front 1 Both animals and fungi are heterotrophic. What distinguishes animal heterotrophy from fungal heterotrophy is that only animals derive their nutrition from A) preying on animals. B) ingesting it. C) consuming living, rather than dead, prey. D) using enzymes to digest their food. | back 1 B |
front 2 Which of the following is (are) unique to animals?
| back 2 C |
front 3 In terms of food capture, which sponge cell is most similar to the cnidocyte of a cnidarian?
| back 3 B |
front 4 Sponges are most accurately described as
| back 4 D |
front 5 Which of the following functions as both a mouth and an anus in members of the phylum Cnidaria?
| back 5 B |
front 6 Which of the following is true of members of the phylum Cnidaria?
| back 6 C |
front 7 The members of which clade in the phylum Cnidaria occur only as polyps?
| back 7 C |
front 8 The last common ancestor of all animals was probably a(n)
| back 8 E |
front 9 Evidence of which structure or characteristic would be most surprising to find among fossils of the Ediacaran fauna?
| back 9 B |
front 10 The most ancient branch point in animal phylogeny is that between having
| back 10 C |
front 11 According to the evidence collected so far, the animal kingdom is
| back 11 A |
front 12 If a multicellular animal lacks true tissues, then it can properly be included among the
| back 12 B |
front 13 Which of the following statements concerning animal taxonomy is (are) true?
| back 13 C |
front 14 If the current molecular evidence regarding animal origins is well substantiated in the future, then what will be true of any contrary evidence regarding the origin of animals derived from the fossil record?
| back 14 B |
front 15 Some researchers claim that sponge genomes have homeotic genes (genes that regulate development of anatomical structures), but no Hox genes (genes that regulate development of posterior-anterior axes and body segments). If true, this finding would
| back 15 C |
front 16 The last common ancestor of all bilaterians is thought to have had four Hox genes (genes that regulate development of posterior-anterior axes and body segments). Most extant cnidarians have two Hox genes, except Nematostella, which has three Hox genes. On the basis of these observations, some have proposed that the ancestral cnidarians were originally bilateral and, in stages, lost Hox genes from their genomes. If true, this would mean that
| back 16 B |
front 17 Which statement is most consistent with the hypothesis that the Cambrian explosion was caused by the rise of predator-prey relationships?
| back 17 D |
front 18 Whatever its ultimate cause(s), the Cambrian explosion is a prime example of
| back 18 C |
front 19 What is the probable sequence in which the following clades of animals originated, from earliest to most recent?
| back 19 B |
front 20 Fossil evidence indicates that the following events occurred in what sequence, from earliest to most recent?
| back 20 C |
front 21 Which of the following genetic processes may be most helpful in accounting for the Cambrian explosion?
| back 21 D |
front 22 Which of these, if true, would support the claim that the ancestral cnidarians had bilateral symmetry?
| back 22 A |
front 23 Which of the following animal groups is entirely aquatic?
| back 23 C |
front 24 Chordate pharyngeal slits appear to have functioned first as
| back 24 B |
front 25 Which of the following statements would be least acceptable to most zoologists?
| back 25 D |
front 26 Which extant chordates are postulated to be most like the earliest chordates in physical appearance?
| back 26 A |
front 27 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 27 B |
front 28 What do all craniates have that earlier chordates did not have?
| back 28 D |
front 29 The feeding mode of the extinct conodonts was
| back 29 C |
front 30 The earliest known mineralized structures in vertebrates are associated with which function?
| back 30 D |
front 31 Jaws first occurred in which extant group of fishes?
| back 31 B |
front 32 Which of these might have been observed in the common ancestor of chondrichthyans and osteichthyans?
| back 32 A |
front 33 Which group's members have had both lungs and gills during their adult lives?
| back 33 B |
front 34 Which of the following belong to the lobe-fin clade?
| back 34 E |
front 35 Arrange these taxonomic terms from most inclusive (most general) to least inclusive (most specific).
| back 35 D |
front 36 During chordate evolution, what is the sequence (from earliest to most recent) in which the following structures arose?
