1) Chordate pharyngeal slits appear to have functioned first as
A) the digestive system's opening.
B) suspension-feeding
devices.
C) components of the jaw.
D) gill slits for
respiration.
E) portions of the inner ear.
Answer: B
2) Which of the following statements would be least acceptable to
most zoologists?
A) The extant lancelets are contemporaries, not
ancestors, of vertebrates.
B) The first fossils resembling
lancelets appeared in the fossil record around 530 million years ago.
C) Recent work in molecular systematics supports the hypothesis
that lancelets are the most recent common ancestor of all vertebrates.
D) The extant lancelets are the immediate ancestors of the
fishes.
E) Lancelets display the same method of swimming as do fishes.
Answer: D
3) Which extant chordates are postulated to be most like the
earliest chordates in appearance?
A) lancelets
B) adult tunicates
C) amphibians
D) reptiles
E) chondrichthyans
Answer: A
4) A new species of aquatic chordate is discovered that closely
resembles an ancient form. It has the following characteristics:
external armor of bony plates, no paired lateral fins, and a
suspension-feeding mode of nutrition. In addition to these, it will
probably have which of the following characteristics?
A) legs
B) no jaws
C) an amniotic egg
D) endothermy
Answer: B
5) How many of the following statements about craniates is (are)
correct?
1. Craniates are more highly cephalized than are noncraniates.
2. Craniates' genomic evolution includes duplication of clusters
of genes that code for transcription factors.
3. The craniate
clade is synonymous with the vertebrate clade.
4. Pharyngeal
slits that play important roles in gas exchange originated in
craniates.
5. The two-chambered heart originated with the early
craniates.
A) one of these
B) two of these
C) three of these
D) four of these
E) five of these
Answer: D
6) What do all craniates have that earlier chordates did not have?
A) brain
B) vertebrae
C) cartilaginous pipe
surrounding notochord
D) partial or complete skull
E) bone
Answer: D
7) Lampreys differ from hagfishes in
A) lacking jaws.
B)
having a cranium.
C) having pharyngeal clefts that develop into
pharyngeal slits.
D) having a notochord throughout life.
E) having a notochord that is surrounded by a tube of cartilage.
Answer: E
8) The feeding mode of the extinct conodonts was
A) herbivory.
B) suspension feeding.
C) predation.
D) filter
feeding.
E) absorptive feeding.
Answer: C
9) The earliest known mineralized structures in vertebrates are
associated with which function?
A) reproduction
B) feeding
C) locomotion
D) defense
E) respiration
Answer: B
<p>10) A team of researchers has developed a poison that has proven effective against lamprey larvae in freshwater cultures. The poison is ingested and causes paralysis by detaching segmental muscles from the skeletal elements. The team wants to test the poison's effectiveness in streams feeding Lake Michigan, but one critic worries about potential effects on lancelets, which are similar to lampreys in many ways. Why is this concern misplaced? <br>A) A chemical poisonous to lampreys could not also be toxic to organisms as ancestral as lancelets. <br>B) Lamprey larvae and lancelets have very different feeding mechanisms. <br>C) Lancelets do not have segmental muscles. <br>D) Lancelets live only in saltwater environments. <br>E) Lancelets and lamprey larvae eat different kinds of food.</p> <p>10) A team of researchers has developed a poison that has proven effective against lamprey larvae in freshwater cultures. The poison is ingested and causes paralysis by detaching segmental muscles from the skeletal elements. The team wants to test the poison's effectiveness in streams feeding Lake Michigan, but one critic worries about potential effects on lancelets, which are similar to lampreys in many ways. Why is this concern misplaced? <br>A) A chemical poisonous to lampreys could not also be toxic to organisms as ancestral as lancelets. <br>B) Lamprey larvae and lancelets have very different feeding mechanisms. <br>C) Lancelets do not have segmental muscles. <br>D) Lancelets live only in saltwater environments. <br>E) Lancelets and lamprey larvae eat different kinds of food.</p>
Answer: D
11) The lamprey species whose larvae live in freshwater streams, but
whose adults live most of their lives in seawater, are similar in this
respect to certain species of
A) chondrichthyans.
B)
actinopterygians.
C) lungfishes.
D) coelacanths.
E) hagfishes.
Answer: B
12) Jaws first occurred in which extant group of fishes?
A)
lampreys
B) chondrichthyans
C) ray-finned fishes
D)
lungfishes
E) placoderms
Answer: B
13) Which of these might have been observed in the common ancestor of
chondrichthyans and osteichthyans?
A) a mineralized, bony
skeleton
B) opercula
C) bony fin rays
D) a spiral
valve intestine
E) a swim bladder
Answer: A
14) To which of the following are the scales of chondrichthyans most
closely related in a structural sense?
A) osteichthyan scales
B) reptilian scales
C) mammalian scales
D) bird
scales
E) chondrichthyan teeth
Answer: E
15) Which of these statements accurately describes a similarity
between sharks and ray-finned fishes?
A) The skin is typically
covered by flattened bony scales.
B) They are equally able to
exchange gases with the environment while stationary.
C) They
are highly maneuverable due to their flexibility.
D) They have a
lateral line that is sensitive to changes in water pressure.
E)
A swim bladder helps control buoyancy.
