Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Exam 3 Quick reference guide 1. Define the biological species concept. a. A group of populations whose members have the potential to interbreed, but do not necessarily look the same. b. It does not apply to asexual organisms. 2. What are pre- and post zygotic barriers? They are biological factors that .. 3. Match prezygotic barriers to examples from class. 4. Match postzygotic barriers to examples from class 5. Define taxonomy and systematics. 6. Know the taxonomic levels – know their order from most inclusive to least inclusive. 7. Know characteristics of the scientific name versus a common name. 8. What is phylogeny? The evolutionary history of species. 9. How is phylogeny/evolutionary relationships among species determined? a. The fossil record b. Homologous structures (not analogous structures) c. Comparative embryology d. The nucleotide sequence of DNA (genes) 10. What are phylogenetic trees and what do they depict? They are branching diagrams that depict… 11. What is cladisitics and what has it done to the traditional classification of organisms? 12. What is a clade? It is a branch on a phylogenetic tree that includes all the descendants of one ancestor 13. What distinguishes a eukaryotic cell from a prokaryotic cell? In prokaryotic cells there is a lack of membrane bound organelles; specifically the nucleus is absent 14. The current classification system know the Domains and the kingdoms under each domain; types of cells and single or multi-cellular for members of each domain. a. Bacteria domain/kingdom= prokaryotic & mostly single-celled (not cyanobacteria) b. Archaea domain/kingdom = prokaryotic & single-celled c. Eukarya domain= eukaryotic; single-celled and multicellular (some colonial) i. Protists – single-celled, colonial, and multicellular ii. Plants – all multi-cellular iii. Fungi – mostly multi-cellular (single-celled yeast) iv. Animals – all multi-cellular 15. Define these nutritional modes and who they represent (kingdoms): a. Autotroph b. Heterotroph c. Photoautotroph = C source is carbon dioxide & energy source is sunlight: plants, algae (protists) & cyanobacteria d. Mixotrophs = switch between autotrophy and heterotrophy 16. Define decomposers. What organisms are decomposers? a. Defineb. Organisms – Bacteria and fungi are the main decomposers of ecosystems 17. What are cell walls? What organisms have them and what distinguishes them? Define= a. Bacteria = peptidoglycan b. Plant =cellulose c. Fungi= chitin 18. Bacteria characteristics: a. Most single cells (spherical, rod or curved shaped) b. Cell wall of peptidoglcyan c. Mobile? If so how do they move? d. Structures outside of cell wall: pili, capsule, outer-membrane e. Some are heterotrophs, some are autotrophs f. Difference in structure between a Gram + and Gram – bacterium? g. How reproduce? Asexual reproduction via binary fission h. Genetic recombination via lateral gene transfer (conjugation via sex pilus) i. Some (mainly rods) produce spores- why? 19. Distinguish between these bacteria: a. Obligate aerobes = b. Obligate anaerobes = c. Facultative anaerobes = 20. Pathogenic bacteria: cause disease in the host they infect due to some molecules they possess or produce. Most pathogenic bacteria produce poisons (toxins): a. Capsule = explain b. Endotoxins= chemical components of the outer membrane (in Gram – negative bacteria): LPS of outer membrane c. Exotoxins = proteins that bacterial cells secrete into their environment i. Several exotoxins produced by Staphylococcus aureus ii. Botulism toxin produced by Clostridium botulinum iii. Tetanus toxin produced by Clostridium tetani 21. Kingdom Protists is a diverse collection of eukaryotic organisms. There are multiple clades of protists with some lineages that are more closely related to plants, fungi, or animals than they are to other protists. a. Reproduction: asexual and sexual b. Some can move with flagella, cilia, or pseudopods. c. Some are autotrophs (A), some are heterotrophs (H), few are both i. (A) Algae (uni-cellular, colonial and multicellular seaweeds) ii. (A/H) Photosynthetic Euglena (a mixotroph) iii. (H) Protozoans- eat by ingestion iv. (H) Slime molds 22. How do protists move? Identify the structures and how they work. 23. Describe a protozoan (H). Single-celled protist that ingest their food and primarily live in aquatic environments (flagellates, ciliates, amoebas, and apicomplexans). Read ppt slide and study guide for more details. 24. Describe slime molds (H). Protist that resemble fungi in lifestyle and appearance as decomposers, but are not closely related. 25. Describe unicellular algae (A). Photosynthetic protist that support food chains in fresh water and marine ecosystems (dinoflagellates, diatoms and unicellular green algae) 26. Describe seaweeds (A). Multicellular, photosynthetic marine algae that grow on and near rocky shores (include red, green and brown algae) 27. Fungi characteristics: mushrooms, molds, mildew, bracket fungus, yeast, and truffles a. Body is made of thread-like filaments called hyphae: threads of cytoplasm surrounded by plasma membrane b. Most hyphae are multicellular (with chains of cells separated by cross walls with pores) c. Yeast are single-celled. d. All are heterotrophs that feed by absorption e. Haploid body cells f. Cells walls of chitin g. Don’t move h. Mycelium body of hyphae is underground or below a surface: it’s hyphae grow, feed, and produce reproductive structures. i. Generally