Ch 29
1) Which of the following could occur only after plants moved from
the oceans to land?
A) Animals could also move onto land because
there were opportunities for new food sources. B) Animals could also
move onto land because they had easier access to nitrogen.
C)
Cyanobacteria could also move onto land because their host plants
occurred there.
D) Plants in the oceans were able to evolve forms
that lived in much deeper parts of the oceans.
A
2) According to the fossil record, plants colonized terrestrial habitats ________.
A) in conjunction with insects that pollinated them
B) in
conjunction with fungi that helped provide them with nutrients from
the soil C) to escape abundant herbivores in the oceans
D) only about 150 million years ago
B
3) The most direct ancestors of land plants were probably ________.
A) kelp (brown alga) that formed large beds near the
shorelines
B) green algae
C) photosynthesizing prokaryotes (cyanobacteria)
D) liverworts and mosses
B
4) About 450 million years ago, the terrestrial landscape on Earth would have ________.
A) looked very similar to that of today, with flowers, grasses,
shrubs, and trees
B) been completely bare rock, with little pools
that contained cyanobacteria and protists
C) been covered with tall forests in swamps that would become today's coal
D) had non-vascular, green plants similar to liverworts forming green mats on rock
D
5) What evidence do paleobotanists look for that indicates the
movement of plants from water to land?
A) waxy cuticle to
decrease evaporation from leaves
B) loss of structures that
produce spores
C) sporopollenin to inhibit evaporation from leaves
D) remnants
of chloroplasts from photosynthesizing cells
A
6) Which of these events, based on plant fossils, came last (most recently)?
A) extensive growth of gymnosperm forests
B) colonization of
land by early liverworts and mosses
C) rise and diversification
of angiosperms
D) carboniferous swamps with giant horsetails and lycophytes
C
7) Why have biologists hypothesized that the first land plants had a low, sprawling growth habit?
A) They were tied to the water for reproduction, thus needing to
remain in close contact with the moist soil.
B) The ancestors of
land plants, green algae, lacked the structural support to stand erect
in air.
C) Land animals of that period were small and could not pollinate tall plants.
D) There was less competition for space, so they simply spread out flat.
B
8) Spores and seeds have basically the same function—dispersal—but
are vastly different because spores ________.
A) have a
protective outer covering; seeds do not
B) have an embryo; seeds
do not
C) have stored nutrition; seeds do not
D) are unicellular;
seeds are not
D
9) You find a green organism in a pond near your house and believe it
is a plant, not an alga. The mystery organism is most likely a plant
and not an alga if it ________.
A) contains chloroplasts
B)
is surrounded by a cuticle
C) does not contain vascular tissue
D) has cell walls that are
comprised largely of cellulose
B
10) Retaining the zygote on the living gametophyte of land plants ________.
A) protects the zygote from herbivores
B) evolved concurrently
with pollen
C) helps in dispersal of the zygote
D) allows it to be nourished by the parent plant
D
11) The structural integrity of bacteria is to peptidoglycan as the
structural integrity of plant spores is to ________.
A)
lignin
B) cellulose
C) secondary compounds
D) sporopollenin
D
12) According to our current knowledge of plant evolution, which
group of organisms should feature cell division most similar to that
of land plants?
A) some unicellular green algae
B) some cyanobacteria
C) some charophytes
D) some red algae
C
13) Which taxon is essentially equivalent to the
"embryophytes"? A) Plantae
B) Pterophyta
C) Bryophyta
D) Charophycea
A
14) If the kingdom Plantae is someday expanded to include the
charophytes (stoneworts), then the shared derived characteristics of
the kingdom will include ________.
A) rings of
cellulose-synthesizing complexes and ability to synthesize
sporopollenin
B) rings of cellulose-synthesizing complexes,
chlorophylls a and b, and alternation of generations
C) rings of cellulose-synthesizing complexes, alternation of
generations, and ability to synthesize sporopollenin
D) rings of
cellulose-synthesizing complexes, chlorophylls a and b, cell walls of
cellulose, and ability to synthesize sporopollenin
A
15) Which of the following environmental factors probably helped
early plants to successfully colonize land?