Answer: D
16) Which group's members have had both lungs and gills during their
adult lives?
A) sharks, skates, and rays
B) lungfishes
C) lancelets
D) amphibians
E) ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs
Answer: B
17) There is evidence that ray-finned fishes evolved
A) in
response to a crisis that wiped out the chondrichthyans.
B)
directly from lampreys and hagfish.
C) early in the Cambrian
period.
D) directly from lancelets.
E) the swim bladder
from a lung.
Answer: E
18) The swim bladder of ray-finned fishes
A) was probably
modified from simple lungs of chondrichthyans.
B) developed into
lungs in saltwater fishes.
C) first appeared in sharks.
D)
provides for regulation of buoyancy.
E) Two of the options
listed are correct.
Answer: D
19) Which of the following belongs to the lobe-fin clade?
A)
chondrichthyans
B) ray-finned fishes
C) lampreys
D)
hagfishes
E) tetrapods
Answer: E
20) Arrange these taxonomic terms from most inclusive (most general)
to least inclusive (most specific).
1. lobe-fins
2. amphibians
3. gnathostomes
4.
osteichthyans
5. tetrapods
A) 4, 3, 1, 5, 2
B) 4, 3, 2, 5, 1
C) 4, 2, 3, 5, 1
D) 3, 4, 1, 5, 2
E) 3, 4, 5, 1, 2
Answer: D
21) A trend first observed in the evolution of the earliest tetrapods
was
A) the appearance of jaws.
B) the appearance of bony
vertebrae.
C) feet with digits.
D) the mineralization of
the endoskeleton.
E) the amniotic egg.
Answer: C
22) What should be true of fossils of the earliest tetrapods?
A) They should show evidence of internal fertilization.
B)
They should show evidence of having produced shelled eggs.
C)
They should indicate limited adaptation to life on land.
D) They
should be transitional forms with the fossils of chondrichthyans that
lived at the same time.
E) They should feature the earliest
indications of the appearance of jaws.
Answer: C
23) Which of these are amniotes?
A) amphibians
B) fishes
C) egg-laying mammals
D) placental mammals
E) More
than one of these is correct.
Answer: E
24) Why is the amniotic egg considered an important evolutionary
breakthrough?
A) It has a shell that increases gas exchange.
B) It allows deposition of eggs in a terrestrial environment.
C) It prolongs embryonic development.
D) It provides
insulation to conserve heat.
E) It permits internal
fertilization to be replaced by external fertilization.
Answer: B
25) Which era is known as the "age of reptiles"?
A)
Cenozoic
B) Mesozoic
C) Paleozoic
D) Devonian
E) Cambrian
Answer: B
26) Which of these characteristics added most to vertebrate success
in relatively dry environments?
A) the shelled, amniotic egg
B) the ability to maintain a constant body temperature
C)
two pairs of appendages
D) bony scales
E) a four-chambered heart
Answer: A
27) Which of the following is characteristic of most extant reptiles
and most extant mammals?
A) ectothermy
B) diaphragm
C) shelled eggs
D) keratinized skin
E) conical teeth
that are relatively uniform in size
Answer: D
28) At the end of which era did most dinosaurs and pterosaurs become
extinct?
A) Cretaceous
B) Permian
C) Devonian
D) Ordovician
E) Triassic
Answer: A
29) Which of the following are the only extant animals that descended
directly from dinosaurs?
A) lizards
B) crocodiles
C)
snakes
D) birds
E) tuataras
Answer: D
30) Examination of the fossils of Archaeopteryx reveals that, in
common with extant birds, it had
A) a long tail containing
vertebrae.
B) feathers.
C) teeth.
D) Three of the
options listed are correct.
E) Two of the options listed are correct.
Answer: B
31) Why is the discovery of the fossil Archaeopteryx significant? It
supports the
A) phylogenetic relatedness of birds and reptiles.
B) contention that birds are much older than we originally
thought.
C) claim that some dinosaurs had feathers well before
birds had evolved.
D) idea that the first birds were ratites.
E) hypothesis that the earliest birds were ectothermic.
Answer: A
32) During chordate evolution, what is the sequence (from earliest to
most recent) in which the following structures arose?
1. amniotic egg
2. paired fins
3. jaws
4. swim
bladder
5. four-chambered heart
A) 2, 3, 4, 1, 5
B) 3, 2, 4, 1, 5
C) 3, 2, 1, 4, 5
D) 2, 1, 4, 3, 5
E) 2, 4, 3, 1, 5
Answer: A
33) Among extant vertebrates, a sheet of muscle called the diaphragm
is found in
A) birds.
B) monotremes.
C) marsupials.
D) placentals.
E) Three of the options listed are correct.
Answer: E
34) Which of these would a paleontologist be most likely to do in
order to determine whether a fossil represents a reptile or a mammal?
A) Look for the presence of milk-producing glands.
B) Look
for the mammalian characteristics of a four-chambered heart and a
diaphragm.
C) Because mammals are eutherians, look for evidence
of a placenta.
D) Use molecular analysis to look for the protein
keratin.
E) Examine the teeth.
Answer: E
35) Which of the following represents the strongest evidence that two
of the three middle ear bones of mammals are homologous to certain
reptilian jawbones?
A) They are similar in size to the reptilian
jawbones.
