1) Darwin and Wallace's theory of evolution by natural selection was
revolutionary because it _____.
A) was the first theory to refute
the ideas of special creation
B) proved that individuals
acclimated to their environment over time
C) dismissed the idea
that species are constant and emphasized the importance of variation
and change in populations
D) was the first time a biologist had
proposed that species changed through time
Answer: C
2) Catastrophism was Cuvier's attempt to explain the existence of
_____.
A) evolution
B) the fossil record
C)
uniformitarianism
D) the origin of new species
Answer: B
3) With what other idea of his time was Cuvier's theory of
catastrophism most in conflict?
A) the scala naturae
B) the
fixity of species
C) island biogeography
D) uniformitarianism
Answer: D
4) Prior to the work of Lyell and Darwin, the prevailing belief was
that Earth is _____.
A) a few thousand years old, and populations
are unchanging
B) a few thousand years old, and populations
gradually change
C) millions of years old, and populations
rapidly change
D) millions of years old, and populations are unchanging
Answer: A
5) During a study session about evolution, one of your fellow
students remarks, "The giraffe stretched its neck while reaching
for higher leaves; its offspring inherited longer necks as a
result." Which statement is most likely to be helpful in
correcting this student's misconception?
A) Characteristics
acquired during an organism's life are generally not passed on through
genes.
B) Spontaneous mutations can result in the appearance of
new traits.
C) Only favorable adaptations have survival
value.
D) Disuse of an organ may lead to its eventual disappearance.
Answer: A
6) When Cuvier considered the fossils found in the vicinity of Paris,
he concluded that the extinction of species _____.
A) occurs, but
that there is no evolution
B) and the evolution of species both
occur
C) and the evolution of species do not occur
D) does
not occur, but evolution does occur
Answer: A
7) In the mid-1900s, the Soviet geneticist Lysenko believed that his
winter wheat plants, exposed to increasingly colder temperatures,
would eventually give rise to more cold-tolerant winter wheat.
Lysenko's attempts in this regard were most in agreement with the
ideas of _____.
A) Cuvier
B) Lamarck
C) Darwin
D) Lyell
Answer: B
8) If x indicates the location of fossils of two closely related
species, then fossils of their most-recent common ancestor are most
likely to occur in which stratum?
A) A
B) B
C)
C
D) D
Answer: C
9) If x indicates the fossils of two closely related species, neither
of which is extinct, then their remains may be found in how many of
these strata?
A) one stratum
B) two strata
C) three
strata
D) four strata
Answer: B
The horizontal axis of the cladogram depicted below is a timeline that extends from 100,000 years ago to the present; the vertical axis represents nothing in particular. The labeled branch points on the tree (V-Z) represent various common ancestors. Let's say that only since 50,000 years ago has there been enough variation between the lineages depicted here to separate them into distinct species, and only the tips of the lineages on this tree represent distinct species.
10) Which pair of scientists below would probably have agreed with
the process that is depicted by this tree?
A) Cuvier and
Lamarck
B) Lamarck and Wallace
C) Aristotle and
Lyell
D) Wallace and Linnaeus
Answer: B
11) The cow Bos primigenius (which is bred for meat and milk) has a
smaller brain and larger eyes than closely related wild species of
ungulates. These traits most likely arose by _____.
A) natural
selection, because these traits evolved in the population over
time
B) natural selection, because these traits were not
consciously selected by humans
C) artificial selection, because
changes in these traits co-occurred with human selection for high milk
output and high muscle content
D) artificial selection, because
these animals differ from their close relatives and common ancestor
Answer: C
12) Starting from the wild mustard Brassica oleracea, breeders have
created the strains known as Brussels sprouts, broccoli, kale, and
cabbage. Therefore, which of the following statements is
correct?
A) In this wild mustard, there is enough heritable
variation to permit these different varieties.
B) Heritable
variation is low in wild mustard—otherwise this wild strain would have
different characteristics.
C) Natural selection is rare in wild
populations of wild mustard.
D) In wild mustard, most of the
variation is due to differences in soil or other aspects of the environment.
Answer: A
13) Which of the following scientists argued that variation among
individuals allows evolution to occur?
A) Aristotle
B)
Lamarck
C) Linnaeus
D) Wallace
Answer: D
14) Which of these conditions are always true of populations evolving
due to natural selection?
Condition 1: The population must vary
in traits that are heritable.
Condition 2: Some heritable traits
must increase reproductive success.
Condition 3: Individuals pass
on most traits that they acquire during their lifetime.
A)
Condition 1 only
B) Condition 2 only
C) Conditions 1 and
2
D) Conditions 2 and 3
Answer: C
15) A farmer uses triazine herbicide to control pigweed in his field.
