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L1 L1 List the 8 taxa that are used in classification in order from largest to smallest. Which pattern of evolution explains that populations undergo rapid changes in a short period of time? A:(Domain, Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species) A:(Punctuated equilibrium) L1 L1 What is the function of the xylem in plants? Which direction does a restriction enzyme read DNA? A :( Conducts water) A:( 3’ to 5’ / 3 prime to 5 prime) L1 What is the process called in which (-) and (+) charges are applied to pull DNA fragments through gel? L1 Which of the following is generally a more serious mutation- a single base (point) mutation or achromosomal mutation? A:(Electrophoresis) A:(Chromosomal) L1 L1 List 2 characteristics of the Protista kingdom. What is a circular strand of DNA in a prokaryote cell called? A:(Single-celled, eukaryote, typically very mobile, extremely diverse) A :( Plasmid) L1 L1 What part of an egg must be removed before the cell can be cloned? Which project, launched in 1990, set out to sequence the genetic code for humans? (The nucleus) (Human Genome Project) L1 L1 List 2 Assumptions for Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium. What is a vestigial organ? (An organ that does not have a function) (No mutations, no migration, no selection, random mating, large population) L1 L1 Name 2 types of autotrophic bacteria. The peppered moth of England is a real-life example of which mechanism for evolution? A :( Photo and Chemo autotrophs) (Natural Selection) L1 L1 What is the function of the phloem in a plant? How do amoeba move? A:( Transport organic molecules/sugars/products of photosynthesis) A:(false feet or pseudopods) L1 L1 What would lead to a more serious mutation- a substitution or a deletion? If one strand of DNA is 100 bp long and another is 40 bp long, which one would travel further in gel? A:(Deletion) A:( 40 bp) L1 L1 If the half life of a radioactive element is 3,,500 yrs, how much should be present after 10,500 years? What is the endosperm used for in a seed? A:(Nourishes the embryo) A:( 1/8) L1 L1 In humans, our diploid number is _______and our haploid number is _______. Which organelle in a plant is responsible for photosynthesis? A:(46, 23) A :( Chloroplast) L1 L1 In the peppered moth population of England, the dark moths become more common than the light ones. What would scientists calculate to determine the extent of evolution in this population? Which cells in a plant form stomata? A:(Guard cells) A:( Allele frequencies) L1 L1 List 4 characteristics of the plant kingdom. Name two types of heterotrophic bacteria. A :( Multicellular, eukoryote, cell walls, cellulose in cell walls, autotrophic) A:( Chemoheterotrophs and photoheterotrophs) L1 L1 Which form of evidence for evolution would a bird wing and butterfly wing be? Why do viruses stick to some cells and not others? A:(Viral proteins must match the cell) A:(Analogous structure) L1 L1 What is a non-disjunction? What did we do to E.coli in AP lab 6a to get them to take in the foreign plasmid containing the jellyfish gene? A:(When chromosomes don’t separate during meiosis- gamete ends up with an extra copy) A:(Heat-shocked them) L1 L1 List 3 characteristics of bacteria What can you tell about the genotypes in a population after applying Hardy-Weinberg? A:(Single celled, prokaryote, plasmids, single chromosome……..) A:(How many BB’s and Bb’s) L1 L1 Why are pine and flowers placed into a separate class? List 3 characteristics of the Fungi kingdom A :( Pines have naked seeds, flowers have fruit surrounding seeds) A:(Multicellular, eukaryote, incomplete cell walls with chitin, heterotrophic) L1 L1 Why are moss placed into a separate phylum than ferns, pines and flowers? What is a retrovirus? A :( Lack a xylem and a phloem/vascular tissue) A:(A virus which contains RNA principle hereditary material) L1 L1 What is gradualism? In which type of organism are restriction enzymes naturally found? A:(Pattern of evolution-populations slowly evolve at a constant rate) L1 A:(Prokaryotes) A segment of DNA that codes for a protein is known as a _____________. L1 If the half life of a molecule is 2,000 yrs and ¼ of the radioactive molecule is remaining, how old is the fossil? A:(Gene) A:( 4,000 yrs) L1 L1 Why is jellyfish DNA able to function in bacterial plasmid DNA? A:(Both