A) a decreased
availability of CO2
B) relatively few competitors for light
C) an increased
availability of symbiotic partners
D) air's relative lack of
support, compared to water's support
C
16) A student encounters a pondweed that appears to be a charophyte.
Which of the following features would help the student determine
whether the sample comes from a charophyte or from some other type of
green alga?
A) molecular structure of enzymes inside the
chloroplasts and presence of phragmoplasts
B) molecular structure of enzymes inside the chloroplasts and rings
of cellulose-synthesizing complexes
C) structure of sperm cells
and presence of phragmoplasts
D) structure of sperm cells,
presence of phragmoplasts, and rings of cellulose-synthesizing complexes
D
22) The fact that both charophytes and green plants contain
chlorophylls a and b demonstrates which of the following?
A)
These derived traits show that green plants evolved from ancient
charophytes.
B) These shared traits show that green plants
evolved from present-day charophytes.
C) The common ancestor of these two groups contained chlorophylls a and b.
D) These two groups are not closely related.
C
23) Which of the following statements about the transition from ocean
to land by plants is most likely to be accurate?
A) The
transition to land occurred within a few generations.
B) The
transition to land was likely gradual, with plants evolving traits
that let them survive ever-drier conditions.
C) Rising sea levels favored individuals that were able to survive ever-drier conditions.
D) The high light levels of terrestrial systems favored individuals that contained flexible photosynthetic enzyme systems.
B
24) Which of the following statements about the zygotes of plants is most likely to be accurate?
A) Protection of the zygote from the drying effects of air was
important.
B) Protection of the zygote from competitors for light
was more important in air than in water.
C) Zygotes in plants are more independent of parental tissue than are algal zygotes.
D) Zygotes in plants are more likely to germinate quickly after release from the parent plant than are zygotes released from algal organisms.
A
25) If animals had alternation of generations like plants,
________.
A) they would have twice as rapid a population growth
rate as compared to their current rates
B) the products of mitosis would undergo meiosis
C) the
products of meiosis would immediately fuse to form a zygote and then
undergo mitosis
D) the products of meiosis would undergo mitosis and become multicellular
D
26) Apical meristems ________.
A) occur only in shoots of
plants
B) occur only in roots of plants
C) occur in both
roots and shoots of plants
D) allow plants to move from one place
to another
C
27) Which of the following statements about stomata is
accurate?
A) Stomata are not important in algae because they do
not need CO2.
B) Stomata, when closed, allow CO2 to diffuse into
plants.
C) Stomata are important in terrestrial plants because
they allow the roots to absorb water and nutrients from the
soil.
D) Stomata are important in terrestrial plants because they
allow CO2 to diffuse into the plant.
D
28) The presence of vascular tissue allowed plants to
________.
A) absorb nutrients from the soil and form a symbiosis
with fungi
B) transport nutrients and water from below-ground
tissues to above-ground tissues and grow taller
C) transport
nutrients and water from below-ground tissues and use them to protect
developing embryos
D) release toxins into the soil that reduced
competition with other plants by poisoning nearby plants
B
29) Bryophytes (non-vascular plants) ________.
A) are more
similar to ancestral green algae than are vascular plants
B) are
more similar to ancestral red algae than are vascular plants
C)
can be included in the grade monilophyte because they do not have a
complex vascular system
D) are evolutionarily more advanced than
seed plants
A
30) Grades, as opposed to clades, ________.
A) indicate degrees
of evolutionary relatedness
B) show relatedness among living organisms
C) are almost always
monophyletic
D) represent groups with similar traits
D
31) Stomata ________.
A) occur in all land plants and define
them as a monophyletic group B) open to allow gas exchange and close
to decrease water loss
C) occur in all land plants and are the
same as pores
D) open to increase both water absorption and gas exchange
B
32) Liverworts, hornworts, and mosses are grouped together as
bryophytes. Besides not having vascular tissue, what do they all have
in common?
