Study Guide: Quiz 6

 

Quiz Preparation Tasks:

Your Answers and Notes

11

Elegant Responsiveness

 

 

A hormone that controls a person’s appetite might bind to ____________ proteins on membranes in the brain.

 

 

What is the typical site of origin of leptin hormone?

 

 

 

In a normal person, what is the effect of elevated leptin levels in the bloodstream?

 

 

11.1

Life’s Responsiveness

 

 

If a bog plant designed to catch insects proves unable to do so, the result will be starvation for ____________.

 

 

Why does a living thing need to be responsive?

 

 

 

Based on Figure 11.5 in your text, what is the role of homeostatic mechanisms?

 

 

 

 

 

When an environmental change shifts an organism’s internal chemistry toward a new state, the organism’s response is to try to return its chemistry toward the original state. This tendency on the organism’s part is called ____________.

 

11.2

Responsiveness at the Transcriptional Level

 

 

In the lactose operon of E. coli, what causes the repressor protein to change its shape?

 

 

 

What is the resultant effect of the repressor protein’s shape change on lactose gene expression?

 

 

When there is little or no lactose present in a bacterium’s environment, then the gene for the lactose transport enzyme is not trans-____________ and trans-____________.

 

 

When there is little or no lactose present in a bacterium’s environment, then the gene for the ____________ breakdown enzyme is not transcribed and translated.

 

 

When there is little or no lactose present in a bacterium’s environment, then the ____________ sequence in the DNA is bound by a repressor protein.

 

 

When there is little or no lactose present in a bacterium’s environment, then the ____________ operon is shut down.

 

 

When the lactose operon is functioning, the bacterium can ____________ and break down lactose because ____________ and degradation genes are being transcribed.

 

11.3

Responsiveness at the Cellular Level

 

 

After a fly trips the sensory hair on the modified leaf of a Venus flytrap, what is the very next step in the closing process?

 

 

According to Figure 11.10, list the complete sequence of chemical events in the closure of a Venus flytrap.

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the Venus flytrap, the enzyme expansin helps to close the trap by loosening the ____________ in the plant’s cell walls.

 

 

Once ____________ has weakened the cellulose in the walls of the leaf trap cells, ____________ rushes into the cells, expanding them and closing the trap.

 

11.5

Responsiveness at the Organ System Level

 

 

The suprachiasmatic nuclei in the brain help the human nervous system to respond to daily alterations in ____________ and ____________.

 

 

The ____________ ____________ enable the nervous system to respond to light/dark alterations through their stimulation of the pineal ____________ in the center of your head.

 

 

The human nervous system responds to daily alterations in light and darkness by influencing melatonin levels in the ____________.

 

 

The human nervous system responds to daily alterations in light and darkness by controlling how much melatonin reaches the ____________ nuclei.

 

 

The human nervous system responds to daily alterations in light and darkness by modulating the amount of ____________ secretion of the hypothalamus.

 

 

The human nervous system responds to daily alterations in light and darkness by influencing ____________ levels secreted by the thyroid gland.

 

 

The human nervous system responds to daily alterations in light and darkness by changing the basal ____________ rate of your cells.

 

 

One effect of melatonin on the suprachiasmatic nuclei is that it corrects the ____________ of their day/night signaling system.

 

 

What is the general effect of decreasing melatonin levels in the body?

 

 

 

List 5 different reasons some individuals take a melatonin supplement.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12

Informational Continuity in Organisms

 

 

Biological information is preserved within the base sequence of what molecule?

 

 

12.1

Reproduction: Asexual and Sexual

 

 

Asexual Reproduction

 

 

Give 3 examples of asexual reproduction methods in plants.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What method of asexual reproduction does the Kalanchoe plant utilize?

 

 

 

What method of asexual reproduction does the Iris plant utilize?

 

 

 

Sexual Reproduction

 

 

One major advantage of sexual reproduction over asexual reproduction is that in sexual reproduction, the population has increased ____________ variability.

 

 

List 4 disadvantages of sexual reproduction.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An “allele” is a specific alternate form of a ____________.

 

 

 

Two slightly different versions of genes that lie at the exact same location on two separate homologous chromosomes are called ____________.

 

 

The phrase “two homologous sets of genes” can mean either two similar collections of genes from two separate ____________, or two similar collections of genes arranged on two complete sets of ____________.

