | ||
c. The population's point of fastest growth | ||
d. The population's point of extinction |
a. It has separate hearts, which pump blood to either its gas-exchange organ or to its tissues. | ||
b. It has a three-chambered heart that directs blood to either its tissues or its gas-exchange organ each time it is pumped. | ||
c. It has not "solved" this problem. | ||
d. It has a four-chambered heart that allows for the pumping of blood, at high pressure, to each system, the gas-exchange organ and the tissues. |
a. It has separate hearts, which pump blood to either its gas-exchange organ or to its tissues. | ||
b. It has a three-chambered heart that directs blood to either its tissues or its gas-exchange organ each time it is pumped. | ||
c. It has not "solved" this problem. | ||
d. It has a four-chambered heart that allows for the pumping of blood, at high pressure, to each system, the gas-exchange organ and the tissues. |
a. It has separate hearts, which pump blood to either its gas-exchange organ or to its tissues. | ||
b. It has a three-chambered heart that directs blood to either its tissues or its gas-exchange organ each time it is pumped. | ||
c. It has not "solved" this problem. | ||
d. It has a four-chambered heart that allows for the pumping of blood, at high pressure, to each system, the gas-exchange organ and the tissues. |
a. A flatworm | ||
b. An annelid worm | ||
c. A snail | ||
d. A starfish |
a. Insects | ||
b. Flatworms | ||
c. Anemones | ||
d. Echinoderms |
a. Insects | ||
b. Flatworms | ||
c. Anemones | ||
d. Echinoderms |
a. The central nervous system | ||
b. The peripheral nervous system | ||
c. The somatic nervous system | ||
d. The autonomic nervous system |
a. Temporal isolation | ||
b. Behavioral isolation | ||
c. Mechanical isolation | ||
d. Ecological isolation |
a. Temporal isolation | ||
b. Behavioral isolation | ||
c. Mechanical isolation | ||
d. Ecological isolation |
a. Endocrine | ||
b. Nervous-system | ||
c. Respiratory | ||
d. None of the above |
a. They are crabs that have just molted and have not yet undergone sclerotization. | ||
b. They are crabs whose epicuticle has not yet been covered with a cement layer. | ||
c. They are crabs whose exocrine glands have been triggered to dissolve their chitin matrix. | ||
d. They are crabs that have been prevented from molting. |
a. At point C, because that is the point at which their population is largest | ||
b. At point A, because that is the point at which their population has the fastest growth rate | ||
c. At point C, because that is the point at which their population is most stable | ||
d. At point B, because that is the point at which their population has the fastest growth rate |
a. The carrying capacity would increase. | ||
b. The carrying capacity would decrease. | ||
c. The carrying capacity would not change. | ||
d. The carrying capacity would fluctuate briefly and then return to its initial number. |
a. In order to reach the nectar of an orchid, wasps commit "crimes" against other insects by killing them. | ||
b. Male wasps are lured to orchids and unwittingly pollinate them because orchids emit a pheromone like that of female wasps. | ||
c. Female wasps drink the nectar of orchids but then, rather than pollinating the flowers, bite off the orchid's pollen-rich anthers. | ||
d. Wasps that pollinate orchids later die from the fatal pollen. |
a. Norepinephrine | ||
b. Epinephrine | ||
c. Glucocorticoids | ||
d. Mineralocorticoids |
a. Fossils | ||
b. Continental shape | ||
c. Rocks | ||
d. Climate |
a. Plants are less abundant and nutritious than animal prey. | ||
b. The tough fibers of plants require stronger chewing or other mechanical digestion adaptations. | ||
c. The cellulose of plants requires a more complicated system of digestion and absorption. | ||
d. Both B and C |
a. Chemoreceptors | ||
b. Electromagnetic receptors | ||
c. Mechanoreceptors | ||
d. Thermoreceptors |
a. They are r strategists. | ||
b. They are K strategists. | ||
c. They are strong competitors. | ||
d. They are often exotic. |
a. They cannot detect motion visually but must rely on mechanoreceptors. | ||
b. They do not have stereoscopic vision. | ||
c. Their electric fields would interfere with the production of images. | ||
d. They can, so long as the movies are projected underwater (through a liquid medium). |
a. Chemoreceptor input (mainly from odors) is sent to a more primitive portion of the brain than is other sensory input. | ||
b. Chemoreceptors are found in all animals. | ||
c. Chemoreceptors are more primitive in design than other receptors. | ||
d. Both A and B |
a. Phagocytosis (the ingestion of bacteria by cells) | ||
b. The ability to recognize specific pathogens | ||
