front 1 1) Which of the following statements best describes theories?
| back 1 Answer: B |
front 2 2) Catastrophism, meaning the regular occurrence of geological or
meteorological disturbances (catastrophes), was Cuvier's attempt to
explain the existence of | back 2 Answer: B |
front 3 3) With what other idea of his time was Cuvier's theory of
catastrophism most in conflict? | back 3 Answer: D |
front 4 4) What was the prevailing belief prior to the time of Lyell and
Darwin? | back 4 Answer: A |
front 5 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? | back 5 Answer: A |
front 6 6) Which of the following is the most accurate summary of Cuvier's
consideration of fossils found in the vicinity of Paris? | back 6 Answer: C |
front 7 7) In the mid-1900s, the Soviet geneticist Lysenko believed that his
winter wheat plants, exposed to ever-colder temperatures, would
eventually give rise to ever more cold-tolerant winter wheat.
Lysenko's attempts in this regard were most in agreement with the
ideas of | back 7 Answer: C |
front 8 8) Charles Darwin was the first person to propose | back 8 Answer: D |
front 9 9) Which of these conditions should completely prevent the occurrence
of natural selection in a population over time? | back 9 Answer: A |
front 10 10) Natural selection is based on all of the following except
| back 10 Answer: E |
front 11 11) Which of the following represents an idea that Darwin learned
from the writings of Thomas Malthus? | back 11 Answer: B |
front 12 12) Given a population that contains genetic variation, what is the
correct sequence of the following events, under the influence of
natural selection? | back 12 Answer: A |
front 13 13) A biologist studied a population of squirrels for 15 years.
During that time, the population was never fewer than 30 squirrels and
never more than 45. 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 80.
Which inference(s) about this population might be true? | back 13 Answer: E |
front 14 14) Which of the following must exist in a population before natural
selection can act upon that population? | back 14 Answer: A |
front 15 15) Which of Darwin's ideas had the strongest connection to Darwin
having read Malthus's essay on human population growth? | back 15 Answer: C |
front 16 16) If Darwin had been aware of genes, and of their typical mode of
transmission to subsequent generations, with which statement would he
most likely have been in agreement? | back 16 Answer: A |
front 17 17) The role that humans play in artificial selection is to | back 17 Answer: C |
front 18 18) Currently, two extant elephant species (X and Y) are placed in
the genus Loxodonta, and a third species (Z) is placed in the genus
Elephas. Thus, which statement should be true? | back 18 Answer: B |
front 19 19) The rise of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)
can be considered to be an example of artificial selection because
| back 19 Answer: C |
front 20 20) In a hypothetical environment, fishes called pike-cichlids are
visual predators of algae-eating fish (in other words, they locate
their prey by sight). If a population of algae-eaters experiences
predation pressure from pike-cichlids, which of the following is least
likely to be observed in the algae-eater population over the course of
many generations? | back 20 Answer: C |
front 21 21) DDT was once considered a "silver bullet" that would
permanently eradicate insect pests. Today, instead, DDT is largely
useless against many insects. Which of these would have been required
for this pest eradication effort to be successful in the long run?
| back 21 Answer: D |
front 22 22) If the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus experiences a cost for
maintaining one or more antibiotic-resistance genes, then what should
happen in environments from which antibiotics are missing? | back 22 Answer: B |
front 23 23) Of the following anatomical structures, which is homologous to
the bones in the wing of a bird? | back 23 Answer: E |
front 24 24) If two modern organisms are distantly related in an evolutionary
sense, then one should expect that | back 24 Answer: B |
front 25 25) Structures as different as human arms, bat wings, and dolphin
flippers contain many of the same bones, these bones having developed
from very similar embryonic tissues. How do biologists interpret these
similarities? | back 25 Answer: E |
front 26 26) Over evolutionary 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? | back 26 Answer: C |
front 27 27) Which of the following pieces of evidence most strongly supports
the common origin of all life on Earth? | back 27 Answer: B |
front 28 28) Logically, which of these should cast the most doubt on the
relationships depicted by an evolutionary tree? | back 28 Answer: E |
front 29 29) Which of the following statements most detracts from the claim
that the human appendix is a completely vestigial organ? | back 29 Answer: C |
front 30 30) Members of two different species possess a similar-looking
structure that they use in a similar fashion to perform the same
function. Which information would best help distinguish between an
explanation based on homology versus one based on convergent
evolution? | back 30 Answer: B |
front 31 31) Ichthyosaurs were aquatic dinosaurs. Fossils show us that they
had dorsal fins and tails, as do fish, even though their closest
relatives were terrestrial reptiles that had neither dorsal fins nor
aquatic tails. The dorsal fins and tails of ichthyosaurs and fish are
| back 31 Answer: E |
front 32 32) Both ancestral birds and ancestral mammals shared a common
ancestor that was terrestrial. Today, penguins (which are birds) and
seals (which are mammals) have forelimbs adapted for swimming. What
term best describes the relationship of the bones in the forelimbs of
penguins and seals, and what term best describes the flippers of
penguins and seals? | back 32 Answer: C |
front 33 33) What must be true of any organ that is described as vestigial?
| back 33 Answer: B |
front 34 34) What is true of pseudogenes? | back 34 Answer: D |
front 35 35) 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 | back 35 Answer: A |
front 36 36) If one wanted to find the largest number of endemic species, one
should visit which of the following geological features (assuming each
has existed for several millions of years)? | back 36 Answer: B |
front 37 37) A high degree of endemism is most likely in environments that are
| back 37 Answer: B |
front 38 The following questions refer to Figure 22.1, which shows an outcrop
of sedimentary rock whose strata are labeled AD. | back 38 Answer: C |
front 39 The following questions refer to Figure 22.1, which shows an outcrop
of sedimentary rock whose strata are labeled AD. | back 39 Answer: B |
front 40 40) Currently, two extant elephant species (X and Y) are placed in
the genus Loxodonta and a third species (Z) is placed in the genus
Elephas. Assuming this classification reflects evolutionary
relatedness, which of the following is the most accurate phylogenetic
tree? | back 40 Answer: D |
front 41 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 41 Answer: E |
front 42 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 42 Answer: D |
front 43 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 43 Answer: E |
front 44 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 44 Answer: B |
front 45 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 45 Answer: E |
front 46 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 46 Answer: B |
front 47 The following questions refer to the evolutionary tree in Figure
22.2. | back 47 Answer: B |
front 48 About 13 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 13 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). | back 48 Answer: B |
front 49 About 13 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 13 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). | back 49 Answer: A |
front 50 About 13 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 13 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). | back 50 Answer: E |
front 51 51) Which of the following is not an observation or inference on
which natural selection is based? | back 51 Answer: B |
front 52 52) Which of the following observations helped Darwin shape his
concept of descent with modification? | back 52 Answer: D |
front 53 53) Within six months of effectively using methicillin to treat S.