For the first few years, the triazine works well and almost all the
pigweed dies; but after several years, the farmer sees more and more
pigweed. Which of these explanations best explains what
happened?
A) The herbicide company lost its triazine formula and
started selling poor-quality triazine.
B) Natural selection
caused the pigweed to mutate, creating a new triazine-resistant
species.
C) Triazine-resistant pigweed has less-efficient
photosynthesis metabolism.
D) Triazine-resistant weeds were more
likely to survive and reproduce.
Answer: D
16) After the drought of 1977, researchers on the island of Daphne
Major hypothesized that medium ground finches that had large, deep
beaks, survived better than those with smaller beaks because they
could more easily crack and eat the tough Tribulus cistoides fruits.
If this hypothesis is correct, what would you expect to observe if a
population of these medium ground finches colonizes a nearby island
where Tribulus cistoides is the most abundant food for the next 1000
years? Assume that (1) even the survivors of the 1977 drought
sometimes had difficulty cracking the tough T. cistoides fruits and
would eat other seeds when offered a choice; and (2) food availability
is the primary limit on finch fitness on this new island.
A)
evolution of yet larger, deeper beaks over time
B) evolution of
smaller, pointier beaks over time
C) random fluctuations in beak
size and shape
D) no change in beak size and shape
Answer: A
17) After the drought of 1977, researchers hypothesized that on the
Galápagos island Daphne Major, medium ground finches with large, deep
beaks survived better than those with smaller beaks because they could
more easily crack and eat the tough Tribulus cistoides fruits. A
tourist company sets up reliable feeding stations with a variety of
bird seeds (different types and sizes) so that tourists can get a
better look at the finches. Which of these events is now most likely
to occur to finch beaks on this island?
A) evolution of yet
larger, deeper beaks over time, until all birds have relatively large,
deep beaks
B) evolution of smaller, pointier beaks over time,
until all birds have relatively small, pointy beaks
C) increased
variation in beak size and shape over time
D) no change in beak
size and shape over time
Answer: C
The following question is based on information from Frank M. Frey, "Opposing Natural Selection from Herbivores and Pathogens May Maintain Floral-Color Variation in Claytonia virginica (Portulacaceae)," Evolution 58(11), 2004: 2426-37.
18) Claytonia virginica is a woodland spring herb with flowers that
vary from white to pale pink to bright pink. Slugs prefer to eat
pink-flowering over white-flowering plants (due to chemical
differences between the two), and plants experiencing severe herbivory
are more likely to die. The bees that pollinate this plant also prefer
pink to white flowers, so that Claytonia with pink flowers have
greater relative fruit set than Claytonia with white flowers. A
researcher observes that the percentage of different flower colors
remains stable in the study population from year to year. Given no
other information, if the researcher removes all slugs from the study
population, what do you expect to happen to the distribution of flower
colors in the population over time?
A) The percentage of pink
flowers should increase over time.
B) The percentage of white
flowers should increase over time.
C) The distribution of flower
colors should not change.
D) The distribution of flower colors
should randomly fluctuate over time.
Answer: A
19) Parasitic species tend to have simple morphologies. Which of the
following statements best explains this observation?
A) Parasites
are lower organisms, and this is why they have simple
morphologies.
B) Parasites do not live long enough to inherit
acquired characteristics.
C) Simple morphologies convey some
advantage in most parasites.
D) Parasites have not yet had time
to progress, because they are young evolutionarily.
Answer: C
20) Darwin and Wallace were the first to propose _____.
A) that
evolution occurs
B) a mechanism for how evolution occurs
C)
that Earth is older than a few thousand years
D) natural
selection as the mechanism of evolution
Answer: D
21) A population of organisms will not evolve if _____.
A) all
individual variation is due only to environmental factors
B) the
environment is changing at a relatively slow rate
C) the
population size is large
D) the population lives in a habitat
without competing species present
Answer: A
22) Which of the following represents an idea that Darwin learned
from the writings of Thomas Malthus?
A) Technological innovation
in agricultural practices will permit exponential growth of the human
population into the foreseeable future.
B) Populations tend to
increase at a faster rate than their food supply normally
allows.
C) Earth changed over the years through a series of
catastrophic upheavals.
D) The environment is responsible for
natural selection.
Answer: B
23) Given a population that contains genetic variation, what is the
correct sequence of the following events under the influence of
natural selection?
1. Well-adapted individuals leave more
offspring than do poorly adapted individuals.
2. A change occurs
in the environment.
3. Genetic frequencies within the population
change.