| back 36 A |
front 37 Which of the following are the most abundant and diverse of the extant vertebrates?
| back 37 A |
front 38 What should be true of fossils of the earliest tetrapods?
| back 38 C |
front 39 Which of these are amniotes?
| back 39 C |
front 40 Why is the amniotic egg considered an important evolutionary breakthrough?
| back 40 B |
front 41 Which of these characteristics added most to vertebrate success in relatively dry environments?
| back 41 A |
front 42 Which of the following are the only extant animals that descended directly from dinosaurs?
| back 42 D |
front 43 A trend first observed in the evolution of the earliest tetrapods was
| back 43 C |
front 44 Among the invertebrate phyla, phylum Arthropoda is unique in possessing members that have
| back 44 D |
front 45 Arthropods invaded land about 100 million years before vertebrates did so. This most clearly implies that
| back 45 E |
front 46 Which of these would a paleontologist be most likely to do in order to determine whether a fossil represents a reptile or a mammal?
| back 46 E |
front 47 In which vertebrates is fertilization exclusively internal?
| back 47 D |
front 48 Internal fertilization, leathery amniotic eggs, and skin that resists drying are characteristics of which extant vertebrate group?
| back 48 B |
front 49 Organisms at which of the following trophic levels increased the most because of the movement of animals onto land?
| back 49 A |
front 50 The decline of cyanobacteria in the early Cambrian oceans was most likely related to
| back 50 D |
front 51 If all of the animals died in a large region of an ocean, we would expect an increase in the
| back 51 B |
front 52 Evidence indicates that an ancestral finch species from South America arrived on the Galapágos Islands and formed many new species, adapting to the diverse environments on the islands. With the evolution of these new bird species on the Galapágos Islands, we would expect to find a corresponding
| back 52 A |
front 53 A new, sixth global mass-extinction event appears to be occurring on Earth today. The most likely explanation for the dramatic loss of species is
| back 53 D |
front 54 As a result of harvesting a higher proportion of older and larger cod and other fish species for food,
| back 54 B |
front 55 Which of the following characteristics distinguishes modern humans from other modern apes?
| back 55 B |
front 56 What is a primary, common evolutionary feature of all reptiles, mammals, and birds?
| back 56 D |
front 57 One important evolutionary change that occurred with the rise of animals is
| back 57 A |
front 58 If wild dogs take part in cooperative hunting, they will likely have a better outcome than if they hunt alone, especially if they share the prey. The dogs that cooperate are increasing the survival probability of one another. This is an example of
| back 58 B |
front 59 Humans widely use pesticides on plants as a means to control insect and plant pests. However, pesticides are not selective in what they kill, so they often kill beneficial insect and plant species as well. This unintentional consequence favors plant and insect species that are pesticide resistant. This scenario is an example of
| back 59 A |
front 60 A student catches a ray-finned fish from the ocean and notices that attached to its flank is an equally long, snakelike organism. The attached organism has no external segmentation, no scales, a slimy substance on its surface, a round mouth surrounded by a sucker, a tongue, and two small eyes. The student thinks it might be a marine hagfish or a lamprey. Which feature excludes the organism from possibly being a lamprey?
| back 60 C |
front 61 Using similarities in body symmetry and other anatomical features to assign an organism to a clade involves
| back 61 E |
front 62 Which of the following is a point of conflict between the phylogenetic analyses presented in these two figures?
| back 62 A |
front 63 What is true in the molecular phylogeny (B) that is not true in the traditional phylogeny (A)?
| back 63 B |
front 64 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 64 B |
front 65 What conclusion is apparent from the data in Table 27.1?
| back 65 D |
front 66 All things being equal, which of these is the simplest explanation for the change in the number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates to ancestral vertebrates, as shown in Table 27.1?
| back 66 D |
front 67 Which tree(s) has (have) been created by emphasizing genomic features of placozoans?
| back 67 C |
front 68 Which tree(s) has (have) been created by emphasizing the structural simplicity of placozoans?
| back 68 A |
front 69 Which tree(s) has (have) been created by emphasizing a protein found in placozoans?