aureus infections in a community, all new infections were caused by
MRSA. How can this result best be explained? | back 53 Answer: D |
front 54 54) The upper forelimbs of humans and bats have fairly similar
skeletal structures, whereas the corresponding bones in whales have
very different shapes and proportions. However, genetic data suggest
that all three kinds of organisms diverged from a common ancestor at
about the same time. Which of the following is the most likely
explanation for these data? | back 54 Answer: C |
front 55 55) DNA sequences in many human genes are very similar to the
sequences of corresponding genes in chimpanzees. The most likely
explanation for this result is that | back 55 Answer: A |
front 56 1) During an individual organism's lifetime, which of these is most
likely to help the organism respond properly to changes in its
environment? | back 56 Answer: C |
front 57 2) If, on average, 46% of the loci in a species' gene pool are
heterozygous, then the average homozygosity of the species should be
| back 57 Answer: C |
front 58 3) Which of these variables is likely to undergo the largest change
in value as the result of a mutation that introduces a brand-new
allele into a population's gene pool at a locus that had formerly been
fixed? | back 58 Answer: A |
front 59 4) Which statement about the beak size of finches on the island of
Daphne Major during prolonged drought is true? | back 59 Answer: B |
front 60 5) Although each of the following has a better chance of influencing
gene frequencies in small populations than in large populations, which
one most consistently requires a small population as a precondition
for its occurrence? | back 60 Answer: C |
front 61 6) In modern terminology, diversity is understood to be a result of
genetic variation. Which of the following is a recognized source of
variation for evolution? | back 61 Answer: E |
front 62 7) A trend toward the decrease in the size of plants on the slopes of
mountains as altitudes increase is an example of | back 62 Answer: A |
front 63 8) The higher the proportion of loci that are "fixed" in a
population, the lower is that population's | back 63 Answer: E |
front 64 9) Which statement about variation is true? | back 64 Answer: D |
front 65 10) Rank the following one-base point mutations (from most likely to
least likely) with respect to their likelihood of affecting the
structure of the corresponding polypeptide: | back 65 Answer: B |
front 66 11) Most invertebrates have a cluster of ten similar Hox genes, all
located on the same chromosome. Most vertebrates have four such
clusters of Hox genes, located on four nonhomologous chromosomes. The
process that could have potentially contributed to the cluster's
presence on more than one chromosome was ________. | back 66 Answer: D |
front 67 12) Which of the following is a true statement concerning genetic
variation? | back 67 Answer: C |
front 68 13) How many of these statements regarding populations are true?
| back 68 Answer: D |
front 69 14) Whenever diploid populations are in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium at
a particular locus | back 69 Answer: A |
front 70 15) In the formula for determining a population's genotype
frequencies, the 2 in the term 2pq is necessary because | back 70 Answer: B |
front 71 16) In the formula for determining a population’s genotype
frequencies, the pq in the term 2pq is necessary because | back 71 Answer: D |
front 72 17) Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium must occur in populations wherein
| back 72 Answer: E |
front 73 18) In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that
are in equilibrium, the frequency of the allele a is 0.3. What is the
percentage of the population that is homozygous for this allele?
| back 73 Answer: D |
front 74 19) In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that
are in equilibrium, the frequency of allele a is 0.2. What is the
percentage of the population that is heterozygous for this allele?
| back 74 Answer: E |
front 75 20) In a Hardy-Weinberg population with two alleles, A and a, that
are in equilibrium, the frequency of allele a is 0.1. What is the
frequency of individuals with AA genotype? | back 75 Answer: D |
front 76 21) You sample a population of butterflies and find that 56% are
heterozygous at a particular locus. What should be the frequency of
the recessive allele in this population? | back 76 Answer: E |
front 77 22) In peas, a gene controls flower color such that R = purple and r
= white. In an isolated pea patch, there are 36 purple-flowering
plants and 64 white-flowering plants. Assuming Hardy-Weinberg
equilibrium, what is the value of q for this population? | back 77 Answer: D |
front 78 23) Evolution | back 78 Answer: C |
front 79 24) Over time, the movement of people on Earth has steadily
increased. This has altered the course of human evolution by
increasing | back 79 Answer: D |
front 80 25) Swine are vulnerable to infection by bird flu virus and human flu virus, which can both be present in an individual pig at the same time. When this occurs, it is possible for genes from bird flu virus and human flu virus to be combined, thereby producing a genetically distinctive virus, which can subsequently cause widespread disease. The production of new types of flu virus in the manner described
above is most similar to the phenomenon of | back 80 Answer: D |
front 81 26) If the original finches that had been blown over to the Galápagos
from South America had already been genetically different from the
parental population of South American finches, even before adapting to
the Galápagos, this would have been an example of | back 81 Answer: E |
front 82 27) What is true of natural selection? | back 82 Answer: D |
front 83 28) The restriction enzymes of bacteria protect the bacteria from
successful attack by bacteriophages, whose genomes can be degraded by
the restriction enzymes. The bacterial genomes are not vulnerable to
these restriction enzymes because bacterial DNA is methylated. This
situation selects for bacteriophages whose genomes are also
methylated. As new strains of resistant bacteriophages become more
prevalent, this in turn selects for bacteria whose genomes are not
methylated and whose restriction enzymes instead degrade methylated
DNA. The outcome of the conflict between bacteria and bacteriophage at
any point in time results from | back 83 Answer: A |
front 84 29) The restriction enzymes of bacteria protect the bacteria from
successful attack by bacteriophages, whose genomes can be degraded by
the restriction enzymes. The bacterial genomes are not vulnerable to
these restriction enzymes because bacterial DNA is methylated. This
situation selects for bacteriophages whose genomes are also
methylated. As new strains of resistant bacteriophages become more
prevalent, this in turn selects for bacteria whose genomes are not
methylated and whose restriction enzymes instead degrade methylated
DNA. Over the course of evolutionary time, what should occur? | back 84 Answer: D |
front 85 30) Arrange the following from most general (i.e., most inclusive) to
most specific (i.e., least inclusive): | back 85 Answer: C |
front 86 31) Sexual dimorphism is most often a result of | back 86 Answer: D |
front 87 32) In the wild, male house finches (Carpodus mexicanus) vary
considerably in the amount of red pigmentation in their head and
throat feathers, with colors ranging from pale yellow to bright red.
These colors come from carotenoid pigments that are found in the
birds' diets; no vertebrates are known to synthesize carotenoid
pigments. Thus, the brighter red the male's feathers are, the more
successful he has been at acquiring the red carotenoid pigment by his
food-gathering efforts (all other factors being equal). During
breeding season, one should expect female house finches to prefer to
mate with males with the brightest red feathers. Which of the
following is true of this situation? | back 87 Answer: D |
front 88 33) During breeding season, one should expect female house finches to
prefer to mate with males with the brightest red feathers. Which of
the following terms are appropriately applied to this situation?
| back 88 Answer: D |
front 89 34) Adult male humans generally have deeper voices than do adult
female humans, which is the direct result of higher levels of
testosterone causing growth of the larynx. If the fossil records of
apes and humans alike show a trend toward decreasing larynx size in
adult females and increasing larynx size in adult males, then | back 89 Answer: A |
front 90 35) Adult male humans generally have deeper voices than do adult
female humans, which is the direct result of higher levels of
testosterone causing growth of the larynx. If one excludes the
involvement of gender in the situation, then the pattern that is
apparent in the fossil record is most similar to one that should be
expected from | back 90 Answer: C |
front 91 36) Which of the following statements best summarizes evolution as it
is viewed today? | back 91 Answer: D |
front 92 37) Which of the following is most likely to produce an African
butterfly species in the wild whose members have one of two strikingly
different color patterns? | back 92 Answer: D |
front 93 38) Most Swiss starlings produce four to five eggs in each clutch.
Starlings producing fewer, or more, than this have reduced fitness.