B) They are similar in shape to the reptilian
jawbones.
C) The mammalian jaw has fewer bones than does the
reptilian jaw.
D) These bones can be observed to move from the
developing jaw to the developing middle ear in mammalian embryos.
E) Mammals can hear better than reptiles.
Answer: D
36) Female birds lay their eggs, thereby facilitating flight by
reducing weight. Which "strategy" seems most likely for
female bats to use to achieve the same goal?
A) lay shelled eggs
B) limit litters to a single embryo
C) refrain from flying
throughout pregnancy (about 6 weeks long)
D) give birth to
underdeveloped young, and subsequently carry them in a pouch that has
teats
E) feed multiple embryos internally using placentas
Answer: B
37) In which vertebrates is fertilization exclusively internal?
A) chondrichthyans, osteichthyans, and mammals
B)
amphibians, mammals, and reptiles
C) chondrichthyans,
osteichthyans, and reptiles
D) reptiles and mammals
E)
reptiles and amphibians
Answer: D
Match the extant vertebrate groups with the descriptions.
38) Their scales most closely resemble teeth in both structure
and origin.
A) amphibians
B) nonbird reptiles
C)
chondrichthyans
D) mammals
E) osteichthyans
Answer: C
Match the extant vertebrate groups with the descriptions.
39) Internal fertilization, leathery amniotic egg, and skin that
resists drying are characteristics of
A) amphibians.
B)
nonbird reptiles.
C) chondrichthyans.
D) mammals.
E) birds.
Answer: B
Match the extant vertebrate groups with the descriptions.
40) Which of the following are the most abundant and diverse of
the extant vertebrates?
A) ray-finned fishes
B) birds
C) amphibians
D) nonbird reptiles
E) mammals
Answer: A
Match the extant vertebrate groups with the descriptions.
41) What is the single unique characteristic that distinguishes
extant birds from other extant vertebrates?
A) endothermy
B) feathers
C) an amniotic egg
D) flight
E) a
four-chambered heart
Answer: B
42) Arrange the following taxonomic terms from most inclusive (most
general) to least inclusive (most specific).
1. apes
2. hominins
3. Homo
4 anthropoids
5. primates
A) 5, 1, 4, 2, 3
B) 5, 4, 1, 2, 3
C) 5, 4, 2, 1, 3
D) 5, 2, 1, 4, 3
E) 5, 2, 4, 1, 3
Answer: B
43) Which of these traits is most strongly associated with the
adoption of bipedalism?
A) fingerprints
B) enhanced depth
perception
C) shortened hind limbs
D) opposable big toe
E) repositioning of foramen magnum
Answer: E
44) Which of the following statements about human evolution is
correct?
A) Modern humans are the only human species to have
evolved on Earth.
B) Human ancestors were virtually identical to
extant chimpanzees.
C) Human evolution has occurred within an
unbranched lineage.
D) The upright posture and enlarged brain of
humans evolved simultaneously.
E) Fossil evidence indicates that
early anthropoids were arboreal and cat-sized.
Answer: E
45) Which of the following are considered apes?
A) lorises
B) New World monkeys
C) Old World monkeys
D)
orangutans
E) tarsiers
Answer: D
46) Which of these species was the first to have been adapted for
long-distance bipedalism?
A) Australopithecus garhi
B) H.
erectus
C) H. ergaster
D) H. habilis
E) H. sapiens
Answer: C
47) Which of these species was apparently the first to craft stone
tools?
A) Australopithecus garhi
B) H. erectus
C) H.
ergaster
D) H. habilis
E) H. sapiens
Answer: A
48) Which of these species was the first to have some members migrate
out of Africa?
A) Australopithecus garhi
B) H. erectus
C) H. ergaster
D) H. habilis
E) H. sapiens
Answer: B
49) Which of these species is currently thought to have coexisted (at
the same time and places) with H. neanderthalensis?
A) H.
erectus
B) H. ergaster
C) H. habilis
D) H. sapiens
Answer: D
50) Which of these species had members who moved out of Africa?
A) H. erectus
B) H. ergaster
C) H. habilis
D)
H. sapiens
E) both H. sapiens and H. erectus
Answer: E
51) With which of the following statements would a biologist be most
inclined to agree?
A) Humans and apes represent divergent lines
of evolution from a common ancestor.
B) Humans evolved directly
from Old World monkeys.
C) Humans represent the pinnacle of
evolution and have escaped from being affected by natural selection.
D) Humans evolved from chimpanzees.
E) Humans and apes are
the result of disruptive selection in a species of chimpanzee.
Answer: A
52) Which of these statements about human evolution is correct?
A) The ancestors of Homo sapiens were chimpanzees.
B)
Human evolution has proceeded in an orderly fashion from an ancestral
anthropoid to Homo sapiens.
C) The evolution of upright posture
and enlarged brain occurred simultaneously.
D) Different species
of the genus Homo have coexisted at various times throughout hominin
evolution.
E) Mitochondrial DNA analysis indicates that modern
humans are genetically very similar to Neanderthals.
Answer: D
53) The oldest fossil remains of Homo sapiens found so far date from
about
A) 6 million years ago.
B) 1.6 million years ago.
C) 195,000 years ago.
D) 60,000 years ago.