reproductive structures grow above-ground (or above a surface) from the below ground mycelium; as with mushrooms & bread mold) j. Reproduction: asexual and sexual k. Typically reproduce by releasing haploid spores that are produced either sexually or asexually. l. Spores germinate by producing mycelia if they land on a moist place with food. 28. Fungi- What are fungal hyphae are used for? (see ppt slides) 29. Fungi- know about nutritional modes –see ppt slides and study guide 30. Fungi -Identify symbiotic relationships: lichen and mycorrhizae 31. Plants are: multicellular, photosynthetic autotrophs, sexual and asexual reproduction, don’t move 32. Characteristics of non-vascular plants (Bryophtes): mosses & liverworts 33. Characteristics of vascular plants with no seeds: ferns 34. Characteristics of vascular plants with seeds that are naked (gymnosperms): conifers/ ginkgos 35. Characteristics of flowering vascular plants with fruits surrounding their seeds (angiosperms): a. Monocots – grains like corn, lilies, palms b. Dicots – rose bushes, hardwood trees and cactus 36. Match mosses, ferns, pine trees, and rosebushes to either non-vascular, vascular without seeds, vascular with naked seeds and vascular, seeds surrounded by an ovary 37. Distinguish between an angiosperm and gymnosperm. How are they different: which is classified as monocots/dicots? Which includes conifers? Do they both produce pollen? 38. What are conifers? Be familiar with ppt slides 39. Know the fern life cycle. a. The diploid sporophyte produces haploid spores (via meiosis) which can fall to the ground and germinate to produce a haploid, multicellular gametophyte through mitotic divisions. b. Haploid sperm and eggs are found in the mature gametophyte. c. Water is required for the sperm to reach the egg. d. The fertilized egg produces a diploid zygote e. The diploid zygote divides by mitosis and grows and differentiates into diploid zygote. 40. Define apical meristem. (see ppt slide) a. Where are they found? b. Their mitotic division produces what type of growth? 41. Define lateral meristem a. Where are they found? b. Their mitotic division produces what type of growth? 42. Primary growth is growth in length 43. Secondary growth: a. Is growth in width of stems and roots b. Gives rise to secondary xylem and phloem c. It occurs in dicots & conifers when primary growth is completed. d. It causes the epidermis to be replaced with cork cells. 44. The division of the lateral meristem in the cork cambium produces __________ cells. 45. The division of the lateral meristem in the vascular cambium produces secondary ______________ and secondary _____________ 46. What are the three plant tissue, their descriptions and functions: a. Dermal: b. Ground: c. Vascular: now components and function of xylem and phloem 47. For a dicot know the arrangement of plant tissues in the root: a. Dermal (epidermis) with root hairs and no cuticle b. Cortex – outer cell mass and inner cell mass (endoderm) c. Vascular cylinder at the core 48. For a dicot know the arrangement of plant tissues in the stem: a. Vascular tissue arranged in a ring. b. Central tissue = ground tissue= pith c. Outer ground tissue = cortex d. Outermost tissue is dermal tissue =epidermis 49. For a monocot know the arrangement of plant tissues in the stem: a. Vascular tissue is scattered within ground tissue. 50. What is the dermal cuticle and what is its function? Where in a plant is the waxy, waterproof cuticle secreted? Where is it not secreted and why? 51. Know facts about leaf structure in dicots. a. They are the major sites of photosynthesis in most. b. They posses most of their stomata on the lower side of the leaf. c. They contain ground tissue called mesophyll. a. They contain bundles of vascular tissue (veins) that are branched within the leaf 52. Xylem a. Consists of tracheids and wider vessel elements b. Transports water and dissolved minerals 53. Phloem: a. Consists of sieve tube elements and companion cells b. Transports plant products (sugars and hormones) 54. The components of a complete flower include: 55. In an angiosperm the female gametophyte: is the egg, which is found within an ovule inside the ovary of a carpel. 56. In an angiosperm the male gametophyte: is sperm found in the anther of a pollen grain 57. In angiosperms: a. Microspores and megaspores are produced through meiosis and are haploid b. Microspores will give rise to the male gametophyte, while megaspores give rise to the female gametophyte. c. Microspores undergo ______ mitotic division to produce ______ sperm cells d. Megaspores undergo ______ mitotic divisions to produce ______ cells. 58. In angiosperms sexual reproduction is characterized by a double fertilization event. Which of the following statements is true regarding this double fertilization? One sperm fertilizes one egg and it will become the plant zygote, while a second sperm fertilizes a larger cell with 2 nuclei to become a triploid cell 59. Know the details of what happens after the egg is fertilized and the triploid cell is produced (see your ppt slides) 60. In an angiosperm what forms the seed? What does it provide? 61. In an angiosperm what forms the fruit? What different kinds of fruits exist? Tasty, winged or clingy; what is its purpose? 62. Why is seed dispersal important? 63. Define: a. Cotyledon b. Endosperm c. Pollination d. Fertilization e. Germination f. Seed dormancy g. Fertilization 64. Extra-credit: your protist handout. 65. Extra-credit: describe a lichen