front 1 Which of the following causes the seasons of the earth? | back 1 The tilt of the axis of the earth |
front 2 2) Which of the following chordate groups has all four key chordate characteristics as an adult? | back 2 Lancelets |
front 3 3) Polar regions are cooler than the equator because | back 3 The poles are farther from the sun |
front 4 4) Why is the amniotic egg considered an important evolutionary breakthrough? | back 4 It allows deposition of eggs in a terrestrial environment |
front 5 5) Which of the following levels of organization is arranged in the correct sequence from most to least inclusive? | back 5 Ecosystem,community,population,individual |
front 6 6) Which type of biome would most likely occur in a climate with seasonal precipitation, rainy winters are hot, dry summers (daytime temperature can exceed 40 degrees C)? | back 6 Chaparral |
front 7 7) Which of the following are important biotic factors that can affect the structure and organization of biological communities? | back 7 predation, competition |
front 8 8) Which of the following includes two major clades of living vertebrates? | back 8 Cyclostomes and Gnathostomes |
front 9 9) In the process of energy transfer between trophic levels, the percentage of energy stored in assimilated foods that is not used for respiration, is known as | back 9 Production efficiency |
front 10 10) Which one of the following would contribute the most to the removal of CO2 from the atmosphere in the carbon cycle? | back 10 Photosynthetic organisms |
front 11 11) A cow’s herbivorous diet indicates that itis a(n) | back 11 Primary consumer |
front 12 12) An ecologist recorded 12 white-tailed deer, Odocoileus virginianus, per square mile in one woodlot and 20 per square mile on another woodlot. What was the ecologist comparing? | back 12 density |
front 13 13) What is the most important role of photosynthetic organisms in an ecosystem? | back 13 converting inorganic compounds into organic compounds |
front 14 14) 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? | back 14 no jaws |
front 15 15) which of the following biotic factors would have the greatest impact in limiting the ability of organisms to survive and reproduce? | back 15 Disease |
front 16 16) The high level of pesticides in birds of prey is an example of | back 16 Biological magnification |
front 17 17) In 2008, the population of New Zealand was approximately 4,275,000 people. If the birth rate was 14 births for every 1,000 people, approximately how many births occurred in New Zealand in 2008? | back 17 60,000 |
front 18 18) The animal diversity in this terrestrial biome is higher than in any other biome | back 18 Tropical forest |
front 19 19) This graph shows the effect of soil pH on microbial diversity. One conclusion you should draw from this figure is: | back 19 there appears to be an optimal pH value for maximizing microbial diversity |
front 20 20) Which of the following causes an increase in the intensity of UV radiation reaching the Earth? | back 20 Depletion of atmospheric zone |
front 21 21) With which of the following statements would an evolutionary biologist be most inclined to agree? | back 21 Humans and apes represent divergent lines of evolution from a common ancestor |
front 22 22) Which of the following biomes is correctly paired with the description of its climate? | back 22 tropical forests–nearly constant day length and temperature |
front 23 23) Trees are not usually found in the tundra biome because of | back 23 permafrost. |
front 24 24) Carrying capacity is | back 24 the maximum population size that a particular environment can support. |
front 25 25) Which of these are amniotes?
| back 25 More than one of these is correct. |
front 26 26) Consider the food chain grass → grasshopper → mouse → snake → hawk. How much of the chemical energy fixed by photosynthesis of the grass (100%) is available to the hawk? | back 26 0.01% |
front 27 27) The common spiny mouse (Acomys cahirinus) and the golden spiny mouse (A. russatus) can occupy essentially the same ecological niche. They accomplish this by: | back 27 temporal niche partitioning |
front 28 28) Which of these ecosystems has the lowest net primary production per square meter? | back 28 a grassland |
front 29 29) The major role of detritivores in ecosystems is to | back 29 recycle chemical nutrients to a form capable of being used by autotrophs |
front 30 30) The are of ecology concerned with the behavioral, physiological, and morphological ways individuals interact with the environment is known as | back 30 Organismal ecology |
front 31 31)Which of the following is an example of cryptic coloration? | back 31 a "walking stick" insect that resembles a twig |
front 32 32) Evidence shows that some grasses benefit from being grazed. Which of the following terms would best describe this plant-herbivore interaction? | back 32 mutualism |
front 33 33) Monarch butterflies are protected from birds and other predators because of cardiac glycosides they incorporate into their tissues from eating milkweed when they were in their caterpillar stage. The wings of a different species of butterfly, the Viceroy, look nearly identical to the Monarch so predators that have learned not to eat the bad-tasting Monarch avoid Viceroys as well. This example best describes | back 33 Batesian mimicry |
front 34 34) To measure the population of lake trout in a 250-hectare lake, 400 individual trout were netted and marked with a fin clip, then returned to the lake. The next week, the lake was netted again, and out of the 200 lake trout that were caught, 50 had fin clips. Using the capture-recapture estimate, the lake trout population size could be closest to which of the following? | back 34 1,600 |
front 35 35) Arrange these taxonomic terms from most inclusive (most general) to least inclusive (most specific)
| back 35 5,2,3,4,1 |
front 36 36) Given that, in the process of energy transfer between trophic levels, trophic efficiencies are generally about 10%. What percent of the energy fixed by primary producers in a typical field ecosystem, would a secondary consumer (such as fox) receive? | back 36 1% |