E) 16,000
years ago.
Answer: C
54) Which of the following statements is correct in regard to Homo
erectus?
A) Their fossils are not limited to Africa.
B) On
average, H. erectus had a smaller brain than H. habilis.
C) H.
erectus had a level of sexual dimorphism less than that of modern
humans.
D) H. erectus was not known to use tools.
E) H.
erectus evolved before H. habilis.
Answer: A
55) Which of the following is the most inclusive (most general)
group, all of whose members have foramina magna centrally positioned
in the base of the cranium?
A) hominoids
B) Homo
C)
anthropoids
D) hominins
E) primates
Answer: D
56) Which of the following is the most inclusive (most general)
group, all of whose members have fully opposable thumbs?
A) apes
B) Homo
C) anthropoids
D) hominins
E) primates
Answer: C
57) Which of the following is the most specific group that includes
both the Old World monkeys and the New World monkeys?
A) apes
B) Homo
C) anthropoids
D) hominins
E) primates
Answer: C
58) At least one of these has been found in all species of eumetazoan
animals studied thus far.
A) Hox
B) Dlx
C) Otx
D) FOXP2
E) more than one of these
Answer: A
59) Which of the following is a cluster of genes coding for
transcription factors involved in the evolution of innovations in
early vertebrate nervous systems and vertebrae?
A) Hox
B)
Dlx
C) Otx
D) FOXP2
E) more than one of these
Answer: B
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
60) The presence of a swim bladder allows the typical ray-finned
fish to stop swimming and still
A) effectively circulate its
blood.
B) be highly maneuverable.
C) use its lateral line
system.
D) use its swim bladder as a respiratory organ.
E)
not sink.
Answer: E
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
61) Rank the following fish, from most to least, in terms of the
amount of energy it must use to maintain its position (depth) in the
water column over the long term.
1. physoclistus fish
2. physostomus fish
3.
chondrichthyan fish
A) 1, 2, 3
B) 2, 3, 1
C) 2, 1, 3
D) 3, 1, 2
E) 3, 2, 1
Answer: E
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
62) If a physoclistus fish removes gas from its swim bladder,
this fish's density cannot actually change until that gas arrives at
the
A) mouth.
B) gills.
C) skin.
D) heart.
E) anus.
Answer: B
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
63) Which shark structure is most analogous to a swim bladder
full of gas?
A) its lateral line system
B) its spiral
valve
C) its liver
D) its dead-end nostrils
E) its gills
Answer: C
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
64) When a shark stops swimming, it does which of the following?
1. sinks
2. quickly dies
3. oxygenates its blood
less effectively
A) 1 only
B) 2 only
C) 3 only
D) 1 and 3
E) 1, 2, and 3
Answer: D
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
65) We should expect the inner wall of the swim bladder to be
lined with tissue that is derived from
A) ectoderm.
B)
endoderm.
C) mesoderm.
D) mesoglea.
E) neurectoderm.
Answer: B
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
66) Regarding its position in the water column, the same thing
that happens to a shark when it stops swimming also happens to a
A) physostomus fish when it gulps air.
B) physoclistus
fish when it moves gas from the blood into the water.
C)
physoclistus fish when it moves gas from the swim bladder into the
blood.
D) physoclistus fish when it moves gas from the blood
into the swim bladder.
Answer: B
Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and, thus,
their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomus and
physoclistus. The ancestral version is the physostomus version, in
which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube
(Figure 34.1). The fish fills this version by swimming to the surface,
taking gulps of air, and directing them into the swim bladder. Air is
removed from this version by "belching." The physoclistus
version is more derived, and has lost its connection to the esophagus.
Instead, gas enters and leaves the swim bladder via special
circulatory mechanisms within the wall of the swim bladder.
67) In coelacanths, a swim bladder is present, but the swim
bladder is full of adipose tissue (fat), which is there on a fairly
permanent basis. If such a swim bladder is used by coelacanths to
affect buoyancy, then it does so in much the same way as does the
A) liver of a shark.
B) physoclistus swim bladder.
C) physostomus swim bladder.
D) lung of a lungfish.
Answer: A
68) Which graph properly depicts the relationship between the amount
of gas in the swim bladder and the density of the fish?
A. SEE IMAGE
B. SEE IMAGE
C. SEE IMAGE
D. SEE
IMAGE
E. SEE IMAGE
Answer: C
69) If a ray-finned fish is to both hover (remain stationary) in the
water column and ventilate its gills effectively, then what other
structure besides its swim bladder will it use?
A) its heart
B) its pectoral fins
C) its lateral
line system
D) its caudal (tail) fin
E) its opercula
Answer: E
70) Which graph below best represents the way that density changes
over time in a physoclistus fish and in a physostomus fish,
respectively?
A) A and B
B) B and A
C) B and C
D) C and B
E) D and B
Answer: D
71) At 5, 10, and 15 hours in the graph below, which of the following
statements should be true?
A) This fish is in the process of adding gas to its swim
bladder.
B) This fish is in the process of removing gas from its
swim bladder.
C) This fish has a swim bladder that is relatively
full of gas.
D) This fish has a swim bladder that contains
relatively little gas.
Answer: D
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
72) Which number represents the birds?