4. Poorly adapted individuals have decreased survivorship.
A) 2->4->1->3
B) 4->2->1->3
C) 4->2->3->1
D) 2->4 ->3->1
Answer: A
24) A biologist studied a population of squirrels for fifteen years. During that time, the population was never fewer than thirty squirrels and never more than forty-five. Her data showed that over half of the squirrels born did not survive to reproduce, because of both competition for food and predation. In a single generation, 90% of the squirrels that were born lived to reproduce, and the population increased to eighty. Which inference(s) about this most recent surge in the population size might be true?
A) The amount of available food may have increased.
B) The
parental generation of squirrels developed better eyesight due to
improved diet; the subsequent squirrel generation inherited better
eyesight.
C) The number of predators that prey upon squirrels may
have decreased.
D) The amount of available food may have
increased and/or the predators that prey upon squirrels may have decreased.
Answer: D
25) Which of the following must exist in a population before natural
selection can act upon that population?
A) genetic variation
among individuals
B) variation among individuals caused by
environmental factors
C) sexual reproduction
D) the
population has predators
Answer: A
26) Which of Darwin's ideas had the strongest connection to his
reading of Malthus's essay on human population growth?
A) descent
with modification
B) variation among individuals in a
population
C) struggle for existence
D) that the ancestors
of the Galápagos finches had come from the South American mainland
Answer: C
27) If Darwin had been aware of genes and their typical mode of
transmission to subsequent generations, with which statement would he
most likely have been in agreement?
A) If natural selection can
change gene frequency in a population over generations, given enough
time and genetic diversity, then natural selection can cause
sufficient genetic change to produce new species from old
ones.
B) If an organism's somatic cell genes change during its
lifetime, making it more fit, then it will be able to pass these genes
on to its offspring.
C) If an organism acquires new genes by
engulfing, or being infected by, another organism, then a new genetic
species will result.
D) A single mutation in a single gene in a
single gamete, if inherited by future generations, will produce a new species.
Answer: A
28) The role that humans play in artificial selection is to
_____.
A) determine who lives and who dies
B) create genetic
diversity
C) choose which organisms reproduce
D) perform
artificial insemination
Answer: C
29) Currently, two extant elephant species (X and Y) are classified
in the genus Loxodonta, and a third species (Z) is placed in the genus
Elephas. Thus, which statement should be true?
A) Species X and Y
are not related to species Z.
B) Species X and Y share a greater
number of homologies with each other than either does with species
Z.
C) Species X and Y share a common ancestor that is alive
today.
D) Species X and Y are the result of artificial selection.
Answer: B
30) In a hypothetical environment, fishes called pike-cichlids are
visual predators of large, adult algae-eating fish (in other words,
they locate their prey by sight). The population of algae-eaters
experiences predatory pressure from pike-cichlids. Which of the
following is least likely to result in the algae-eater population in
future generations?
A) selection for drab coloration of the
algae-eaters
B) selection for nocturnal algae-eaters (active only
at night)
C) selection for larger female algae-eaters, bearing
broods composed of more, and larger, young
D) selection for
algae-eaters that become sexually mature at smaller overall body sizes
Answer: C
31) Currently, two of the living elephant species (X and Y) are placed in the genus Loxodonta and a third surviving species (Z) is placed in the genus Elephas. Assuming this classification reflects evolutionary relatedness, which of the following is the most accurate phylogenetic tree?
A) A
B) B
C) C
D) D
Answer: D
32) Cotton-topped tamarins are small primates with tufts of long
white hair on their heads. While studying these creatures, you notice
that males with longer hair get more opportunities to mate and father
more offspring. To test the hypothesis that having longer hair is
adaptive in these males, you should _____.
A) test whether other
traits in these males are also adaptive
B) look for evidence of
hair in ancestors of tamarins
C) determine if hair length is
heritable
D) test whether males with shaved heads are still able
to mate
Answer: C
33) Fossils of Thrinaxodon, a species that lived during the Triassic
period, have been found in both South Africa and Antarctica.
Thrinaxodon had a reptile-like skeleton and laid eggs, but small
depressions on the front of its skull suggest it had whiskers and,
therefore, fur. Thrinaxodon may have been warm-blooded. The fossils of
Thrinaxodon are consistent with the hypothesis that _____.
A)
fossils found in a given area look like the modern species in that
same area
B) the environment where it lived was very warm
C)
mammals evolved from a reptilian ancestor
D) Antarctica and South
Africa separated after Thrinaxodon went extinct
Answer: C
34) Many crustaceans (for example, lobsters, shrimp, and crayfish)
use their tails to swim, but crabs have reduced tails that curl under
their shells and are not used in swimming. This is an example of
_____.
A) convergent evolution
B) a homologous
structure
C) natural selection
D) a vestigial trait
Answer: D
35) Which of the following, if discovered, could refute our current
understanding of the pattern of evolution?