c. The ability to boost the immune system | ||
d. None of the above |
a. It is inefficient and so can only be supplementary to another type of respiration (e.g. gills, lungs, and tracheae). | ||
b. It forces those animals that use it to keep the outer surface of their body moist. | ||
c. It cannot be used by very small organisms as they lack sufficient surface area. | ||
d. It leads indirectly to an increase in the amount of carbon dioxide taken in by the system. |
a. It is used even by aquatic insects. | ||
b. It directly carries air to virtually every individual cell. | ||
c. It can lead to water loss via water-vapor diffusion. | ||
d. It is especially useful in large insects (>5cm), because it employs chitinous supports. |
a. A season in which resources are plentiful and can be exploited by as many offspring as possible | ||
b. A Wolbachia bacterial infection | ||
c. The absence of males | ||
d. The absence of females |
a. Smooth and gradual growth, rather than growth occurring in bursts | ||
b. Support for a larger, heavier body size | ||
c. Better leverage for muscles | ||
d. All of the above |
a. When killer whales are present in an area, the urchins that otters (their prey) eat are more abundant and devour kelp beds. | ||
b. When a voracious starfish predator is removed from a tide pool, some of its prey species disappear while others' abundance increases hugely. | ||
c. When raised alone, black-sided salamanders and yellow-sided salamanders each are present in lower densities unlike when they are raised together. | ||
d. In the presence of a fish predator, small prey species are more abundant, but when the fish is removed large prey species are more abundant. |
a. They operate in a fashion similar to sonar, emitting constant weak signals and using changes in those signals to detect movement. | ||
b. Unlike those of land vertebrates, they are used exclusively to stun prey or potential predators. | ||
c. They are the most primitive kinds of sensory structures present in vertebrates. | ||
d. Both B and C |
a. Multiple receptors would fire. | ||
b. Neurons would fire for a longer time. | ||
c. The action potential would be stronger. | ||
d. Neurons would fire faster. |
a. Birds, which require very efficient oxygen intake because they are homeothermic, use air sacs to increase the efficiency of their lung ventilation. | ||
b. Frogs inflate their lungs by gulping in air and forcing it into their lungs using muscles in their mouths. | ||
c. Reptiles inflate their lungs by using the contractions of a muscular diaphragm. | ||
d. Fish increase the efficiency of their gills by using a method of countercurrent exchange. |
a. Energy is lost at each level of a food chain, so high-trophic-level organisms are the least numerous. | ||
b. High-trophic-level species are more dominant and therefore more numerous. | ||
c. A trophic-level pyramid is a model of the equilibrium number of species on an island. | ||
d. Small herbivores, like voles, form the base of every trophic-level pyramid. |
a. In summer the phytoplankton blooms are rapidly eaten by aquatic animals, but by fall the numbers of those animals have decreased. | ||
b. In summer the heat of sunlight on open water is actually too strong for many phytoplankton to survive. | ||
c. In autumn lower, nutrient-rich waters are brought to the surface, providing necessary resources for phytoplankton. | ||
d. In autumn a thermocline is established, preventing oxygen from diffusing away from the surface waters where phytoplankton bloom. |
a. Aquatic herbivores feed on microscopic algae that require little digestion. | ||
b. Aquatic herbivores can rely on a degree of external digestion from the medium in which they live. | ||
c. Terrestrial plants contain much higher levels of structural carbohydrates. | ||
d. Terrestrial plants are not associated with microbes that, in aquatic systems, aid in vegetative breakdown. |
a. Pandas are much larger than goats. | ||
b. Pandas' food sources are less fibrous than that of goats. | ||
c. Pandas use a different digestive mode than the fermentation method of goats. | ||
d. Goats are unusual among herbivores in that they have very slow metabolisms. |
a. The situation can only occur in systems in which no more than three species are present in a food web. | ||
b. The better of two competing species is rarely removed from a habitat except under experimental conditions. | ||
c. The frequency of niche overlap controls for this. | ||
d. Most animals that compete for one resource also have other resources available to them. |
a. A well-developed axial skeleton | ||
b. A poorly-developed pelvic girdle | ||
c. The absence of an appendicular skeleton | ||
d. The presence of chitin |