| back 69 B |
front 70 Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and thus their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomous and physoclistous. The ancestral version is the physostomous version, in which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube (Figure 27.2). 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 physoclistous 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. The presence of a swim bladder allows the typical ray-finned fish to stop swimming and still
| back 70 D |
front 71 Fishes that have swim bladders can regulate their density and thus their buoyancy. There are two types of swim bladder: physostomous and physoclistous. The ancestral version is the physostomous version, in which the swim bladder is connected to the esophagus via a short tube (Figure 27.2). 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 physoclistous 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. If a physoclistous fish removes gas from its swim bladder, this fish's density cannot actually change until that gas arrives at the
| back 71 B |
front 72 Which graph properly depicts the relationship between the amount of gas in the swim bladder and the density of the fish?
| back 72 C |
front 73 How do a physoclistous fish and a physotomous fish compare in terms of the amount of energy each must use to maintain its position (depth) in the water column over the long term?
| back 73 B |
front 74 Trichoplax adhaerens (Tp) is the only living species in the phylum Placozoa. Individuals are about 1 mm wide and only 27 μm high, are irregularly shaped, and consist of a total of about 2,000 cells, which are diploid (2n = 12). There are four types of cells, none of which is a nerve or muscle cell, and none of which has a cell wall. They move using cilia, and any "edge" can lead. Tp feeds on marine microbes, mostly unicellular green algae, by crawling atop the algae and trapping it between its ventral surface and the substrate. Enzymes are then secreted onto the algae, and the resulting nutrients are absorbed. Tp sperm cells have never been observed, nor have embryos past the 64-cell (blastula) stage. In which of the following ways is Tp similar to a typical animal?
| back 74 B |
front 75 Trichoplax adhaerens (Tp) is the only living species in the phylum Placozoa. Individuals are about 1 mm wide and only 27 μm high, are irregularly shaped, and consist of a total of about 2,000 cells, which are diploid (2n = 12). There are four types of cells, none of which is a nerve or muscle cell, and none of which has a cell wall. They move using cilia, and any "edge" can lead. Tp feeds on marine microbes, mostly unicellular green algae, by crawling atop the algae and trapping it between its ventral surface and the substrate. Enzymes are then secreted onto the algae, and the resulting nutrients are absorbed. Tp sperm cells have never been observed, nor have embryos past the 64-cell (blastula) stage. On the basis of the information in the previous paragraph, which of these should be able to be observed in Tp?
| back 75 C |
front 76 Trichoplax adhaerens (Tp) is the only living species in the phylum Placozoa. Individuals are about 1 mm wide and only 27 μm high, are irregularly shaped, and consist of a total of about 2,000 cells, which are diploid (2n = 12). There are four types of cells, none of which is a nerve or muscle cell, and none of which has a cell wall. They move using cilia, and any "edge" can lead. Tp feeds on marine microbes, mostly unicellular green algae, by crawling atop the algae and trapping it between its ventral surface and the substrate. Enzymes are then secreted onto the algae, and the resulting nutrients are absorbed. Tp sperm cells have never been observed, nor have embryos past the 64-cell (blastula) stage. Tp's body symmetry seems to be most like that of
| back 76 A |
front 77 An elementary school science teacher decided to liven up the classroom with a saltwater aquarium. Knowing that saltwater aquaria can be quite a hassle, the teacher proceeded stepwise. First, the teacher conditioned the water. Next, the teacher decided to stock the tank with various marine invertebrates, including a sea star, a sponge, a sea urchin, a jellyfish, several hermit crabs, some sand dollars, and an ectoproct. Last, she added some vertebrates — a parrotfish and a clownfish. She arranged for daily feedings of copepods and feeder fish. One day, Tommy (a student in an undersupervised class of 40 fifth graders) got the urge to pet Nemo (the clownfish), who was swimming among the waving petals of a pretty underwater "flower" that had a big hole in the midst of the petals. Tommy giggled upon finding that these petals felt sticky. A few hours later, Tommy was in the nurse's office with nausea and cramps. Microscopic examination of his fingers would probably have revealed the presence of