Which of the following terms best describes this situation? | back 93 Answer: C |
front 94 39) The recessive allele that causes phenylketonuria (PKU) is
harmful, except when an infant's diet lacks the amino acid
phenylalanine. What maintains the presence of this harmful allele in a
population's gene pool? | back 94 Answer: C |
front 95 40) Heterozygote advantage should be most closely linked to which of
the following? | back 95 Answer: B |
front 96 41) In seedcracker finches from Cameroon, small- and large-billed
birds specialize in cracking soft and hard seeds, respectively. If
long-term climatic change resulted in all seeds becoming hard, what
type of selection would then operate on the finch population? | back 96 Answer: B |
front 97 42) When imbalances occur in the sex ratio of sexual species that
have two sexes (i.e., other than a 50:50 ratio), the members of the
minority sex often receive a greater proportion of care and resources
from parents than do the offspring of the majority sex. This is most
clearly an example of | back 97 Answer: E |
front 98 43) The same gene that causes various coat patterns in wild and
domesticated cats also causes the cross-eyed condition in these cats,
the cross-eyed condition being slightly maladaptive. In a hypothetical
environment, the coat pattern that is associated with crossed eyes is
highly adaptive, with the result that both the coat pattern and the
cross-eyed condition increase in a feline population over time. Which
statement is supported by these observations? | back 98 Answer: B |
front 99 44) A proficient engineer can easily design skeletal structures that
are more functional than those currently found in the forelimbs of
such diverse mammals as horses, whales, and bats. The actual forelimbs
of these mammals do not seem to be optimally arranged because | back 99 Answer: D |
front 100 45) There are those who claim that the theory of evolution cannot be
true because the apes, which are supposed to be closely related to
humans, do not likewise share the same large brains, capacity for
complicated speech, and tool-making capability. They reason that if
these features are generally beneficial, then the apes should have
evolved them as well. Which of these provides the best argument
against this misconception? | back 100 Answer: A |
front 101 46) Blue light is that portion of the visible spectrum that
penetrates the deepest into bodies of water. Ultraviolet (UV) light,
though, can penetrate even deeper. A gene within a population of
marine fish that inhabits depths from 500 m to 1,000 m has an allele
for a photopigment that is sensitive to UV light, and another allele
for a photopigment that is sensitive to blue light. Which of the
following graphs best depicts the predicted distribution of these
alleles within a population if the fish that carry these alleles
prefer to locate themselves where they can see best? (SEE IMAGE) | back 101 Answer: B |
front 102 47) Anopheles mosquitoes, which carry the malaria parasite, cannot
live above elevations of 5,900 feet. In addition, oxygen availability
decreases with higher altitude. Consider a hypothetical human
population that is adapted to life on the slopes of Mt. Kilimanjaro in
Tanzania, a country in equatorial Africa. Mt. Kilimanjaro's base is
about 2,600 feet above sea level and its peak is 19,341 feet above sea
level. If the incidence of the sickle-cell allele in the population is
plotted against altitude (feet above sea level), which of the
following distributions is most likely, assuming little migration of
people up or down the mountain? | back 102 Answer: B |
front 103 48) If global warming permits mosquitoes to live at higher altitudes
than they currently do, then in which direction should the entire plot
in the correct distribution below be shifted? | back 103 Answer: A |
front 104 In a very large population, a quantitative trait has the following
distribution pattern: | back 104 Answer: B |
front 105 50) If the curve in the previous figure shifts to the left or to the
right, there is no gene flow, and the population size consequently
increases over successive generations. Which of the following is (are)
probably occurring? | back 105 Answer: C |
front 106 HIV's genome of RNA includes the code for reverse transcriptase (RT),
an enzyme that acts early in infection to synthesize a DNA genome off
of an RNA template. The HIV genome also codes for protease (PR), an
enzyme that acts later in infection by cutting long viral polyproteins
into smaller, functional proteins. Both RT and PR represent potential
targets for antiretroviral drugs. Drugs called nucleoside analogs (NA)
act against RT, whereas drugs called protease inhibitors (PI) act
against PR. | back 106 Answer: D |
front 107 HIV's genome of RNA includes the code for reverse transcriptase (RT),
an enzyme that acts early in infection to synthesize a DNA genome off
of an RNA template. The HIV genome also codes for protease (PR), an
enzyme that acts later in infection by cutting long viral polyproteins
into smaller, functional proteins. Both RT and PR represent potential
targets for antiretroviral drugs. Drugs called nucleoside analogs (NA)
act against RT, whereas drugs called protease inhibitors (PI) act
against PR. | back 107 Answer: B |
front 108 HIV's genome of RNA includes the code for reverse transcriptase (RT),
an enzyme that acts early in infection to synthesize a DNA genome off
of an RNA template. The HIV genome also codes for protease (PR), an
enzyme that acts later in infection by cutting long viral polyproteins
into smaller, functional proteins. Both RT and PR represent potential
targets for antiretroviral drugs. Drugs called nucleoside analogs (NA)
act against RT, whereas drugs called protease inhibitors (PI) act
against PR. | back 108 Answer: E |
front 109 HIV's genome of RNA includes the code for reverse transcriptase (RT),
an enzyme that acts early in infection to synthesize a DNA genome off
of an RNA template. The HIV genome also codes for protease (PR), an
enzyme that acts later in infection by cutting long viral polyproteins
into smaller, functional proteins. Both RT and PR represent potential
targets for antiretroviral drugs. Drugs called nucleoside analogs (NA)
act against RT, whereas drugs called protease inhibitors (PI) act
against PR. | back 109 Answer: E |
front 110 HIV's genome of RNA includes the code for reverse transcriptase (RT),
an enzyme that acts early in infection to synthesize a DNA genome off
of an RNA template. The HIV genome also codes for protease (PR), an
enzyme that acts later in infection by cutting long viral polyproteins
into smaller, functional proteins. Both RT and PR represent potential
targets for antiretroviral drugs. Drugs called nucleoside analogs (NA)
act against RT, whereas drugs called protease inhibitors (PI) act
against PR. | back 110 Answer: A |
front 111 A large population of laboratory animals has been allowed to breed
randomly for a number of generations. After several generations, 25%
of the animals display a recessive trait (aa), the same percentage as
at the beginning of the breeding program. The rest of the animals show
the dominant phenotype, with heterozygotes indistinguishable from the
homozygous dominants. | back 111 Answer: B |
front 112 A large population of laboratory animals has been allowed to breed
randomly for a number of generations. After several generations, 25%
of the animals display a recessive trait (aa), the same percentage as
at the beginning of the breeding program. The rest of the animals show
the dominant phenotype, with heterozygotes indistinguishable from the
homozygous dominants. | back 112 Answer: B |
front 113 A large population of laboratory animals has been allowed to breed
randomly for a number of generations. After several generations, 25%
of the animals display a recessive trait (aa), the same percentage as
at the beginning of the breeding program. The rest of the animals show
the dominant phenotype, with heterozygotes indistinguishable from the
homozygous dominants. | back 113 Answer: C |
front 114 You are studying three populations of birds. Population A has ten
birds, of which one is brown (a recessive trait) and nine are red.
Population B has 100 birds, of which ten are brown. Population C has
30 birds, and three of them are brown. | back 114 Answer: B |
front 115 You are studying three populations of birds. Population A has ten
birds, of which one is brown (a recessive trait) and nine are red.
Population B has 100 birds, of which ten are brown. Population C has
30 birds, and three of them are brown. | back 115 Answer: A |
front 116 In those parts of equatorial Africa where the malaria parasite is
most common, the sickle-cell allele constitutes 20% of the β
hemoglobin alleles in the human gene pool. | back 116 Answer: D |
front 117 In those parts of equatorial Africa where the malaria parasite is
most common, the sickle-cell allele constitutes 20% of the β
hemoglobin alleles in the human gene pool. | back 117 Answer: A |
front 118 In those parts of equatorial Africa where the malaria parasite is
most common, the sickle-cell allele constitutes 20% of the β
hemoglobin alleles in the human gene pool. | back 118 Answer: E |
front 119 In those parts of equatorial Africa where the malaria parasite is
most common, the sickle-cell allele constitutes 20% of the β
hemoglobin alleles in the human gene pool. | back 119 Answer: B |
front 120 In those parts of equatorial Africa where the malaria parasite is most common, the sickle-cell allele constitutes 20% of the β hemoglobin alleles in the human gene pool. 65) Considering the overall human population of the U.S. mainland at
the time when the slave trade brought large numbers of people from
equatorial Africa, what was primarily acting to change the frequency
of the sickle-cell allele in the overall U.S. population? | back 120 Answer: B |
front 121 In those parts of equatorial Africa where the malaria parasite is most common, the sickle-cell allele constitutes 20% of the β hemoglobin alleles in the human gene pool. 66) The sickle-cell allele is pleiotropic (i.e., it affects more
than one phenotypic trait). Specifically, this allele affects oxygen
delivery to tissues and affects one's susceptibility to malaria. Under
conditions of low atmospheric oxygen availability, individuals
heterozygous for this allele can experience life-threatening
sickle-cell "crises." Such individuals remain less
susceptible to malaria. Thus, pleiotropic genes/alleles such as this
can help explain why | back 121 Answer: C |
front 122 In the year 2500, five male space colonists and five female space
colonists (all unrelated to each other) settle on an uninhabited
Earthlike planet in the Andromeda galaxy. The colonists and their
offspring randomly mate for generations. All ten of the original
colonists had free earlobes, and two were heterozygous for that trait.