A) They are all wind pollinated.
B) They are heterosporous.
C) They can reproduce asexually by producing gemmae.
D) They require water for reproduction.
D
33) Most moss gametophytes do not have a cuticle and are 1-2 cells
thick. What does this imply about moss gametophytes and their
structure?
A) They use stomata for gas exchange
regulation.
B) They can easily lose water to, and absorb water
from, the atmosphere.
C) Photosynthesis occurs throughout the entire gametophyte surface.
D) They have branching veins in their leaves.
B
34) As you stroll through a moist forest, you are most likely to see
a ________. A) zygote of a green alga
B) gametophyte of a
moss
C) sporophyte of a liverwort
D) gametophyte of a fern
B
35) Which of these are spore-producing structures?
A) sporophyte (capsule) of a moss
B) antheridium of a moss or
fern
C) archegonium of a moss or fern
D) gametophyte of a moss
A
36) What is an accurate statement about the genus Sphagnum? A) It is
an economically important liverwort.
B) It grows in extensive
mats in grassland areas.
C) It accumulates to form coal and is
burned as a fuel.
D) It represents a large repository of CO2 that is likely to be released with global warming.
D
37) How are bryophytes and seedless vascular plants alike?
A) Plants in both groups have vascular tissue.
B) In both
groups, sperm swim from antheridia to archegonia.
C) The dominant generation in both groups is the sporophyte.
D) Plants in both groups have true roots, stems, and leaves.
B
38) In general, liverworts have a cuticle and pores. However, some
species do not have pores. What would you predict concerning the
cuticle of these species and why?
A) The cuticle would be the
same thickness as in those species with pores.
B) The cuticle
would be thicker than in those species with pores.
C) The cuticle would be thinner than in those species with
pores.
D) The cuticle would be thick in some places and thin in
other places.
C
39) Archegonia ________.
A) are the sites where male gametes are produced
B) may contain sporophyte embryos
C) have the same function as
sporangia
D) make asexual reproductive structures
B
40) Which of the following is an accurate statement about plant reproduction?
A) Embryophytes are small plants in an early developmental
stage.
B) Male and female bryophytes each produce a type of
gametangia.
C) Eggs and sperm of most land plants swim toward one another.
D) Bryophytes are limited to asexual reproduction.
B
41) Assuming that they all belong to the same plant, which of the
following sequences describes structures from largest to
smallest?
A) gametes, gametophytes, antheridia
B) gametes,
antheridia, gametophytes
C) gametophytes, gametes, antheridia
D) gametophytes,
antheridia, gametes
D
42) Which of the following statements is accurate with regard to the life cycle of mosses?
A) The haploid generation grows on the sporophyte
generation.
B) Spores are primarily distributed by water
currents.
C) Antheridia and archegonia are produced by gametophytes.
D) The sporophyte generation is dominant.
C
43) At some time during their life cycles, bryophytes make ________.
A) microphylls
B) true roots
C) true leaves
D) sporangia
D
44) Two small, poorly drained lakes lie close to each other in a northern forest. The basins of both lakes are composed of the same geologic substratum. One lake is surrounded by a dense Sphagnum mat; the other is not. Compared to the pond with Sphagnum, the pond lacking the moss mat should have ________.
A) lower numbers of bacteria
B) reduced rates of
decomposition
C) reduced oxygen content
D) water with a
higher pH
D
45) The 1-meter height attainable by Dawsonia moss is at the upper
end of the size range reached by mosses. What accounts for the
relative tallness of Dawsonia?
A) the cuticle that is found along
the ridges of "leaves"
B) "leaves" that are
more than one cell layer thick
C) reduced size, mass, and persistence of the sporophytes, which
allows gametophores to grow taller
D) the presence of conducting
tissues in the "stem"
D
46) The haploid gametophytes of bryophytes are ________.