A) no fossils of
soft-bodied animals
B) a modern bird having reptile-like scales
on its legs
C) radioactive dating of rocks showing that rocks
closer to the Earth's surface are younger than lower rock
strata
D) diverse fossils of mammals in Precambrian rock
Answer: D
36) Researchers discovered that a new strain of bacteria that cause
tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) taken from a dead patient has a point
mutation in the rpoB gene that codes for part of the RNA polymerase
enzyme. This mutant form of RNA polymerase does not function as well
as the more common form of RNA polymerase. A commonly used antibiotic
called rifampin does not affect the mutant rpoB bacteria.
A
researcher mixes M. tuberculosis with and without the rpoB mutation
and adds the bacteria to cell cultures. Half the cell cultures contain
only standard nutrients, while the other half of the cell cultures
contain rifampin and the standard nutrients. After many cell
generations, the researcher finds that _____.
A) very few M.
tuberculosis in the standard nutrient cell cultures carry the rpoB
gene mutation, but almost all of the M. tuberculosis in the cell
cultures with rifampin carry the rpoB mutation
B) almost all M.
tuberculosis in the standard nutrient cell cultures carry the rpoB
gene mutation, but very few of the M. tuberculosis in the cell
cultures with rifampin carry the rpoB mutation
C) very few M.
tuberculosis in any of the cell cultures carry the rpoB gene
mutation
D) almost all of the M. tuberculosis in both types of
cell cultures carry the rpoB mutation
Answer: A
37) Scientific theories _____.
A) are nearly the same things as
hypotheses
B) are supported by, and make sense of, many
observations
C) cannot be tested because the described events
occurred only once
D) are predictions of future events
Answer: B
38) DDT was once considered a "silver bullet" that would
permanently eradicate insect pests. Instead, DDT is largely useless
against many insects. Which of these would have prevented this
evolution of DDT resistance in insect pests?
A) All habitats
should have received applications of DDT at about the same
time.
B) The frequency of DDT application should have been
higher.
C) None of the insect pests would have genetic variations
that resulted in DDT resistance.
D) DDT application should have
been continual.
Answer: C
39) If the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus experiences a cost for
maintaining one or more antibiotic-resistance genes, what would happen
in environments that lack antibiotics?
A) These genes would be
maintained in case the antibiotics appear.
B) These bacteria
would be outcompeted and replaced by bacteria that have lost these
genes.
C) These bacteria would try to make the cost worthwhile by
locating and migrating to microenvironments where traces of
antibiotics are present.
D) The number of genes conveying
antibiotic resistance would increase in these bacteria.
Answer: B
40) Of the following anatomical structures, which is homologous to
the bones in the wing of a bird?
A) bones in the hind limb of a
kangaroo
B) chitinous struts in the wing of a butterfly
C)
bony rays in the tail fin of a flying fish
D) bones in the
flipper of a whale
Answer: D
41) Structures as different as human arms, bat wings, and dolphin
flippers contain many of the same bones, which develop from similar
embryonic tissues. These structural similarities are an example of
_____.
A) homology
B) convergent evolution
C) the
evolution of common structure as a result of common function
D)
the evolution of similar appearance as a result of common function
Answer: A
42) Over long periods of time, many cave-dwelling organisms have lost
their eyes. Tapeworms have lost their digestive systems. Whales have
lost their hind limbs. How can natural selection account for these
losses?
A) Natural selection cannot account for losses, but
accounts only for new structures and functions.
B) Natural
selection accounts for these losses by the principle of use and
disuse.
C) Under particular circumstances that persisted for long
periods, each of these structures presented greater costs than
benefits.
D) The ancestors of these organisms experienced harmful
mutations that forced them to lose these structures.
Answer: C
43) Which of the following evidence most strongly supports the common
origin of all life on Earth? All organisms _____.
A) require
energy
B) use essentially the same genetic code
C)
reproduce
D) show heritable variation
Answer: B
44) Members of two different species possess a similar-looking
structure that they use in a similar way to perform about the same
function. Which of the following would suggest that the relationship
more likely represents homology instead of convergent
evolution?
A) The two species live at great distance from each
other.
B) The two species share many proteins in common, and the
nucleotide sequences that code for these proteins are almost
identical.
C) The structures in adult members of both species are
similar in size.
D) Both species are well adapted to their
particular environments.
Answer: B
45) What must be true of any organ described as vestigial?
A) It
must be analogous to some feature in an ancestor.