The allele for free earlobes is dominant to the allele for attached
earlobes. | back 122 Answer: A |
front 123 In the year 2500, five male space colonists and five female space
colonists (all unrelated to each other) settle on an uninhabited
Earthlike planet in the Andromeda galaxy. The colonists and their
offspring randomly mate for generations. All ten of the original
colonists had free earlobes, and two were heterozygous for that trait.
The allele for free earlobes is dominant to the allele for attached
earlobes. | back 123 Answer: A |
front 124 In the year 2500, five male space colonists and five female space
colonists (all unrelated to each other) settle on an uninhabited
Earthlike planet in the Andromeda galaxy. The colonists and their
offspring randomly mate for generations. All ten of the original
colonists had free earlobes, and two were heterozygous for that trait.
The allele for free earlobes is dominant to the allele for attached
earlobes. | back 124 Answer: C |
front 125 70) You are maintaining a small population of fruit flies in the
laboratory by transferring the flies to a new culture bottle after
each generation. After several generations, you notice that the
viability of the flies has decreased greatly. Recognizing that small
population size is likely to be linked to decreased viability, the
best way to reverse this trend is to | back 125 Answer: A |
front 126 71) The volcano is currently dormant, but in a hypothetical future
scenario, satellite cones at the base of Mt. Kilimanjaro spew
sulfurous gases and lava, destroying all life located between the base
and 6,000 feet above sea level. As a result of this catastrophe, how
should the frequency of the sickle-cell allele change in the remnant
human population that survives above 6,000 feet, and which phenomenon
accounts for this change in allele frequency? | back 126 Answer: E |
front 127 72) Swine are vulnerable to infection by bird flu virus and human flu
virus, which can both be present in an individual pig at the same
time. When this occurs, it is possible for genes from bird flu virus
and human flu virus to be combined. If the human flu virus contributes
a gene for Tamiflu resistance (Tamiflu is an antiviral drug) to the
new virus, and if the new virus is introduced to an environment
lacking Tamiflu, then what is most likely to occur? | back 127 Answer: C |
front 128 73) Natural selection changes allele frequencies because some
________ survive and reproduce more successfully than others. | back 128 Answer: E |
front 129 74) No two people are genetically identical, except for identical
twins. The main source of genetic variation among human individuals is
| back 129 Answer: C |
front 130 75) Sparrows with average-sized wings survive severe storms better
than those with longer or shorter wings, illustrating | back 130 Answer: E |
front 131 76) If the nucleotide variability of a locus equals 0%, what is the
gene variability and number of alleles at that locus? | back 131 Answer: B |
front 132 77) There are 40 individuals in population 1, all with genotype A1A1,
and there are 25 individuals in population 2, all with genotype A2A2.
Assume that these populations are located far from each other and that
their environmental conditions are very similar. Based on the
information given here, the observed genetic variation is most likely
an example of | back 132 Answer: A |
front 133 78) A fruit fly population has a gene with two alleles, A1 and A2.
Tests show that 70% of the gametes produced in the population contain
the A1 allele. If the population is in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium,
what proportion of the flies carry both A1 and A2? | back 133 Answer: D |
front 134 1) What is true of macroevolution? | back 134 Answer: B |
front 135 2) What is true of the flightless cormorants of the Galápagos
Islands? | back 135 Answer: D |
front 136 3) Which of the following statements about species, as defined by the
biological species concept, is (are) correct? | back 136 Answer: B |
front 137 4) Which of the various species concepts distinguishes two species
based on the degree of genetic exchange between their gene pools?
| back 137 Answer: C |
front 138 5) There is still some controversy among biologists about whether
Neanderthals should be placed within the same species as modern humans
or into a separate species of their own. Most DNA sequence data
analyzed so far indicate that there was probably little or no gene
flow between Neanderthals and Homo sapiens. Which species concept is
most applicable in this example? | back 138 Answer: D |
front 139 6) You are confronted with a box of preserved grasshoppers of various
species that are new to science and have not been described. Your
assignment is to separate them into species. There is no accompanying
information as to where or when they were collected. Which species
concept will you have to use? | back 139 Answer: D |
front 140 7) Dog breeders maintain the purity of breeds by keeping dogs of
different breeds apart when they are fertile. This kind of isolation
is most similar to which of the following reproductive isolating
mechanisms? | back 140 Answer: D |
front 141 8) Rank the following from most general to most specific: | back 141 Answer: B |
front 142 9) Two species of frogs belonging to the same genus occasionally
mate, but the offspring fail to develop and hatch. What is the
mechanism for keeping the two frog species separate? | back 142 Answer: A |
front 143 10) Theoretically, the production of sterile mules by interbreeding
between female horses (mares) and male donkeys (jacks) should | back 143 Answer: C |
front 144 11) When male horses (stallions) and female donkeys (jennets) mate,
they produce a sterile hybrid called a hinny. Hinnies occur much less
frequently than do mules, but are just as healthy and robust as mules.
Logically, which of the following best accounts for the relative
rarity of hinnies, and what kind of prezygotic isolating mechanism is
at work here? | back 144 Answer: D |
front 145 12) Dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) and gray wolves (Canis lupus) can
interbreed to produce viable, fertile offspring. These species shared
a common ancestor recently (in geologic time) and have a high degree
of genetic similarity, although their anatomies vary widely. Judging
from this evidence, which two species concepts are most likely to
place dogs and wolves together into a single species? | back 145 Answer: E |
front 146 13) Rocky Mountain juniper (Juniperus scopulorum) and one-seeded
juniper (J. monosperma) have overlapping ranges. If pollen grains
(which contain sperm cells) from one species are unable to germinate
and make pollen tubes on female ovules (which contain egg cells) of
the other species, then which of these terms are applicable? | back 146 Answer: A |
front 147 14) Rocky Mountain juniper (Juniperus scopulorum) and one-seeded
juniper (J. monosperma) have overlapping ranges. If pollen grains
(which contain sperm cells) from one species are unable to germinate
and make pollen tubes on female ovules (which contain egg cells) of
the other species, then which of these terms is applicable? | back 147 Answer: B |
front 148 15) What does the biological species concept use as the primary
criterion for determining species boundaries? | back 148 Answer: C |
front 149 16) In a hypothetical situation, a certain species of flea feeds only
on pronghorn antelopes. In rangelands of the western United States,
pronghorns and cattle often associate with one another. If some of
these fleas develop a strong preference for cattle blood and mate only
with other fleas that prefer cattle blood, then over time which of
these should occur, if the host mammal can be considered as the fleas'
habitat? | back 149 Answer: E |
front 150 17) Two closely related populations of mice have been separated for
many generations by a river. Climatic change causes the river to dry
up, thereby bringing the mice populations back into contact in a zone
of overlap. Which of the following is not a possible outcome when they
meet? | back 150 Answer: C |
front 151 18) The difference between geographic isolation and habitat
differentiation is the | back 151 Answer: A |
front 152 19) Among known plant species, which of these have been the two most
commonly occurring phenomena that have led to the origin of new
species? | back 152 Answer: D |
front 153 20) Beetle pollinators of a particular plant are attracted to its
flowers' bright orange color. The beetles not only pollinate the
flowers, but they mate while inside of the flowers. A mutant version
of the plant with red flowers becomes more common with the passage of
time. A particular variant of the beetle prefers the red flowers to
the orange flowers. Over time, these two beetle variants diverge from
each other to such an extent that interbreeding is no longer possible.