A)
multicellular, just like the haploid stages of animal species
B)
multicellular and produce zygotes
C) usually composed of single
cells, just like the gametes of mammals
D) usually multicellular, but one cell thick
D
47) If bryophytes do not have vascular tissue, how can some mosses reach 60 centimeters tall?
A) The term nonvascular plant is actually a misnomer.
B) These
tall mosses are more closely related to seed plants than to other
mosses.
C) Some mosses independently evolved conducting tissues.
D) The rhizoids contain the conducting tissues.
C
48) If you were asked to design a bryophyte that could be successful
in a bare, moist area, which of the following possible adaptations
would you include?
A) a symbiosis with phosphorus-absorbing
mycorrhizae fungi
B) a symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria
C) a symbiosis with iron-absorbing algae
D) a symbiosis with
toxin-producing dinoflagellates
B
49) Moss sporophytes are typically green when young, but turn brown
when ready to release their spores. This observation would lead you to
think that the ________.
A) sporophyte photosynthesizes when
young and contributes energy for spore production
B) sporophyte
photosynthesizes at all ages—it just uses different wavelengths for
photosynthesis at different ages
C) gametophyte cannot photosynthesize
D) cuticle rubs off of
older sporophytes and exposes the color that is underneath
A
50) Assuming equal spore production rates, what is the likely
consequence in a bryophyte with both asexual and sexual reproduction
versus one with only sexual reproduction?
A) Species with both
types of reproduction have higher rates of genetic diversity than
species with only sexual reproduction.
B) Species with both types of reproduction have higher population
growth rates than species with only sexual reproduction.
C)
Species with both types of reproduction are less evolutionarily
advanced than species with only sexual reproduction.
D) Species with both types of reproduction occur primarily in dry environments.
B
55) Which set contains the most closely related terms?
A) megasporangium, megaspore, pollen, ovule
B) microsporangium,
microspore, egg, ovary
C) megasporangium, megaspore, egg, ovule
D) microsporangium, microspore, carpel, ovary
C
56) How could you determine if a plant is heterosporous?
A) Male
and female reproductive structures are located on separate plants.
B) It has vascular tissue.
C) It has multiple
sporangia.
D) Its diploid sporophyte produces spores via meiosis.
A
57) A botanist discovers a new species of plant in a tropical rain forest. Investigation of its anatomy and life cycle shows the following characteristics: flagellated sperm, xylem with tracheids, separate gametophyte, and sporophyte generations with the sporophyte dominant, and no seeds. This plant is probably most closely related to ________.
A) mosses
B) ferns
C) gymnosperms
D) flowering plants
B
58) You are hiking in a forest and come upon a mysterious plant,
which you determine is either a lycophyte sporophyte or a monilophyte
sporophyte. Which of the following would be most helpful in
determining the correct classification of the plant?
A) whether
or not it has true leaves
B) whether it has microphylls or megaphylls
C) whether or not it has seeds
D) its height
B
59) Assuming that they all belong to the same plant, which of the
following lists structures from largest to smallest (or from most
inclusive to least inclusive)?
A) sporophylls, sporangia,
sporophytes, spores
B) sporophylls, sporophytes, sporangia, spores
C) sporophytes, spores, sporangia, sporophylls
D) sporophytes, sporophylls, sporangia, spores
D
60) If humans had been present to build log structures during the
Carboniferous period (they were not), which plant types would have
been suitable sources of logs?
A) horsetails and
bryophytes
B) lycophytes and bryophytes
C) ferns, horsetails, and lycophytes
D) charophytes
(stoneworts), bryophytes, and gymnosperms
C
61) Arrange the following terms from most inclusive to least
inclusive.
A) embryophytes, green plants, tracheophytes, seedless
vascular plants, ferns
B) green plants, embryophytes, tracheophytes, seedless vascular plants, ferns
C) green plants, tracheophytes, embryophytes, seedless vascular plants, ferns
D) embryophytes, ferns, green plants, tracheophytes, seedless vascular plants
B
62) Use the following description to answer the question.