are made of the same molecules) What structures produced by a fungus have the ability to form new fungi if they land on a hospitable surface that contains moisture and food? L1 A: (Spores) L1 What is a point mutation? How do plants take in carbon dioxide and water? A:(A change is a single DNA base/nucleotide) A: (carbon dioxide is taken in from the air and water is absorbed from the ground) L1 L1 Mitosis is the division of a cell that gives rise to _____________ cells. Meiosis gives rise to _____________ cells. What specialized structures on a roots of certain plants increase surface area for absorbing water? A: (root hairs) A:(Identical, haploid or unique) L1 L1 List one practical application for genetic engineering. Sexual reproduction increases genetic _____________ in a population. A: (production of human proteins such as insulin, human growth hormone, genetically altering crops to be pest-resistant or herbicide resistant…………….) A: (variation) L1 L1 A human arm and a whale are examples of _______________ structures. Which tissue makes up the leaf veins of a plant? A: (xylem and phloem) A: (Homologous) L1 L1 Which two types of tissue are considered vascular tissue for certain plants? List two strategies a flower might use to attract pollinators. A: (xylem and phloem) A: (color, color pattern, smell, nectar, mimicry) L1 L1 List two strategies used by flowering plants for seed dispersal. Explain 1 method in which stomata can be used as an adaptation for life on land by certain types of plants. A: (fruit, stickers, seeds carried by wind, exploding fruit) L1 List the 3 domains. A: (plants have the ability to close them, they are closed during the day in CAM plants, they are located on the bottom of a leaf) L1 The scientific name for humans is Homo sapiens. Identify our genus name and species name. A: (Eubacteria/bacteria, Archaebacteria, Eukarya) A: (genus name is Homo and species name is sapiens) L1 L1 Which life form was considered to be the first to carry out photosynthesis? In the 1960s, Miller and Urey used gases in an experiment that are thought to have existed in the earth’s early atmosphere. Which gas did they purposely leave out? A: (Bacteria/prokaryotes) A: (Oxygen) L-1 L-1 List the two major components of a virus. If a bacterial strain doubles its population every 20 minutes and there is one cell to begin, how many cells would exist after 1 hour? A: (DNA or RNA and protein) A: (8 cells) L1 L1 What is the major difference between a prokaryote and eukaryote cell? What is the difference between the ribosomes of a prokaryote and the ribosomes of a eukaryote? A: (prokaryotes lack nuclei) A: (prokaryote ribosomes are smaller than eukaryote ribosomes) L1 L1 Which polysaccharide is found in fungal cell walls? Which polysaccharide is found in the cell wall of plants? A: (chitin) A: (cellulose) L1 L1 Scientists think that billions of years ago, the concentration of oxygen in the atmosphere began to increase. This would have theoretically opened up a new niche for which type of organisms? What evidence did scientists consider when they placed archaebacteria and eubacteria into completely different domains? A: (the analysis of DNA sequences) A: (aerobic bacteria) L-1 What type of reproduction is binary fission? L1 When do CAM plants (such as cacti) open their stomata? A: (asexual – it is also known as cell cloning) A: (at night) L1 L1 What type of organism is generally susceptible to antibiotics? Which type of organism naturally produces antibiotics? A: (bacteria) A: (Fungi) L2 L2 What is allopatric speciation? Define transpiration. A:(Speciation due to geographic isolation) A:(Water evaporation from leaves) L2 L2 Why do flowers undergo double fertilization? What is the difference between the sporophyte and gametophyte generation in plants) A:(Each pollen grain contains two nuclei – each nucleus fertilizes a part of the ovule or egg) L2 Why are Darwin’s finches considered to be an example of adaptive radiation? A:(Sporophyte= diploid cells, gametophyte= haploid cells) L2 Define Transformation. A:(When bacteria take in foreign DNA) A :( Took advantage of a variety of food sources, different beak sizes were selected for) L2 L2 Name two factors which are used to determine if organisms are the same species List 3 main factors which contribute to variation in a population. A:(Fertile offspring, mate naturally) A:(Mutation, sexual