B) It must be
homologous to some feature in an ancestor.
C) It must be both
homologous and analogous to some feature in an ancestor.
D) It
need be neither homologous nor analogous to some feature in an ancestor.
Answer: B
46) Pseudogenes are _____.
A) composed of RNA, rather than
DNA
B) the same things as introns
C) unrelated genes that
code for the same gene product
D) nonfunctional vestigial genes
Answer: D
47) It has been observed that organisms on islands are different
from, but closely related to, similar forms found on the nearest
continent. This is taken as evidence that ____.
A) island forms
are descended from mainland forms
B) common environments are
inhabited by the same organisms
C) island forms and mainland
forms have identical gene pools
D) the island forms and mainland
forms are converging
Answer: A
48) Given what we know about evolutionary biology, we expect to find
the largest number of endemic species in which of the following
geological features, which have existed for at least a few million
years?
A) an isolated ocean island in the tropics
B) an
extensive mountain range
C) a grassland in the center of a large
continent, with extreme climatic conditions
D) a shallow estuary
on a warm-water coast
Answer: A
49) The greatest number of endemic species is expected in
environments that are _____.
A) easily reached and ecologically
diverse
B) isolated and show little ecological diversity
C)
isolated and ecologically diverse
D) easily reached and show
little ecological diversity
Answer: B
The horizontal axis of the cladogram depicted below is a timeline that extends from 100,000 years ago to the present; the vertical axis represents nothing in particular. The labeled branch points on the tree (V-Z) represent various common ancestors. Let's say that only since 50,000 years ago has there been enough variation between the lineages depicted here to separate them into distinct species, and only the tips of the lineages on this tree represent distinct species.
50) How many distinct species, both living and extinct, are depicted
in this tree?
A) five
B) six
C) nine
D) eleven
Answer: D
The horizontal axis of the cladogram depicted below is a timeline that extends from 100,000 years ago to the present; the vertical axis represents nothing in particular. The labeled branch points on the tree (V-Z) represent various common ancestors. Let's say that only since 50,000 years ago has there been enough variation between the lineages depicted here to separate them into distinct species, and only the tips of the lineages on this tree represent distinct species.
51) Which of the five common ancestors, labeled V-Z, is the common
ancestor of the greatest number of species, both living and
extinct?
A) V
B) W
C) Y
D) Z
Answer: C
The horizontal axis of the cladogram depicted below is a timeline that extends from 100,000 years ago to the present; the vertical axis represents nothing in particular. The labeled branch points on the tree (V-Z) represent various common ancestors. Let's say that only since 50,000 years ago has there been enough variation between the lineages depicted here to separate them into distinct species, and only the tips of the lineages on this tree represent distinct species.
52) Which of the five species, labeled V-Z, is the common ancestor
of the fewest number of species?
A) V
B) W
C) Y
D) Z
Answer: A
53) Evolutionary trees such as this are properly understood by
scientists to be _____.
A) theories
B) hypotheses
C)
dogmas
D) facts
Answer: B
54) About thirteen different species of finches inhabit the Galápagos
Islands today, all descendants of a common ancestor from the South
American mainland that arrived a few million years ago. Genetically,
there are four distinct lineages, but the thirteen species are
currently classified among three genera. The first lineage to diverge
from the ancestral lineage was the warbler finch (genus Certhidea).
Next to diverge was the vegetarian finch (genus Camarhynchus),
followed by five tree finch species (also in genus Camarhynchus) and
six ground finch species (genus Geospiza). If the six ground finch
species have evolved most recently, then which of these is the most
logical prediction?
A) They should be limited to the six islands
that most recently emerged from the sea.
B) Their genomes should
be more similar to each other than are the genomes of the five tree
finch species.
C) They should share fewer anatomical homologies
with each other than they share with the tree finches.
D) The
chances of hybridization between two ground finch species should be
less than the chances of hybridization between two tree finch species.
Answer: B
55) Which species is most closely related to species W?
A) V is
most closely related to species W.
B) X is most closely related
to species W.
C) Y and Z are equally closely related to
W.
D) It is not possible to say from this tree.
Answer: A
56) Which of these is the extant (that is, living) species most
closely related to species X?
A) V
B) W
C) Y
D) Z
Answer: A
57) Logically, which of these should cast the most doubt on the
relationships depicted by an evolutionary tree?
A) Some of the
organisms depicted by the tree had lived in different
habitats.
B) The skeletal remains of the organisms depicted by
the tree were incomplete (in other words, some bones were
missing).
C) Transitional fossils had not been found.
D)
Relationships between DNA sequences among the species did not match
relationships between skeletal patterns.
Answer: D