A) 3
B) 4
C) 6
D) 8
E) 10, if it were at the end of a branch
emerging from the dinosaurs
Answer: E
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
73) Which pair of numbers represents extinct reptiles that had
returned to an aquatic life?
A) 1 and 2
B) 3 and 4
C) 5 and 7
D) 6 and 8
E) 7 and 9
Answer: A
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
74) If circle 3 includes all of the extant reptiles that are
ectotherms, then what do circles 4 and 6 represent?
A)
crocodiles and birds
B) turtles and birds
C) ratites and
carinates
D) mammals and birds
E) There is not enough
information to say.
Answer: E
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
75) Which number represents the closest relative to the
parareptiles?
A) 1
B) 2
C) 3
D) 9
E) It
is not possible to say.
Answer: D
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
76) Which of these numbers represents ectotherms that were able
to fly?
A) 1
B) 2
C) 7
D) 8
E) It is not
possible to say.
Answer: C
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
77) Whose DNA would have had the most sequence homologies with
amphibian DNA?
A) 5
B) 6
C) 7
D) 8
E) 9
Answer: E
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
78) In order for the four-chambered hearts of birds and mammals
to be homologous, which other organisms would have to have had
four-chambered hearts?
A) dinosaurs
B) thecodonts
C)
plesiosaurs
D) synapsids
E) stem reptiles
Answer: E
The following question refer to the phylogenetic tree shown in Figure
34.2.
Figure 34.2
79) The organisms represented by number 8 are
A) birds.
B) mammals.
C) nonbird, terrestrial reptiles.
D)
aquatic reptiles.
E) all mammals except humans.
Answer: B
Terry catches a ray-finned fish from the ocean and notices that
attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike organism. The
attached organism has no external segmentation, no scales, a round
mouth surrounded by a sucker, and two small eyes. Terry thinks it
might be a marine leech, a hagfish, or a lamprey.
80) Which feature excludes the organism from possibly being a
leech?
A) elongated shape
B) lack of scales
C) lack
of external segmentation
D) round mouth
E) anterior sucker
Answer: C
Terry catches a ray-finned fish from the ocean and notices that
attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike organism. The
attached organism has no external segmentation, no scales, a round
mouth surrounded by a sucker, and two small eyes. Terry thinks it
might be a marine leech, a hagfish, or a lamprey.
81) Terry detaches the snakelike organism from the fish and uses
a knife to cut off its head. In doing so, its brain slides out onto
the deck of the boat. Terry peers into the cut end of the head and
notices that the brain had lain in a sort of panlike structure that
only partially surrounded the brain. What is the structure Terry is
observing, and what is it made of?
A) skull, made of bone
B) cranium, made of bone
C) cranium, made of cartilage
D) vertebral column, made of bone
E) vertebral column,
made of cartilage
Answer: C
notices that attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike
organism. The attached organism has no external segmentation, no
scales, a round mouth surrounded by a sucker, and two small eyes.
Terry thinks it might be a marine leech, a hagfish, or a lamprey.
82) Terry takes the body of the snakelike organism and slices it
open along its dorsal side. If it is a hagfish, what should Terry see?
A) a well-developed series of bony vertebrae surrounding the
spinal cord
B) a well-developed series of cartilaginous
vertebrae surrounding the spinal cord
C) a tube of cartilage
(surrounding the notochord) with dorsal projections on both sides of
the spinal cord
D) a notochord, located underneath the spinal cord
Answer: D
Terry catches a ray-finned fish from the ocean and notices that
attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike organism. The
attached organism has no external segmentation, no scales, a round
mouth surrounded by a sucker, and two small eyes. Terry thinks it
might be a marine leech, a hagfish, or a lamprey.
83) The snakelike organism turned out to be a hagfish.
Consequently, why should Terry throw the fish to which the hagfish was
attached overboard, rather than having it for dinner?
A) It has
mucus on its skin.
B) If it had an ectoparasite, then it must
also have endoparasites.
C) The bite of the hagfish introduces
paralytic neurotoxins, which Terry wants to avoid.
D) It was
already sick or dying; otherwise, the hagfish would probably not have
attacked it.
Answer: D
Terry catches a ray-finned fish from the ocean and notices that
attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike organism. The
attached organism has no external segmentation, no scales, a round
mouth surrounded by a sucker, and two small eyes. Terry thinks it
might be a marine leech, a hagfish, or a lamprey.
84) Having caught and handled a hagfish, what will Terry's
shipmates most likely require Terry to do before returning to further
fishing?
A) Wash his hands and then don gloves to prevent the
spread of harmful microbes that live only on hagfish skin.
B)
Clean the bucketsful of hagfish slime from the deck of the boat.
C) Dispose of the fishing tackle that had been poisoned by
coming into contact with the hagfish.
D) Cut up the remaining
hagfish and share pieces of this highly sought-after baitfish.
Answer: B
Terry catches a ray-finned fish from the ocean and notices that
attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike organism. The
attached organism has no external segmentation, no scales, a round
mouth surrounded by a sucker, and two small eyes. Terry thinks it
might be a marine leech, a hagfish, or a lamprey.
85) Terry saved some of the tooth-like objects within the
hagfish's round mouth to analyze their composition in his mentor's
biochemistry research lab. Terry will find that they are composed of
the same protein found in tetrapod
A) skin.