reproduction, crossing over, random assortment) L2 L2 Where does the restriction enzyme EcoR1 get its name? List 4 main types of plants found on earth and the order in which they evolved. A:(Eco=bacteria found in, R=strain of bacteria, 1=1st one found) A:(mosses, ferns, gymnosperm/pines, angiosperms/flowering plants) L2 L2 After fertilization in a flower, what does the ovary eventually become? The ovules? What is the evolutionary trend in plants concerning the sporophyte and gametophyte generations? A:(Fruit, seeds) A:(Gametophyte dominant in early plants, sporophyte dominant in more recent plants) L2 L2 What does it mean that a bacterium is a facultative Name 2 ways in which fungi can reproduce. anaerobe? A:(Asexual and sexual) A:(Can live with or without oxygen) L2 L2 What is sympatric speciation? Which process commonly occurs in flowering plants and is considered a form of sympatric speciation? A:(Speciation within same habitat) A:(Polyploidy) L2 L2 A population consists of 16 blondes and 84 brunettes. What is the frequency of the dominant allele? Name the structure that carries out absorption for a fungus. A:(Hyphae) A:(.6) L2 L2 Which structure can be found on the bottom of a fern leaf? What is the difference between pollination and seed dispersal? A:(Pollination is when pollen reaches the female part of a flower - seed dispersal when seeds are dispersed away from parent plant) A:(Spores) L2 L2 List 3 mechanisms for evolution. Which leaf layer is adjacent (next to) the lower epidermis? A:(Genetic drift, natural selection , migration) A:(Spongy mesophyll) L2 L2 What is it that plants track in photoperiodism and what function in a plant is controlled as a result? List the two tropisms that certain plants may exhibit. A: (plants track night length – flowering is controlled) A: (phototropism, gravitropism, thigmotropism) L2 L2 What does it mean that a bacterium is an obligate anaerobe? 2n refers to the __________number of a cell, N refers to the ___________number. A:(Can only live in an oxygen-free environment) A:(Diploid, haploid) L2 L2 What is a germ mutation? A population consists of 9% blue eyes people. What is the frequency of the dominant allele? A:(Mutation in the sex cell) A:(.7) L2 L2 List the 3 major plant groups that have vascular tissues. List three extreme environments in which archaebacteria can be found. A:(Ferns, pines and flowers) A:(Acid, heat, anaerobic, salt) L2 List the 5 assumptions of Hardy-Weinberg. A: (No migration, no mutations, no selection, random mating, large population) What does it mean that a bacterium is an obligate aerobe? A: (Can live in oxygenated environment only) L2 L2 List two of Darwin’s four principles of Natural What part of a person’s genome is used to Selection. produce a DNA fingerprint? A: (Individuals in a population vary; Some of that variation is inherited; More individuals are A: (a certain type of RFLP called Repeat Sequences) produced in a population than the environment can support; The most “fit” individuals pass on genes most often L2 L2 What is divergent evolution? A: (The idea that two species originated from a common ancestor) What is the order of evolution for the following organisms if Species X and Y are 90% similar on a genetic level, Species X and W are 80% similar, and Y and W are 85% similar. A: (X, Y, W or W,Y,X) L2 L2 List two reasons why phytoplankton are important in respect to life on earth. What type of organism do scientists propose helped to increase the concentration of oxygen in our atmosphere a few billion years ago? A: (they are the major producers of the ocean, they trap the majority of CO2 on a daily basis, they produce a lot of oxygen for heterotrophs) L2 A: (photosynthetic bacteria) L2 Put the following types of organisms in order according to their proposed evolution: eukaryotes, multicellular, prokaryotes. Periods in geologic history that involve great numbers of organisms disappearing are known as _________ _________________. A: (prokaryotes, eukaryotes, multicellular) A: (mass extinctions) L2 L2 What is the evidence that the metabolic pathways (such as aerobic respiration) of many species evolved from primitive, but very similar pathways? What does the RNA World Hypothesis state? A: (the first life forms contained RNA instead of DNA as the genetic material) A: (Many species – i.e. bacteria vs. humans – share similar