A biology student hiking in a forest happens upon an erect, 15-centimeter-tall plant that bears microphylls and a strobilus at its tallest point. When disturbed, the cone emits a dense cloud of brownish dust. A pocket magnifying glass reveals the dust to be composed of tiny spheres with a high oil content.
This student has probably found a ________.
A) bryophyte sporophyte
B) fern sporophyte
C) horsetail gametophyte
D) lycophyte sporophyte
D
63) Use the following description to answer the question.
A biology student hiking in a forest happens upon an erect, 15-centimeter-tall plant that bears microphylls and a strobilus at its tallest point. When disturbed, the cone emits a dense cloud of brownish dust. A pocket magnifying glass reveals the dust to be composed of tiny spheres with a high oil content.
Besides oil, what other chemical should be detected in substantial
amounts upon chemical analysis of these small spheres?
A)
sporopollenins
B) phenolics
C) waxes
D) terpenes
A
64) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
What feature of both true mosses and ferns makes it most surprising
that they can survive for many generations in dry deserts?
A)
flagellated sperm
B) lack of vascular tissues
C) lack of true roots
D) lack of cuticle
A
65) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
Which of the following features is most important for true mosses
and ferns to reproduce in the desert?
A) that the sporophytes
occupy only permanently shady, north-facing habitats
B) that the
sporophytes hug the ground, growing no taller than a couple of inches
C) either that their gametophytes grow close together, or that they be homosporous
D) that the sporophytes have highly lignified vascular tissues
C
66) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
Which of the following characteristics is (are) possessed in common
by true mosses, ferns, and spike mosses, and therefore becomes useless
at helping to determine to which of these groups "flower of
stone" belongs?
A) alternation of generations
B) a sporophyte generation that is dominant and alternation of generations
C) flagellated sperm and true leaves and roots
D) flagellated
sperm and alternation of generations
D
67) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
Upon closer inspection of the leaves of "flower of stone,"
one can observe tiny, cone-like structures. Each cone-like structure
emits spores of two different sizes. Further investigation also
reveals that the roots of "flower of stone" branch only at
the growing tip of the root, forming a Y- shaped structure. Based on
these additional observations, which of the following can be properly
inferred about "flower of stone"?
A) It is
heterosporous and has separate male and female gametophytes.
B)
It is a fern and the cone-like structures are sori.
C) It is
heterosporous, it is a fern, and the cone-like structures are
sori.
D) It is heterosporous, it is a lycophyte, and it has
separate male and female gametophytes.
D
68) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
Upon closer inspection of the leaves of "flower of stone,"
one can observe tiny, cone-like structures. Each cone-like structure
emits spores of two different sizes. Further investigation also
reveals that the roots of "flower of stone" branch only at
the growing tip of the root, forming a Y- shaped structure.
Consequently, which of the following is the closest living relative of
"flower of stone"?
A) true moss
B) club
moss
C) liverwort
D) fern
B
69) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
Upon closer inspection of the leaves of "flower of stone,"
one can observe tiny, cone-like structures. Each cone-like structure
emits spores of two different sizes. Further investigation also
reveals that the roots of "flower of stone" branch only at
the growing tip of the root, forming a Y- shaped structure.
Consequently, "flower of stone" should be expected to
possess which other characteristics?
A) a gametophyte generation
that is dominant and lignified vascular tissues
B) a gametophyte
generation that is dominant and spores that are diploid when
mature
C) lignified vascular tissues and microphylls
D)
microphylls, filamentous rhizoids, but not true roots, and spores that
are diploid when mature
C
70) Use the following information to answer the question.
Big Bend National Park in Texas is mostly Chihuahuan desert, where rainfall averages about 25 centimeters per year. Yet, it is not uncommon when hiking in this extremely arid zone to encounter mosses and ferns. One such plant is called "flower of stone." It is not a flowering plant, nor does it produce seeds. Under arid conditions, its leaflike structures curl up. However, when it rains, it unfurls its leaves, which form a bright green rosette on the desert floor. Consequently, it is sometimes called the "resurrection plant." At first glance, it could be a fern, a true moss, or a spike moss.