B) teeth.
C) bones.
D) cartilage.
E) muscles.
Answer: A
While on an intersession course in tropical ecology, Kris pulls a
large, snakelike organism from a burrow (the class was granted a
collecting permit). The 1-m-long organism has smooth skin, which
appears to be segmented. It has two tiny eyes that are hard to see
because they seem to be covered by skin. Kris brings it back to the
lab at the field station, where it is a source of puzzlement to the
class. Kris says that it is a giant oligochaete worm; Shaun suggests
it is a legless amphibian; Kelly proposes it belongs to a snake
species that is purely fossorial (lives in a burrow).
86) The class decided to humanely euthanize the organism and
subsequently dissect it. Having decided that it was probably not a
reptile, two of their original hypotheses regarding its identity
remained. Which of the following, if observed, should help them arrive
at a conclusive answer?
A) presence of a closed circulatory
system
B) presence of moist, highly vascularized skin
C)
presence of lungs
D) presence of a nerve cord
E) presence
of a digestive system with two openings
Answer: C
While on an intersession course in tropical ecology, Kris pulls a
large, snakelike organism from a burrow (the class was granted a
collecting permit). The 1-m-long organism has smooth skin, which
appears to be segmented. It has two tiny eyes that are hard to see
because they seem to be covered by skin. Kris brings it back to the
lab at the field station, where it is a source of puzzlement to the
class. Kris says that it is a giant oligochaete worm; Shaun suggests
it is a legless amphibian; Kelly proposes it belongs to a snake
species that is purely fossorial (lives in a burrow).
87) The organism was found to have two lungs, but the left lung
was much smaller than the right lung. Kelly added that the herpetology
instructor had said that in most snakes, the same condition exists. If
the size difference between the lungs in this organism is not a shared
ancestral characteristic with its occurrence in snakes, then its
existence in this organism is explained as which of the following?
1. a result of convergent evolution
2. an example of
homologous structures
3. a similar adaptation to a shared
lifestyle or body plan
4. a result of having identical Hox genes
5. a homoplasy
A) 3 only
B) 1 and 5
C) 1, 3, and 5
D) 2, 3,
and 5
E) 3, 4, and 5
Answer: C
While on an intersession course in tropical ecology, Kris pulls a
large, snakelike organism from a burrow (the class was granted a
collecting permit). The 1-m-long organism has smooth skin, which
appears to be segmented. It has two tiny eyes that are hard to see
because they seem to be covered by skin. Kris brings it back to the
lab at the field station, where it is a source of puzzlement to the
class. Kris says that it is a giant oligochaete worm; Shaun suggests
it is a legless amphibian; Kelly proposes it belongs to a snake
species that is purely fossorial (lives in a burrow).
88) The adaptation of the body shape of snakes has resulted in
one of their lungs becoming vestigial. Another adaptation (to a
fossorial lifestyle) is snakes' absence of limbs. If the "mystery
organism" has also become adapted to a fossorial lifestyle,
though its ancestors moved about on the surface, then which structures
should one expect to find upon dissecting the organism?
1. reduced or absent pelvic and/or pectoral girdles
2.
metanephridia
3. hydrostatic skeleton
A) 1 only
B) 1 and 2
C) 1 and 3
D) 2 and 3
E) 1, 2, and 3
Answer: A
While on an intersession course in tropical ecology, Kris pulls a
large, snakelike organism from a burrow (the class was granted a
collecting permit). The 1-m-long organism has smooth skin, which
appears to be segmented. It has two tiny eyes that are hard to see
because they seem to be covered by skin. Kris brings it back to the
lab at the field station, where it is a source of puzzlement to the
class. Kris says that it is a giant oligochaete worm; Shaun suggests
it is a legless amphibian; Kelly proposes it belongs to a snake
species that is purely fossorial (lives in a burrow).
89) Which one of these, if found, should clear up any remaining
doubt as to the identity of the organism?
A) vestigial pelvic
girdle
B) blood vessels carrying oxygenated blood from both the
skin and the functional lung to the heart
C) closed circulatory
system
D) ability to produce toxins from glands located on the
skin, or that empty into the mouth
E) two-chambered heart
Answer: B
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the
respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory
system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into
posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air
sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air
through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
90) If the inner lining of the air sacs is neither thin nor
highly vascularized, then what can be inferred about the air sacs?
A) They must not belong to the respiratory system.
B) They
cannot be derived from endoderm.
C) They cannot be sites of gas
exchange between air and blood.
D) They must obtain nutrition
from some source other than the bloodstream.
E) They cannot
effectively moisturize the air before it reaches the lungs.
Answer: C
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
91) Some bird bones are hollow rather than honeycombed. The hollow
bones mostly contain air sacs. The replacement of bone marrow with air
sacs is properly understood as an adaptation to
A) reduce the
weight of the bird.
B) facilitate flight.
C) eliminate the
functions that marrow performs.
D) All three of the options
listed are correct.
E) Only two of the options listed are correct.
Answer: E
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
93) If Archaeopteryx had air sacs, then which of its features would have had the opposite effect on enabling Archaeopteryx to fly long distances from that provided by air sacs?