What kind of speciation has occurred in this example, and what has
driven it? | back 153 Answer: B |
front 154 21) The origin of a new plant species by hybridization, coupled with
accidents during nuclear division, is an example of | back 154 Answer: B |
front 155 22) The phenomenon of fusion is likely to occur when, after a period
of geographic isolation, two populations meet again and | back 155 Answer: D |
front 156 23) A hybrid zone is properly defined as | back 156 Answer: B |
front 157 24) Which of these should decline in hybrid zones where reinforcement
is occurring? | back 157 Answer: A |
front 158 25) The most likely explanation for the high rate of sympatric
speciation that apparently existed among the cichlids of Lake Victoria
in the past is | back 158 Answer: A |
front 159 26) The most likely explanation for the recent decline in cichlid
species diversity in Lake Victoria is | back 159 Answer: B |
front 160 27) A narrow hybrid zone separates the toad species Bombina bombina
and Bombina variegata. What is true of those alleles that are unique
to the parental species? | back 160 Answer: C |
front 161 28) According to the concept of punctuated equilibrium, the
"sudden" appearance of a new species in the fossil record
means that | back 161 Answer: D |
front 162 29) According to the concept of punctuated equilibrium, | back 162 Answer: C |
front 163 30) Speciation | back 163 Answer: E |
front 164 31) Which of the following statements about speciation is correct?
| back 164 Answer: E |
front 165 32) In order for speciation to occur, what must be true? | back 165 Answer: E |
front 166 The next few questions refer to the following evolutionary tree,
whose horizontal axis represents time (present time is on the far
right) and whose vertical axis represents morphological change. | back 166 Answer: A |
front 167 The next few questions refer to the following evolutionary tree,
whose horizontal axis represents time (present time is on the far
right) and whose vertical axis represents morphological change. | back 167 Answer: A |
front 168 The next few questions refer to the following evolutionary tree,
whose horizontal axis represents time (present time is on the far
right) and whose vertical axis represents morphological change. | back 168 Answer: B |
front 169 The next few questions refer to the following evolutionary tree,
whose horizontal axis represents time (present time is on the far
right) and whose vertical axis represents morphological change. | back 169 Answer: D |
front 170 The next few questions refer to the following evolutionary tree,
whose horizontal axis represents time (present time is on the far
right) and whose vertical axis represents morphological change. | back 170 Answer: A |
front 171 n a hypothetical situation, the National Park Service, which
administers Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona, builds a footbridge
over the Colorado River at the bottom of the canyon. The footbridge
permits interspersal of two closely related antelope squirrels.
Previously, one type of squirrel had been restricted to the terrain
south of the river, and the other type had been restricted to terrain
on the north side of the river. Immediately before and ten years after
the bridge's completion, researchers collected ten antelope squirrels
from both sides of the river, took blood samples, and collected
frequencies of alleles unique to the two types of antelope squirrels
(see the following graphs). | back 171 Answer: D |
front 172 On the volcanic, equatorial West African island of Sao Tomé, two
species of fruit fly exist. Drosophila yakuba inhabits the island's
lowlands, and is also found on the African mainland, located about 200
miles away. At higher elevations, and only on Sao Tomé, is found the
very closely related Drosophila santomea. The two species can
hybridize, though male hybrids are sterile. A hybrid zone exists at
middle elevations, though hybrids there are greatly outnumbered by D.
santomea. Studies of the two species' nuclear genomes reveal that D.
yakuba on the island is more closely related to mainland D. yakuba
than to D. santomea (2n = 4 in both species). Sao Tomé rose from the
Atlantic Ocean about 14 million years ago. | back 172 Answer: C |
front 173 On the volcanic, equatorial West African island of Sao Tomé, two
species of fruit fly exist. Drosophila yakuba inhabits the island's
lowlands, and is also found on the African mainland, located about 200
miles away. At higher elevations, and only on Sao Tomé, is found the
very closely related Drosophila santomea. The two species can
hybridize, though male hybrids are sterile. A hybrid zone exists at
middle elevations, though hybrids there are greatly outnumbered by D.
santomea. Studies of the two species' nuclear genomes reveal that D.
yakuba on the island is more closely related to mainland D. yakuba
than to D. santomea (2n = 4 in both species). Sao Tomé rose from the
Atlantic Ocean about 14 million years ago. | back 173 Answer: D |
front 174 On the volcanic, equatorial West African island of Sao Tomé, two
species of fruit fly exist. Drosophila yakuba inhabits the island's
lowlands, and is also found on the African mainland, located about 200
miles away. At higher elevations, and only on Sao Tomé, is found the
very closely related Drosophila santomea. The two species can
hybridize, though male hybrids are sterile. A hybrid zone exists at
middle elevations, though hybrids there are greatly outnumbered by D.
santomea. Studies of the two species' nuclear genomes reveal that D.
yakuba on the island is more closely related to mainland D. yakuba
than to D. santomea (2n = 4 in both species). Sao Tomé rose from the
Atlantic Ocean about 14 million years ago. | back 174 Answer: D |
front 175 On the volcanic, equatorial West African island of Sao Tomé, two
species of fruit fly exist. Drosophila yakuba inhabits the island's
lowlands, and is also found on the African mainland, located about 200
miles away. At higher elevations, and only on Sao Tomé, is found the
very closely related Drosophila santomea. The two species can
hybridize, though male hybrids are sterile. A hybrid zone exists at
middle elevations, though hybrids there are greatly outnumbered by D.
santomea. Studies of the two species' nuclear genomes reveal that D.
yakuba on the island is more closely related to mainland D. yakuba
than to D. santomea (2n = 4 in both species). Sao Tomé rose from the
Atlantic Ocean about 14 million years ago | back 175 Answer: A |
front 176 On the volcanic, equatorial West African island of Sao Tomé, two
species of fruit fly exist. Drosophila yakuba inhabits the island's
lowlands, and is also found on the African mainland, located about 200
miles away. At higher elevations, and only on Sao Tomé, is found the
very closely related Drosophila santomea. The two species can
hybridize, though male hybrids are sterile. A hybrid zone exists at
middle elevations, though hybrids there are greatly outnumbered by D.
santomea. Studies of the two species' nuclear genomes reveal that D.
yakuba on the island is more closely related to mainland D. yakuba
than to D. santomea (2n = 4 in both species). Sao Tomé rose from the
Atlantic Ocean about 14 million years ago | back 176 Answer: B |
front 177 On the Bahamian island of Andros, mosquitofish populations live in
various, now-isolated, freshwater ponds that were once united.
Currently, some predator-rich ponds have mosquitofish that can swim in
short, fast bursts; other predator-poor ponds have mosquitofish that
can swim continuously for a long time. When placed together in the
same body of water, the two kinds of female mosquitofish exhibit
exclusive breeding preferences. | back 177 Answer: E |
front 178 On the Bahamian island of Andros, mosquitofish populations live in
various, now-isolated, freshwater ponds that were once united.
Currently, some predator-rich ponds have mosquitofish that can swim in
short, fast bursts; other predator-poor ponds have mosquitofish that
can swim continuously for a long time. When placed together in the
same body of water, the two kinds of female mosquitofish exhibit
exclusive breeding preferences. | back 178 Answer: A |
front 179 On the Bahamian island of Andros, mosquitofish populations live in
various, now-isolated, freshwater ponds that were once united.