enzymes/proteins/genes) L2 L2 Which enzyme, coded for by retroviral DNA, copies a single strand of RNA to make DNA? The Central Dogma of Biology is DNA to RNA to protein. How are retroviruses different? (Reverse transcriptase) A: (They convert RNA to DNA to RNA/mRNA to protein) L2 L2 What can happen if two viral strains infect 1 host cell simultaneously (at the same time)? How are bacteria and protists different in terms of their cell structure? A: (The genetic material of the viruses can recombine/mix together and create a new viral strain) A: (bacteria lack nuclei, have smaller ribosomes, lack true organelles) L2 L2 What is the major component found in a bacterial cell wall? Why can’t we say that bacteria carry out mitosis even though they begin with one cell and produce two new cells? A: (peptidoglycan) (Mitosis is the division of the nucleus and bacteria lack nuclei) L2 L2 What is the process called when bacteria clone themselves? List 2 adaptations of flowering plants regarding leaf structure that makes them well-adapted to life on land. A: (waxy cuticle, stomata on the bottom, some have leaf hairs that deflects wind, some have reduced leaf surface area such as spines of a cactus) L2 A: (binary fission) L2 List the two layers of the mesophyll tissue in a plant. Which layer carries out the majority of photosynthesis? A: (Pallisade layer/mesophyll and spongy layer/mesophyll – Pallisade layer carries out the majority of photosynthesis) L2 List three forms of evidence that suggest mitochondria and chloroplasts might have once been living bacteria. List two differences between a spore and a seed. A: (spores are microscopic and haploid; seeds are macroscopic and contain diploid embryos) L2 What types of genes does a bacterial plasmid typically carry? A: (These organelles have their own DNA, replicate independent from the cell, double membrane, have their own ribosomes, similar in size to bacteria) L2 (antibiotic resistance) What is the process called when a bacterium takes in a foreign plasmid? Divergent evolution results in ________________ structures. A: (Transformation) A: (Homologous) L2 L2 Convergent evolution results in ________________ structures. Define homologous structures. L2 A: (Analogous) A: (Structure that have different functions but similar internal anatomy/embryonic origins) L2 L2 Define analogous structures. List two substances carried by xylem tissue in a plant. A: (Structures that have similar functions but very different internal anatomy/embryonic origins) A: (Water and minerals) L-3 Describe the fate of the triploid tissue as well as the fate of the diploid tissue in a flower ovule (once fertilization has occurred). L-3 How does punctuated equilibrium attempt to explain the gaps (missing links/intermediate forms) in the fossil record? A: (triploid tissue becomes endosperm and diploid tissue becomes the plant embryo) A: (there were no intermediate forms – evolution was rapid and changes for a species were drastic) L-3 How does gradualism attempt to explain the gaps (missing links/intermediate forms) in the fossil record? L3 A: (intermediate forms did exist since evolution is slow and gradual, but these forms were never fossilized) L3 A: (they get energy from light and use CO2 as a carbon source) How do chemoautotrophs obtain energy? What is their carbon source? How do photoheterotrophs obtain energy? What is their carbon source? A: (they get energy from inorganic chemicals like sulfur and nitrogen gas; their carbon source comes from CO2) L3 A: (they get energy from light and consume food to obtain carbon) How do chemoheterotrophs obtain energy? What is their carbon source? How do aerobic bacteria carry out respiration if they lack mitochondria? A: (they get energy from food and they get their carbon from food) A: (they carry out processes of respiration along their plasma membrane) L3 One characteristic of bacteria is that they do not have the compartmentalization that can be observed in a typical eukaryotic cell. What does this mean? L3 A: (bacteria do not have membrane-bound organelles such as lysosomes and endoplasmic reticula, therefore, it is more difficult for them to separate chemical reactions that go on inside their cell L3 Can a haploid cell undergo mitosis? Meiosis? Explain. How do photoautotrophs obtain energy? What is their carbon source? L3 L3 Explain how auxin causes plants to bend toward