1. teeth
2. contour feathers
3. wing claws
4. long
tail with many vertebrae
A) 1 and 2
B) 1 and 4
C) 2 and 3
D) 1, 2, and 4
E) 1, 3, and 4
Answer: A
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
93) If Archaeopteryx had air sacs, then which of its features would have had the opposite effect on enabling Archaeopteryx to fly long distances from that provided by air sacs?
1. teeth
2. contour feathers
3. wing claws
4. long
tail with many vertebrae
A) 1 and 2
B) 1 and 4
C) 2 and 3
D) 1, 2, and 4
E) 1, 3, and 4
Answer: E
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the
respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory
system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into
posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air
sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air
through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
94) Which feature of some carinates has the same effect on
weight as the presence of air sacs?
A) presence of a large,
heavily keratinized beak
B) absence of a urinary bladder
C) presence of a carina (keel)
D) number of chambers in
the heart
E) presence of large pectoral muscles
Answer: B
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the
respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory
system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into
posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air
sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air
through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
95) The movement of air along parabronchi is most similar to the
movement of
A) air in the lungs of other amniotes.
B)
food/waste in a gastrovascular cavity.
C) food/waste in a
digestive system with separate mouth and anus.
D) the frog
tongue during feeding.
E) air in lungs of terrestrial amphibians.
Answer: C
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the
respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory
system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into
posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air
sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air
through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
96) Which type of bird is most likely to need air sacs to reduce
its weight?
A) birds that migrate long distances
B)
waterfowl that float on water, but do not dive
C) birds that
spend much of their time underwater
D) ratites
Answer: A
Due to its system of nine air sacs connected to the lungs, the
respiratory system of birds is arguably the most effective respiratory
system of all air-breathers. Upon inhalation, air first flows into
posterior air sacs, then into the lungs, and then into anterior air
sacs on the way to being exhaled. Thus, there is one-way flow of air
through the lungs, along thousands of tubules called parabronchi.
97) The one-way flow of air along parabronchi makes what type of
exchange mechanism possible, at least theoretically?
A) the same
as that occurring in fish gills
B) the same as that occurring in
insect tracheae
C) the same as that occurring in mammalian lungs
D) the same as that occurring in echinoderm skin gills
Answer: A
In the United States and Canada, bats use one of two strategies to
survive winter: They either migrate south, or they hibernate.
Recently, those that hibernate seem to have come under attack by a
fungus, Geomyces destructans (Gd), an attack that is occurring from
Missouri to southern Canada. Many infected bats have a delicate, white
filamentous mat on their muzzles, which is referred to as white-nose
syndrome (WNS). The fungus invades the bat tissues, causes discomfort,
and awakens the bat from its hibernation. The bat fidgets and wastes
calories, using up its stored fat. The bat then behaves abnormally,
leaving its cave during daytime in winter to search for food. Their
food, primarily insects, is scarce during the winter, and the bats
ultimately starve to death. Since 2007, it is estimated that up to 1
million bats have perished from WNS.
98) The Gd mat on the fur of the bats should be expected to
consist of
A) hyphae.
B) haustoria.
C) arbuscules.
D) yeasts.
E) basidia.
Answer: A
In the United States and Canada, bats use one of two strategies to
survive winter: They either migrate south, or they hibernate.
Recently, those that hibernate seem to have come under attack by a
fungus, Geomyces destructans (Gd), an attack that is occurring from
Missouri to southern Canada. Many infected bats have a delicate, white
filamentous mat on their muzzles, which is referred to as white-nose
syndrome (WNS). The fungus invades the bat tissues, causes discomfort,
and awakens the bat from its hibernation. The bat fidgets and wastes
calories, using up its stored fat. The bat then behaves abnormally,
leaving its cave during daytime in winter to search for food. Their
food, primarily insects, is scarce during the winter, and the bats
ultimately starve to death. Since 2007, it is estimated that up to 1
million bats have perished from WNS.
99) Gd is a cold-loving fungus. Thus, which characteristics of
normal bat behavior can be most expected to favor the growth of this
fungus?
A) southward migration during the winter
B)
communal roosting in tightly packed clusters during hibernation
C) reliance on fat reserves for calories during hibernation
D) much-reduced metabolic rate during hibernation
E)
hibernating in parts of the cave that are farthest away from the mouth
of the cave
Answer: D
In the United States and Canada, bats use one of two strategies to
survive winter: They either migrate south, or they hibernate.
Recently, those that hibernate seem to have come under attack by a
fungus, Geomyces destructans (Gd), an attack that is occurring from
Missouri to southern Canada. Many infected bats have a delicate, white
filamentous mat on their muzzles, which is referred to as white-nose
syndrome (WNS). The fungus invades the bat tissues, causes discomfort,
and awakens the bat from its hibernation. The bat fidgets and wastes
calories, using up its stored fat. The bat then behaves abnormally,
leaving its cave during daytime in winter to search for food. Their
food, primarily insects, is scarce during the winter, and the bats
ultimately starve to death. Since 2007, it is estimated that up to 1
million bats have perished from WNS.
100) Gd is a cold-loving fungus. Thus, which characteristics of
abnormal bat behavior can be most expected to favor the growth of this
fungus?