Currently, some predator-rich ponds have mosquitofish that can swim in
short, fast bursts; other predator-poor ponds have mosquitofish that
can swim continuously for a long time. When placed together in the
same body of water, the two kinds of female mosquitofish exhibit
exclusive breeding preferences. | back 179 Answer: C |
front 180 On the Bahamian island of Andros, mosquitofish populations live in
various, now-isolated, freshwater ponds that were once united.
Currently, some predator-rich ponds have mosquitofish that can swim in
short, fast bursts; other predator-poor ponds have mosquitofish that
can swim continuously for a long time. When placed together in the
same body of water, the two kinds of female mosquitofish exhibit
exclusive breeding preferences. | back 180 Answer: E |
front 181 n the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. The oceans were completely
separated by the isthmus about 3 million years ago. | back 181 Answer: A |
front 182 In the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. | back 182 Answer: C |
front 183 n the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. | back 183 Answer: E |
front 184 In the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. | back 184 Answer: D |
front 185 In the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. | back 185 Answer: A |
front 186 In the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. | back 186 Answer: C |
front 187 In the ocean, on either side of the Isthmus of Panama, are 30 species
of snapping shrimp; some are shallow-water species, others are adapted
to deep water. There are 15 species on the Pacific side and 15
different species on the Atlantic side. The Isthmus of Panama started
rising about 10 million years ago. | back 187 Answer: B |
front 188 57) The largest unit within which gene flow can readily occur is a
| back 188 Answer: B |
front 189 58) Males of different species of the fruit fly Drosophila that live
in the same parts of the Hawaiian Islands have different elaborate
courtship rituals. These rituals involve fighting other males and
making stylized movements that attract females. What type of
reproductive isolation does this represent? | back 189 Answer: C |
front 190 59) According to the punctuated equilibria model, | back 190 Answer: C |
front 191 60) Bird guides once listed the myrtle warbler and Audubon's warbler
as distinct species. Recently, these birds have been classified as
eastern and western forms of a single species, the yellow-rumped
warbler. Which of the following pieces of evidence, if true, would be
cause for this reclassification? | back 191 Answer: A |
front 192 61) Which of the following factors would not contribute to allopatric
speciation? | back 192 Answer: E |
front 193 62) Plant species A has a diploid number of 12. Plant species B has a
diploid number of 16. A new species, C, arises as an allopolyploid
from A and B. The diploid number for species C would probably be
| back 193 Answer: D |
front 194 63) Suppose that a group of male pied flycatchers migrated from a
region where there were no collared flycatchers to a region where both
species were present. Assuming events like this are very rare, which
of the following scenarios is least likely? | back 194 Answer: E |
front 195 1) The legless condition that is observed in several groups of extant
reptiles is the result of | back 195 Answer: C |
front 196 2) The various taxonomic levels (namely, genera, classes, etc.) of
the hierarchical classification system differ from each other on the
basis of | back 196 Answer: B |
front 197 3) If organisms A, B, and C belong to the same class but to different
orders and if organisms D, E, and F belong to the same order but to
different families, which of the following pairs of organisms would be
expected to show the greatest degree of structural homology? | back 197 Answer: E |
front 198 4) Linnaeus was a "fixist" who believed that species
remained fixed in the form in which they had been created. Linnaeus
would have been uncomfortable with | back 198 Answer: C |
front 199 5) Which of the following is (are) problematic when the goal is to
construct phylogenies that accurately reflect evolutionary history?
| back 199 Answer: D |
front 200 6) Which individual would make the worst systematist? One who is
uncomfortable with the | back 200 Answer: B |
front 201 7) The term homoplasy is most applicable to which of the following
features? | back 201 Answer: A |
front 202 8) If, someday, an archaean cell is discovered whose rRNA sequence is
more similar to that of humans than the sequence of mouse rRNA is to
that of humans, the best explanation for this apparent discrepancy
would be | back 202 Answer: B |
front 203 9) The best classification system is that which most closely | back 203 Answer: C |
front 204 10) Which of the following pairs are the best examples of homologous
structures? | back 204 Answer: A |
front 205 11) Some molecular data place the giant panda in the bear family
(Ursidae) but place the lesser panda in the raccoon family
(Procyonidae). Consequently, the morphological similarities of these
two species are probably due to | back 205 Answer: D |
front 206 12) The importance of computers and of computer software to modern
cladistics is most closely linked to advances in | back 206 Answer: E |
front 207 13) Which mutation should least require realignment of homologous
regions of a gene that is common to several related species? | back 207 Answer: B |
front 208 14) The common ancestors of birds and mammals were very early (stem)
reptiles, which almost certainly possessed three-chambered hearts (two
atria, one ventricle). Birds and mammals, however, are alike in having
four-chambered hearts (two atria, two ventricles). The four-chambered
hearts of birds and mammals are best described as | back 208 Answer: C |
front 209 15) Which of the following is true of all horizontally oriented
phylogenetic trees, where time advances to the right? | back 209 Answer: D |
front 210 16) When using a cladistic approach to systematics, which of the
following is considered most important for classification? | back 210 Answer: C |
front 211 17) Cladograms (a type of phylogenetic tree) constructed from
evidence from molecular systematics are based on similarities in
| back 211 Answer: E |
front 212 18) There is some evidence that reptiles called cynodonts may have
had whisker-like hairs around their mouths. If true, then what can be
properly said of hair? | back 212 Answer: D |
front 213 19) A researcher wants to determine the genetic relatedness of
several breeds of dog (Canis lupus familiaris). The researcher should
compare homologous sequences of this type of
biochemical________which can be described as ________. | back 213 Answer: E |
front 214 20) Concerning growth in genome size over evolutionary time, which of
these is least associated with the others? | back 214 Answer: A |
front 215 21) Nucleic acid sequences that undergo few changes over the course
of evolutionary time are said to be conserved. Conserved sequences of
nucleic acids | back 215 Answer: C |
front 216 22) Species that are not closely related and that do not share many
anatomical similarities can still be placed together on the same
phylogenetic tree by comparing their | back 216 Answer: D |
front 217 23) Which kind of DNA should provide the best molecular clock for
determining the evolutionary relatedness of several species whose
common ancestor became extinct billions of years ago? | back 217 Answer: A |
front 218 24) A phylogenetic tree constructed using sequence differences in
mitochondrial DNA would be most valid for discerning the evolutionary
relatedness of | back 218 Answer: C |
front 219 25) The lakes of northern Minnesota are home to many similar species
of damselflies of the genus Enallagma that have apparently undergone
speciation from ancestral stock since the last glacial retreat about
10,000 years ago. Sequencing which of the following would probably be
most useful in sorting out evolutionary relationships among these
closely related species? | back 219 Answer: B |
front 220 26) Which statement represents the best explanation for the
observation that the nuclear DNA of wolves and domestic dogs has a
very high degree of sequence homology? | back 220 Answer: D |
front 221 27) The reason that paralogous genes can diverge from each other
within the same gene pool, whereas orthologous genes diverge only
after gene pools are isolated from each other, is that | back 221 Answer: D |
front 222 28) Paralogous genes that have lost the function of coding for any
functional gene product are known as "pseudogenes." Which of
these is a valid prediction regarding the fate of pseudogenes over
evolutionary time? | back 222 Answer: E |
front 223 29) The most important feature that permits a gene to act as a
molecular clock is | back 223 Answer: C |
front 224 30) Neutral theory proposes that | back 224 Answer: E |
front 225 31) When it acts upon a gene, which of the following processes
consequently makes that gene an accurate molecular clock? | back 225 Answer: C |
front 226 32) Which of these would, if it had acted upon a gene, prevent this
gene from acting as a reliable molecular clock? | back 226 Answer: D |
front 227 33) What kind of evidence has recently made it necessary to assign
the prokaryotes to either of two different domains, rather than
assigning all prokaryotes to the same kingdom? | back 227 Answer: A |
front 228 34) What important criterion was used in the late 1960s to
distinguish between the three multicellular eukaryotic kingdoms of the
five-kingdom classification system? | back 228 Answer: C |
front 229 35) Members of which kingdom have cell walls and are all
heterotrophic? | back 229 Answer: B |
front 230 36) Which kingdom has been replaced with two domains? | back 230 Answer: E |
front 231 37) Which eukaryotic kingdom is polyphyletic, and therefore
unacceptable, based on cladistics? | back 231 Answer: D |
front 232 38) Which eukaryotic kingdom includes members that are the result of
endosymbioses that included an ancient proteobacterium and an ancient
cyanobacterium? | back 232 Answer: A |
front 233 39) A large proportion of archaeans are extremophiles, so called
because they inhabit extreme environments with high acidity, salinity,
and/or temperature. Such environments are thought to have been much
more common on the primitive Earth. Thus, modern extremophiles survive
only in places that their ancestors became adapted to long ago. Which
of the following is, consequently, a valid statement about modern
extremophiles, assuming that their habitats have remained relatively
unchanged? | back 233 Answer: B |
front 234 40) Which extinct species should be the best candidate to serve as
the outgroup for the clade whose common ancestor occurs at position 2
in Figure 26.1? | back 234 Answer: A |
front 235 Traditionally, whales and hippopotamuses have been classified in
different orders, the Cetacea and the Artiodactyla, respectively.