front 37 37) Look at the diagram, which shows a general model of nutrient cycling. There are major differences between kingdoms of organisms; for example, plants tend to do most assimilation and photosynthesis. However, all living things contribute to one of the arrows on this diagram. Which arrow shows an activity or activities that is/are performed by every living thing? | back 37 respiration, decomposition, and excretion |
front 38 Teal measured the amount of solar radiation entering a salt marsh in Georgia over a year. He also measured the aboveground biomass of the dominant primary producers, which were grasses, as well as the biomass of the dominant consumers, including insects, spiders, and crabs, and of the detritus that flowed out of the marsh to the surrounding coastal waters. To determine the amount of energy in each unit of biomass, he dried the biomass, burned it in a calorimeter, and measured the amount of heat produced. (for questions 45-50) How much energy is lost by primary producers as respiration in this ecosystem? | back 38 27,995 kcal/m^2 * yr |
front 39 Teal measured the amount of solar radiation entering a salt marsh in Georgia over a year. He also measured the aboveground biomass of the dominant primary producers, which were grasses, as well as the biomass of the dominant consumers, including insects, spiders, and crabs, and of the detritus that flowed out of the marsh to the surrounding coastal waters. To determine the amount of energy in each unit of biomass, he dried the biomass, burned it in a calorimeter, and measured the amount of heat produced. (for questions 45-50) How much energy is lost by primary producers as respiration in this ecosystem? | back 39 224 kcal/m2 • yr |
front 40 Teal measured the amount of solar radiation entering a salt marsh in Georgia over a year. He also measured the aboveground biomass of the dominant primary producers, which were grasses, as well as the biomass of the dominant consumers, including insects, spiders, and crabs, and of the detritus that flowed out of the marsh to the surrounding coastal waters. To determine the amount of energy in each unit of biomass, he dried the biomass, burned it in a calorimeter, and measured the amount of heat produced. (for questions 45-50) Using the table above, how would you describe the population dynamics of L. vivipara? | back 40 The population is increasing |
front 41 Teal measured the amount of solar radiation entering a salt marsh in Georgia over a year. He also measured the aboveground biomass of the dominant primary producers, which were grasses, as well as the biomass of the dominant consumers, including insects, spiders, and crabs, and of the detritus that flowed out of the marsh to the surrounding coastal waters. To determine the amount of energy in each unit of biomass, he dried the biomass, burned it in a calorimeter, and measured the amount of heat produced. (for questions 45-50) What percentage of the solar energy that reaches the marsh is incorporated into net primary production? | back 41 1.1% |
front 42 Teal measured the amount of solar radiation entering a salt marsh in Georgia over a year. He also measured the aboveground biomass of the dominant primary producers, which were grasses, as well as the biomass of the dominant consumers, including insects, spiders, and crabs, and of the detritus that flowed out of the marsh to the surrounding coastal waters. To determine the amount of energy in each unit of biomass, he dried the biomass, burned it in a calorimeter, and measured the amount of heat produced. (for questions 45-50) What percentage of the solar energy that reaches the marsh is incorporated into gross primary production? | back 42 5.8 % |
front 43 43) Look at the following figure (Figure 54.13 in the textbook), which shows a partial Chesapeake Bay food web. If sea nettles disappeared, this figure predicts that | back 43 there would be more striped bass |
front 44 In the first part of an experiment, researchers collected 12 black snakes (Pseudechis porphyriacus) from areas where cane toads had existed for 40–60 years and another 12 from areas free of cane toads. They offered the snakes either a freshly killed native frog (Limnodynastes peronii, a species the snakes commonly eat) or a freshly killed cane toad from which the toxin gland had been removed (making the toad nonpoisonous). What do the data suggest about the effects of cane toads on the predatory behavior of black snakes in areas where the toads have been present for 40–60 years? | back 44 Black snakes will not prey on cane toads in areas where cane toads have been present for 40–60 years. |
front 45 In the first part of an experiment, researchers collected 12 black snakes (Pseudechis porphyriacus) from areas where cane toads had existed for 40–60 years and another 12 from areas free of cane toads. They offered the snakes either a freshly killed native frog (Limnodynastes peronii, a species the snakes commonly eat) or a freshly killed cane toad from which the toxin gland had been removed (making the toad nonpoisonous). What do the data suggest about the predatory behavior of black snakes in areas where cane toads are not currently found? | back 45 In those areas, black snakes will prey on cane toads, but they are more likely to prey on native frogs. |
front 46 46) Mammals and birds eat more often than reptiles. Which of the following traits shared by mammals and birds best explains this habit? | back 46 endothermy |
front 47 47) Which of the following statements is consistent with the principle of competitive exclusion? | back 47 Even a slight reproductive advantage will eventually lead to the elimination of the less well adapted of two competing species |
front 48 48) Which statement best explains survivorship curve B? | back 48 Survivorship can only decrease; therefore, this curve could not happen in nature |
front 49 49) If the sun were to suddenly stop providing energy to Earth, most ecosystems would vanish. Which of the following ecosystems would likely survive the longest after this hypothetical disaster? | back 49 benthic ocean |
front 50 50) Which of the following graphs best illustrates the growth curve of a small population of rodents that has increased to a static carrying capacity. | back 50 E |