A) shifting roosting location to the mouth of the cave
during winter
B) searching for food during winter
C)
searching for food during the day
D) All three of the options
listed are correct.
E) Only two of the options listed are correct.
Answer: D
In the United States and Canada, bats use one of two strategies to
survive winter: They either migrate south, or they hibernate.
Recently, those that hibernate seem to have come under attack by a
fungus, Geomyces destructans (Gd), an attack that is occurring from
Missouri to southern Canada. Many infected bats have a delicate, white
filamentous mat on their muzzles, which is referred to as white-nose
syndrome (WNS). The fungus invades the bat tissues, causes discomfort,
and awakens the bat from its hibernation. The bat fidgets and wastes
calories, using up its stored fat. The bat then behaves abnormally,
leaving its cave during daytime in winter to search for food. Their
food, primarily insects, is scarce during the winter, and the bats
ultimately starve to death. Since 2007, it is estimated that up to 1
million bats have perished from WNS.
101) Gd is a cold-loving fungus. Thus, which characteristics of
normal bat behavior can be most expected to favor the spread of this
fungus to uninfected bats?
A) southward migration during the
winter
B) communal roosting in tightly packed clusters during
hibernation
C) reliance on fat reserves for calories during
hibernation
D) much-reduced metabolic rate during hibernation
E) hibernating in parts of the cave that are farthest away from
the mouth of the cave
Answer: B
In the United States and Canada, bats use one of two strategies to
survive winter: They either migrate south, or they hibernate.
Recently, those that hibernate seem to have come under attack by a
fungus, Geomyces destructans (Gd), an attack that is occurring from
Missouri to southern Canada. Many infected bats have a delicate, white
filamentous mat on their muzzles, which is referred to as white-nose
syndrome (WNS). The fungus invades the bat tissues, causes discomfort,
and awakens the bat from its hibernation. The bat fidgets and wastes
calories, using up its stored fat. The bat then behaves abnormally,
leaving its cave during daytime in winter to search for food. Their
food, primarily insects, is scarce during the winter, and the bats
ultimately starve to death. Since 2007, it is estimated that up to 1
million bats have perished from WNS.
102) Almost all North American bats are insectivores, with one
notable exception being a bat that bites and then laps blood from the
wound. The blood-lapping bats are limited to the warm, southwestern
United States. Thus, if WNS continues to decimate bat populations in
the United States and Canada, then we can expect
A) livestock
bites from vampire bats to increase in frequency.
B) plant
diseases that are spread by insects to increase in frequency.
C)
plant diseases directly caused by insect feeding to increase in
frequency.
D) human and livestock diseases that are spread by
insects to increase in frequency.
E) all but one of these are correct.
Answer: E
In the United States and Canada, bats use one of two strategies to
survive winter: They either migrate south, or they hibernate.
Recently, those that hibernate seem to have come under attack by a
fungus, Geomyces destructans (Gd), an attack that is occurring from
Missouri to southern Canada. Many infected bats have a delicate, white
filamentous mat on their muzzles, which is referred to as white-nose
syndrome (WNS). The fungus invades the bat tissues, causes discomfort,
and awakens the bat from its hibernation. The bat fidgets and wastes
calories, using up its stored fat. The bat then behaves abnormally,
leaving its cave during daytime in winter to search for food. Their
food, primarily insects, is scarce during the winter, and the bats
ultimately starve to death. Since 2007, it is estimated that up to 1
million bats have perished from WNS.
103) Which feature(s) allow(s) hibernating bats to conserve heat
without using calories?
A) shivering
B) fur
C) fat
layer below the skin
D) All three of the options listed are
correct.
E) Two of the options listed are correct.
Answer: E
104) Vertebrates and tunicates share
A) jaws adapted for
feeding.
B) a high degree of cephalization.
C) the
formation of structures from the neural crest.
D) an
endoskeleton that includes a skull.
E) a notochord and a dorsal,
hollow nerve cord.
Answer: E
105) Some animals that lived 530 million years ago resembled
lancelets but had a brain and a skull. These animals may represent
A) the first chordates.
B) a "missing link"
between urochordates and cephalochordates.
C) early craniates.
D) marsupials.
E) nontetrapod gnathostomes.
Answer: C
106) Which of the following could be considered the most recent
common ancestor of living tetrapods?
A) a sturdy-finned,
shallow-water lobe-fin whose appendages had skeletal supports similar
to those of terrestrial vertebrates
B) an armored, jawed
placoderm with two pairs of appendages
C) an early ray-finned
fish that developed bony skeletal supports in its paired fins
D)
a salamander that had legs supported by a bony skeleton but moved with
the side-to-side bending typical of fishes
E) an early
terrestrial caecilian whose legless condition had evolved secondarily
Answer: A
107) Unlike eutherians, both monotremes and marsupials
A) lack
nipples.
B) have some embryonic development outside the uterus.
C) lay eggs.
D) are found in Australia and Africa.
E) include only insectivores and herbivores.
Answer: B
108) Which clade does not include humans?
A) synapsids
B)
lobe-fins
C) diapsids
D) craniates
E) osteichthyans
Answer: C
109) As hominins diverged from other primates, which of the following
appeared first?
A) reduced jawbones
B) language
C)
bipedal locomotion
D) the making of stone tools
E) an
enlarged brain
Answer: C