Recent molecular evidence, however, indicates that the whales' closest
living relatives are the hippos. This has caused some zoologists to
lump the two orders together into a single clade, the Cetartiodactyla.
There is no consensus on whether the Cetartiodactyla should be
accorded order status or superorder status. This is because it remains
unclear whether the whale lineage diverged from the lineage leading to
the hippos before or after the other members of the order Artiodactyla
(pigs, camels, etc.) diverged (see Figure 26.2). | back 235 Answer: B |
front 236 50) Which of the following items does not necessarily exist in a
simple linear relationship with the number of gene-duplication events
when placed as the label on the vertical axis of the following graph? | back 236 Answer: E |
front 237 Traditionally, zoologists have placed birds in their own class, Aves.
More recently, molecular evidence has shown that birds are more
closely related to reptiles than their anatomy reveals. Genetically,
birds are more closely related to crocodiles than crocodiles are to
turtles. Thus, bird anatomy has become highly modified as they have
adapted to flight, without their genes having undergone nearly as much
change. | back 237 Answer: D |
front 238 Traditionally, zoologists have placed birds in their own class, Aves.
More recently, molecular evidence has shown that birds are more
closely related to reptiles than their anatomy reveals. Genetically,
birds are more closely related to crocodiles than crocodiles are to
turtles. Thus, bird anatomy has become highly modified as they have
adapted to flight, without their genes having undergone nearly as much
change. | back 238 Answer: D |
front 239 Traditionally, zoologists have placed birds in their own class, Aves.
More recently, molecular evidence has shown that birds are more
closely related to reptiles than their anatomy reveals. Genetically,
birds are more closely related to crocodiles than crocodiles are to
turtles. Thus, bird anatomy has become highly modified as they have
adapted to flight, without their genes having undergone nearly as much
change. | back 239 Answer: A |
front 240 69) Three living species X, Y, and Z share a common ancestor T, as do
extinct species U and V. A grouping that consists of species T, X, Y,
and Z (but not U or V) makes up | back 240 Answer: D |
front 241 70) In a comparison of birds and mammals, having four limbs is
| back 241 Answer: A |
front 242 72) Based on this tree, which statement is not correct? | back 242 Answer: D |
front 243 73) If you were using cladistics to build a phylogenetic tree of
cats, which of the following would be the best outgroup? | back 243 Answer: C |
front 244 1) All protists are | back 244 Answer: B |
front 245 2) Biologists have long been aware that the defunct kingdom Protista
is polyphyletic. Which of these statements is most consistent with
this conclusion? | back 245 Answer: C |
front 246 3) According to the endosymbiotic theory of the origin of eukaryotic
cells, how did mitochondria originate? | back 246 Answer: B |
front 247 4) Which process could have allowed the nucleomorphs of
chlorarachniophytes to be reduced, without the net loss of any genetic
information? | back 247 Answer: B |
front 248 5) An individual mixotroph loses its plastids, yet continues to
survive. Which of the following most likely accounts for its continued
survival? | back 248 Answer: C |
front 249 6) Which of the following was derived from an ancestral
cyanobacterium? | back 249 Answer: A |
front 250 7) Which two genera have members that can evade the human immune
system by frequently changing their surface proteins? | back 250 Answer: B |
front 251 8) Which of the following pairs of protists and their characteristics
is mismatched? | back 251 Answer: D |
front 252 9) Which of the following statements about dinoflagellates is true?
| back 252 Answer: A |
front 253 11) Which of the following is characteristic of ciliates? | back 253 Answer: E |
front 254 12) Which process results in genetic recombination, but is separate
from the process by which the population size of Paramecium increases?
| back 254 Answer: D |
front 255 17) Which of the following is a characteristic of the water molds
(oomycetes)? | back 255 Answer: A |
front 256 20) The chloroplasts of land plants are thought to have been derived
according to which evolutionary sequence? | back 256 Answer: A |
front 257 21) The chloroplasts of all of the following are thought to be
derived from ancestral red algae, except those of | back 257 Answer: D |
front 258 23) Green algae differ from land plants in that many green algae
| back 258 Answer: B |
front 259 27) Which of the following statements concerning protists is true?
| back 259 Answer: A |
front 260 73) Biologists suspect that endosymbiosis gave rise to mitochondria
before plastids partly because | back 260 Answer: B |
front 261 75) Which protists are in the same eukaryotic supergroup as land
plants? | back 261 Answer: E |
front 262 76) In life cycles with an alternation of generations, multicellular
haploid forms alternate with | back 262 Answer: D |
front 263 1) Both animals and fungi are heterotrophic. What distinguishes
animal heterotrophy from fungal heterotrophy is that only animals
derive their nutrition by | back 263 Answer: B |
front 264 2) The larvae of some insects are merely small versions of the adult,
whereas the larvae of other insects look completely different from
adults, eat different foods, and may live in different habitats. Which
of the following most directly favors the evolution of the latter,
more radical, kind of metamorphosis? | back 264 Answer: B |
front 265 3) Which of the following is (are) unique to animals? | back 265 Answer: C |
front 266 4) What do animals as diverse as corals and monkeys have in common?
| back 266 Answer: D |
front 267 5) The Hox genes came to regulate each of the following in what
sequence, from earliest to most recent? | back 267 Answer: D |
front 268 12) Fossil evidence indicates that the following events occurred in
what sequence, from earliest to most recent? | back 268 Answer: C |
front 269 13) What is the probable sequence in which the following clades of
animals originated, from earliest to most recent? | back 269 Answer: B |
front 270 14) Arthropods invaded land about 100 million years before
vertebrates did so. This most clearly implies that | back 270 Answer: E |
front 271 15) An adult animal that possesses bilateral symmetry is most
certainly also | back 271 Answer: A |
front 272 18) At which developmental stage should one be able to first
distinguish a diploblastic embryo from a triploblastic embryo?