In which combination of locations would one who is searching for the
gametophytes of "flower of stone" have the best chance of
finding them?
A) in moist soil
B) in moist soil and
underground, nourished there by symbiotic fungi
C) in shady, moist places and underground, nourished there by symbiotic fungi
D) in shady, moist places, far from any "flower of stone" sporophytes
C
71) Suppose an efficient conducting system evolved in a moss that
could transport water and other materials as high as a tall tree.
Which of the following statements about "trees" of such a
species would be accurate?
A) Fertilization would probably be easier.
B) Spore dispersal distances would probably decrease.
C)
Females could produce only one archegonium.
D) Individuals would
probably compete more effectively for access to light.
D
72) Which of the following features of how seedless land plants get
sperm to egg are the same as for some of their algal
ancestors?
A) Conjugation tubes are formed between sperm and egg
cells.
B) Packets of sperm are delivered by wind to the eggs.
C) Aquatic invertebrates carry sperm to eggs.
D) Flagellated
sperm swim to the eggs in a water drop.
D
73) Increasing the number of stomata per unit surface area of a leaf
when atmospheric carbon dioxide levels decline is most analogous to a
human ________.
A) breathing faster as atmospheric carbon dioxide
levels increase
B) putting more red blood cells into circulation
when oxygen availability declines at high elevations
C) breathing more slowly as atmospheric oxygen levels
increase
D) increasing the volume of its lungs when atmospheric
carbon dioxide levels increase
B
74) Compared to nonvascular plants, the ancient relatives of vascular
plants ________.
A) produced sporophyte generations independent
of, not dependent on, gametophyte generations
B) produced much smaller sporophyte generations
C) produced
sporophyte generations that provided more nutrition to gametophyte generations
D) probably experienced less competition for light
A
75) The evolution of a vascular system in plants allowed which of the
following to occur?
A) increased height, improved competition for
water, and increased spore dispersal distances
B) increased height, improved competition for light, and increased spore dispersal distances
C) decreased height, improved competition for light, and decreased spore dispersal distances
D) decreased height, improved competition for water, and decreased spore dispersal distances
B
76) If you walk through an area with mosses and ferns, you are seeing ________.
A) both sporophyte and gametophyte generations
B) only vascular
plants
C) both nonvascular and seed-bearing plants
D) both seedless and seed-bearing plants
A
77) The coal and oil that we currently use as fuel sources
________.
A) are remnants of Sphagnum moss bogs
B) are
releasing carbon that was trapped by photosynthesis in ancient
vascular and seedless plants
C) come from calcium and magnesium
carbonates that Carboniferous roots released from rocks
D) come from ancient, seed-bearing plants that grew during the Carboniferous period
A
Three of the following are evidence that charophytes are the closest
algal relatives of plants. Select the exception.
A) similar sperm
structure
B) the presence of chloroplasts
C) similarities in cell wall formation during cell division
D) genetic similarities in chloroplasts
B
Which of the following characteristics of plants is absent in their
closest relatives, the charophyte algae?
A) chlorophyll b
B)
cellulose in cell walls
C) sexual reproduction
D) alternation of multicellular generations
D
In plants, which of the following are produced by meiosis?
A) haploid gametes
B) diploid gametes
C) haploid spores
D) diploid spores
C
Microphylls are found in which plant group?
A) lycophytes
B) liverworts
C) ferns
D) hornworts
A
Suppose an efficient conducting system evolved in a moss that could
transport water and other materials as high as a tall tree. Which of
the following statements about "trees" of such a species
would not be true?
A) Spore dispersal distances would probably increase.
B) Females could produce only one archegonium.
C) Unless its
body parts were strengthened, such a "tree" would probably
flop over.
D) Individuals would probably compete more effectively for access to light.
B