| back 77 D |
front 78 An elementary school science teacher decided to liven up the classroom with a saltwater aquarium. Knowing that saltwater aquaria can be quite a hassle, the teacher proceeded stepwise. First, the teacher conditioned the water. Next, the teacher decided to stock the tank with various marine invertebrates, including a sea star, a sponge, a sea urchin, a jellyfish, several hermit crabs, some sand dollars, and an ectoproct. Last, she added some vertebrates — a parrotfish and a clownfish. She arranged for daily feedings of copepods and feeder fish. Had the teacher wanted to point out organisms that move and feed using the same structural adaptation, the teacher should have chosen the
| back 78 C |
front 79 The most recently discovered phylum in the animal kingdom (1995) is the phylum Cycliophora. It includes three species of tiny organisms that live in large numbers on the outsides of the mouthparts and appendages of lobsters. When in the feeding stage, a cycliophoran permanently attaches to the lobster via an adhesive disk and collects scraps of food from its host's feeding by capturing the scraps in a current created by a ring of cilia. Its body is sac-like and has a U-shaped intestine that brings the anus close to the mouth. Cycliophorans are eucoelomate (have a body cavity that is a coelom) and do not molt (though their host does). Which of these features is least useful in assigning the phylum Cycliophora to a clade of animals?
| back 79 A |
front 80 The most recently discovered phylum in the animal kingdom (1995) is the phylum Cycliophora. It includes three species of tiny organisms that live in large numbers on the outsides of the mouthparts and appendages of lobsters. When in the feeding stage, a cycliophoran permanently attaches to the lobster via an adhesive disk and collects scraps of food from its host's feeding by capturing the scraps in a current created by a ring of cilia. Its body is sac-like and has a U-shaped intestine that brings the anus close to the mouth. Cycliophorans are eucoelomate (have a body cavity that is a coelom) and do not molt (though their host does). Basing your inferences on information in the previous paragraph, to which clade(s) should cycliophorans belong?
| back 80 C |
front 81 The most recently discovered phylum in the animal kingdom (1995) is the phylum Cycliophora. It includes three species of tiny organisms that live in large numbers on the outsides of the mouthparts and appendages of lobsters. When in the feeding stage, a cycliophoran permanently attaches to the lobster via an adhesive disk and collects scraps of food from its host's feeding by capturing the scraps in a current created by a ring of cilia. Its body is sac-like and has a U-shaped intestine that brings the anus close to the mouth. Cycliophorans are eucoelomate (have a body cavity that is a coelom) and do not molt (though their host does). What is true of the feeding stage of cycliophorans?
| back 81 A |
front 82 The most recently discovered phylum in the animal kingdom (1995) is the phylum Cycliophora. It includes three species of tiny organisms that live in large numbers on the outsides of the mouthparts and appendages of lobsters. When in the feeding stage, a cycliophoran permanently attaches to the lobster via an adhesive disk and collects scraps of food from its host's feeding by capturing the scraps in a current created by a ring of cilia. Its body is sac-like and has a U-shaped intestine that brings the anus close to the mouth. Cycliophorans are eucoelomate (have a body cavity that is a coelom) and do not molt (though their host does). Cycliophorans have two types of larvae. One type of larva is produced when the digestive system of a female is impregnated by a male. The digestive system then collapses and develops into a larva, which swims away in search of a new host after the surrounding female dies. Which is the embryonic tissue that is apparently most important in forming this type of larva?
| back 82 C |
front 83 Which of the following clades contains the greatest number of animal species?
| back 83 B |
front 84 Fossil steroid and molecular clock evidence suggests that animals originated
| back 84 D |
front 85 Which of the following was probably the least important factor in bringing about the Cambrian explosion?
| back 85 C |
front 86 Which of the following could be considered the most recent common ancestor of living tetrapods?
| back 86 A |
front 87 Which clade does not include humans?
| back 87 C |
front 88 In the figure given below, the Deuterostomia clade is most closely related to which two main clades? Ctenophora and Cnidaria
| back 88 B |