| back 272 Answer: C |
front 273 19) At which developmental stage should one be able to first
distinguish a protostome embryo from a deuterostome embryo? | back 273 Answer: B |
front 274 20) What distinguishes a coelomate animal from a pseudocoelomate
animal is that coelomates | back 274 Answer: C |
front 275 21) You have before you a living organism, which you examine
carefully. Which of the following should convince you that the
organism is acoelomate? | back 275 Answer: D |
front 276 22) The blastopore is a structure that first becomes evident during
| back 276 Answer: B |
front 277 23) The blastopore denotes the presence of an endoderm-lined cavity
in the developing embryo, a cavity that is known as the | back 277 Answer: A |
front 278 25) Which of the following characteristics generally applies to
protostome development? | back 278 Answer: B |
front 279 26) Protostome characteristics generally include which of the
following? | back 279 Answer: D |
front 280 30) Phylogenetic trees are best described as | back 280 Answer: B |
front 281 35) What is true of the clade Ecdysozoa? | back 281 Answer: D |
front 282 36) Which distinction is given more emphasis by the morphological
phylogeny than by the molecular phylogeny? | back 282 Answer: D |
front 283 38) Which of these, if true, would support the claim that the
ancestral cnidarians had bilateral symmetry? | back 283 Answer: B |
front 284 The previous figure shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a
modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following
question. | back 284 Answer: B |
front 285 44) According to the phylogenies depicted in the previous pair of
figures, if one were to create a taxon called Radiata that included
all animal species whose members have true radial symmetry, then such
a taxon would be | back 285 Answer: A |
front 286 45) What is true of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (B)
that is not true in the traditional phylogeny (A)? | back 286 Answer: B |
front 287 46) In the traditional phylogeny (A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is
depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as
having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the
protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (B), Platyhelminthes is
depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this
change? | back 287 Answer: B |
front 288 Placozoan evolutionary relationships to other animals are currently
unclear, and different phylogenies can be created, depending on the
character used to infer relatedness. Sponges have no tissues, but
about 20 cell types. Tp (Trichoplax adhaerens) produces a neuropeptide
almost identical to one found in cnidarians. The genome of Tp, though
the smallest of any known animal, shares many features of complex
eumetazoan (even human!) genomes. The next three questions refer to
the phylogenetic trees that follow. | back 288 Answer: C |
front 289 A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The
four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to
be rotated 45 degrees and to lie in the grooves between larger,
underlying cells (i.e., spiral cleavage). | back 289 Answer: B |
front 290 70) Among the characteristics unique to animals is Answer: A | back 290 Answer: A |
front 291 71) The distinction between sponges and other animal phyla is based
mainly on the absence versus the presence of | back 291 Answer: D |
front 292 72) Acoelomates are characterized by | back 292 Answer: E |
front 293 74) Which of the following is a point of conflict between the
phylogenetic analyses presented in these two figures? | back 293 Answer: B |
front 294 1) A sponge's structural materials (spicules, spongin) are
manufactured by the | back 294 Answer: D |
front 295 2) How many of the following can be observed in the mesohyl of
various undisturbed sponges at one time or another? | back 295 Answer: D |
front 296 4) In terms of food capture, which sponge cell is most similar to the
cnidocyte of a cnidarian? | back 296 Answer: B |
front 297 44) Which of the following animal groups is entirely aquatic?
| back 297 Answer: C |
front 298 15) Planarians lack dedicated respiratory and circulatory systems
because | back 298 Answer: A |
front 299 49) Which structure do sea slugs use to feed on their prey? | back 299 Answer: D |
front 300 47) Which of the following factors, when used to label the horizontal
axis of the previous graph, would account most directly for the shape
of the plot? | back 300 Answer: E |
front 301 4) In terms of food capture, which sponge cell is most similar to the
cnidocyte of a cnidarian? | back 301 Answer: B |
front 302 10) Corals are most closely related to which group? | back 302 Answer: C |
front 303 11) Which characteristic(s) is (are) shared by both cnidarians and
flatworms? | back 303 Answer: D |
front 304 21) Which mollusc clade includes members that undergo embryonic
torsion? | back 304 Answer: C |
front 305 22) A terrestrial mollusc without a shell belongs to which clade?
| back 305 Answer: C |
front 306 23) A radula is present in members of which clade(s)? | back 306 Answer: E |
front 307 24) Which of the following is found only among annelids? | back 307 Answer: C |
front 308 27) How many of the following can be used to distinguish a nematode
worm from an annelid worm? | back 308 Answer: C |
front 309 2) Which of the following statements would be least acceptable to
most zoologists? | back 309 Answer: D |
front 310 9) The earliest known mineralized structures in vertebrates are
associated with which function? | back 310 Answer: B |
front 311 104) Vertebrates and tunicates share | back 311 Answer: E |
front 312 20) Arrange these taxonomic terms from most inclusive (most general)
to least inclusive (most specific). | back 312 Answer: D |
front 313 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? | back 313 Answer: D |
front 314 Match the extant vertebrate groups with the descriptions. | back 314 Answer: C |
front 315 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. | back 315 Answer: E |
front 316 104) Vertebrates and tunicates share | back 316 Answer: E |
front 317 3) Certain nutrients are considered "essential" in the
diets of some animals because | back 317 Answer: C |
front 318 16) The large surface area in the gut directly facilitates | back 318 Answer: B |
front 319 17) An advantage of a complete digestive system over a gastrovascular
cavity is that the complete system | back 319 Answer: B |
front 320 46) An enlarged cecum is typical of | back 320 Answer: A |
front 321 54) Examine the digestive system structures in the figure above. The
highest rate of nutrient absorption occurs at location(s) | back 321 Answer: B |
front 322 55) Examine the digestive system structures in the figure above. Most
of the digestion of fats occurs in section(s) | back 322 Answer: B |
front 323 59) Which of the following animals is incorrectly paired with its
feeding mechanism? | back 323 Answer: A |
front 324 60) The mammalian trachea and esophagus both connect to the | back 324 Answer: C |
front 325 61) Which of the following organs is incorrectly paired with its
function? | back 325 Answer: C |
front 326 62) Which of the following is not a major activity of the stomach?
| back 326 Answer: D |
front 327 5) Circulatory systems in molluscs | back 327 Answer: D |
front 328 6) The circulatory system of bony fishes, rays, and sharks is similar
to | back 328 Answer: B |
front 329 56) Countercurrent exchange in the fish gill helps to maximize
| back 329 Answer: C |
front 330 19) Because the foods eaten by animals are often composed largely of
macromolecules, this requires the animals to have mechanisms for
| back 330 Answer: C |
front 331 8) Organisms with a circulating body fluid that is distinct from the
fluid that directly surrounds the body's cells are likely to have
| back 331 Answer: B |
front 332 10) The only vertebrates in which blood flows directly from
respiratory organs to body tissues without first returning to the
heart are the | back 332 Answer: C |
front 333 17) Which of the following is the correct sequence of blood flow in
reptiles and mammals? | back 333 Answer: D |
front 334 23) The set of blood vessels with the slowest velocity of blood flow
is | back 334 Answer: D |
front 335 29) The blood pressure is lowest in the | back 335 Answer: E |
front 336 2) Organisms categorized as osmoconformers are most likely | back 336 Answer: B |
front 337 3) The body fluids of an osmoconformer would be ________ with its
________ environment. | back 337 Answer: D |
front 338 12) Urea is produced in the | back 338 Answer: A |
front 339 15) Ammonia is likely to be the primary nitrogenous waste in living
conditions that include | back 339 Answer: A |
front 340 17) The nitrogenous waste that requires the most energy to produce is
| back 340 Answer: D |
front 341 21) The primary nitrogenous waste excreted by birds is | back 341 Answer: E |
front 342 24) Birds secrete uric acid as their nitrogenous waste because uric
acid | back 342 Answer: C |
front 343 48) Compared to wetland mammals, water conservation in mammals of
arid regions is enhanced by having more | back 343 Answers: A |
front 344 29) The osmoregulatory/excretory system of a freshwater flatworm is
based on the operation of | back 344 Answer: A |