light. A: (auxin migrates to the side of the plant opposite the light; the cells respond to auxin by growing longer than the cells facing the light and this length difference causes plants to bend toward light) L3 List 3 practical applications for genetic engineering. A: (a haploid cell can only undergo mitosis – it can make identical copies of itself. However, it cannot carry out meiosis because it already contains just one copy of each type of gene) (cloning, gene sequencing to I.D. diseased genes, genetically enhanced food, solving crime scenes, determining paternity ………..) L3 L3 Name 4 diseases caused by a bacteria. Name 3 prezygotic reproductive barriers. A:(Strep throat, bubonic plague, anthrax, food poisoning, tetanus, staph infection……………..) A:(Geographical, temporal, behavioral, mechanical, gametic) L3 L3 Explain lytic infection in a virus. List the 3 types of tropisms in plants. A:(Viral DNA injection into host cell, takes over cell’s machinery makes new viruses, cell bursts) A:(Phototropism, gravitropism, thigmotropism) L3 L3 What is transduction? Explain lysogenic infection in a virus. A:(When a virus spreads DNA between bacteria) A:(Viral DNA is injected into host DNA where it remains latent for a period of time) L3 L3 What type of mutation results in non-homologous chromosomes crossing over? List 4 forms of evidence that support evolution. A:(Translocation) A:(Fossils, biochemistry, embryos, homologous/analogous structures, vestigial organs) L3 L3 Explain population bottleneck. Explain founder effect. A:(Allele frequencies in a population change due to a drastic decrease in population size) A:(When one portion of a population moves to another location and carries a phenotype in high or low proportion) L3 L3 What is conjugation? Name 5 diseases cause by a virus. A:(When a bacterium accepts a plasmid from another bacterium) A:(Aids, cold, flu, measles, mumps, ebola, chickenpox…………..) L-3 L-3 What is guttation? Name 3 postzygotic reproductive barriers. A: (Loss of water out of the end of the leaves of small (Hybrid inviability, hybrid sterility, F2 breakdown) plants due to temperature/pressure changes at night) L-3 L2 Name the 4 major forces responsible for water replacement in plants. How does the endosymbiosis hypothesis explain how eukaryote cells evolved from prokaryote cells? A: )Transpiration, Adhesion, Cohesion, Root Pressure (TARP)) A: (A large bacterium engulfed smaller bacteria which eventually became mitochondria and chloroplasts) L3 Explain why the evolutionary trend of moving L3 Prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells can both from a dominant gametophyte generation to a contain flagella for motility (movement). However, dominant sporophyte generation for plants would be the design of the structures is very different. Based a genetic advantage. on this situation, what type of structures would you consider prokaryotic and eukaryotic flagella to be? A: (To express a mutant and possibly harmful phenotype, a haploid individual only needs to carry A: (analogous – like a bird wing and butterfly wing) one copy of the gene L3 L3 What is PCR used for when DNA is being prepared for gel electrophoresis? Explain how water specifically enters the root cell of a plant. A: (PCR – polymerase chain reaction – is a process in which the DNA is replicated many times over so that there is enough DNA to run through the gel) L3 A: (Plants first pump minerals into the root cells and then water follows through osmosis) What are mycorrhizae? Explain their relationship with plants. A: (Fungi that wrap around the roots of some plants – they absorb water for plants and the plants feed them sugar) L3 According to the RNA World Hypothesis, scientists have reasoned that RNA could have possibly been the first genetic molecule. List 2 characteristics of RNA that would make this idea reasonable. L3 What is lichen? Explain how it is an example of a symbiotic relationship. A:(Lichen is part fungi and part algae – it generally grows on logs and rocks – the fungus part of lichen absorbs water & minerals from rocks and the algae part carries out photosynthesis & feeds the fungus) L3 How do certain types of bacteria carry out photosynthesis if they lack chloroplasts? A: (RNA can replicate, it can code for proteins, and some types of RNA can act as enzymes) A: (they carry out this process along their plasma membrane)