 

12.2

Preparing Reproductive Cells for Multicellular Organisms

 

 

The Challenge of Making a Reproductive Cell

 

 

A reproductive cell must differ genetically from other normal body cells in what critical way (because it will soon fuse with another reproductive cell to form a new individual)?

 

 

How Can This Ploidy Problem Be Solved?

 

 

The specialized process that halves the number of chromosomes during sex cell formation is named ____________.

 

 

Meiosis: A Triumph of Genome Reduction and Genetic Variability

 

 

List in order 8 successive stages in the process of meiosis.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The stage of meiosis in which the total number of chromosomes is reduced to half is called the reduction division. Which stage brings this about?

 

 

For each of 23 pairs of chromosomes, the haploid egg cell will have either a maternal or paternal chromosome, but it can be different for each pair. This explains how the process of meiosis contributes to genetic ____________.

 

 

Differentiation of Reproductive Cells: A Biological Context

 

 

In the human life cycle, diploid cells undergo a cell division process called ____________. The resulting haploid cells later fuse during ____________, which regenerates diploid cells.

 

 

Early in your own development there exists a small subset of diploid cells called primary germ cells. Where do they begin to develop? Where do they migrate to and lodge? What process will they later go through to become haploid? What will they be called right before the first cell division in that process?

 

 

Haploid secondary spermatocytes go on directly to complete meiosis, forming four spermatid cells. These will eventually differentiate into sperm cells. The last stage of meiosis (that generates the spermatids) is called ____________.

 

12.3

Reproduction in Humans

 

 

Oogenesis in Humans

 

 

A secondary oocyte that has undergone one meiotic division, a polar body, a fluid-filled cavity, and a spherical cluster of nutritive cells are all found within a structure called a mature ____________.

 

 

For about half of a woman’s monthly cycle, the hormone ____________ leaves the pituitary gland and, at the ovary, signals it to bring a more advanced ____________ to complete maturity.

 

 

What hormone, suddenly secreted from the anterior pituitary gland in high levels, causes the mature follicle to rupture from the ovary surface?

 

 

The reproductive system uses the hormones ____________ and (later on) ____________ to “think ahead.” They guide the preparation of the uterus for its role in supporting pregnancy.

 

 

The mature egg, once ruptured from its follicle, is swept into the ____________ by finger-like fringes called ____________.

 

 

Normally a fertilized egg ends its journey temporarily by implanting within the wall of what structure?

 

 

Spermatogenesis and Fertilization

 

 

Sperm cell production occurs within the interior lining of the ____________.

 

 

 

Using Figure 12.21, list in order the sequence of cell types that produce a sperm cell.

 

 

 

 

Leydig cells, testosterone,             LH hormone, and FSH hormone are all involved in the control of ____________ cell production.

 

 

List in order the structures by which a mature sperm cell travels from the epididymis to the female’s reproductive tract.

 

 

Penetration of the egg’ zona pellucida by the sperm cell is a process driven by the activity of a(n) ____________.

 

 

The quintessential (most basic/most important) moment of fertilization of the egg by the sperm cell occurs when the male and female ____________ fuse together into one nucleus.

 

12.4

Reproduction Constrained, Part 1: Control of Birth

 

 

Which methods of birth control work by blocking sperm on its journey from the testicle to the Fallopian tube?

 

 

Which methods of birth control work by altering the hormonal chemistry of the female partner?

 

 

Which of the following methods by which human conception can be postponed is least invasive of the complexity of human physiology? the rhythm method, the vaginal ring, oral contraceptives, tubal ligation, vasectomy

 

 

Name a birth control method that is primarily contraceptive and secondarily abortive in its effects.

 

12.5

Reproduction Constrained, Part 2: Destruction of Life

 

 

Philosophers and Theologians Attempt to Define Personhood

 

 

How did the philosopher Plato set about to determine when human life begins? What terms did he use? When did he consider human life to begin?

 

 

Aristotle, the “Father of Biology,” believed that a human being became a person once he or she exhibited what characteristic?

 

 

Biologists Work to Define the Human Individual

 

 

One excellent biological approach to determining when a mother and her conceptus become separate individuals is the detection of the first measurable ____________ ____________ ____________ via electroencephalography.

 

 

At about what time or stage of development does male genetic information from the sperm begins to be translated into protein products? (This is used by some to determine when a mother and her conceptus become separate individuals.)

 

 

Destruction of Human Life Takes Various Forms

 

 

What chemical combination is commonly used to terminate a pregnancy, killing the little one?

 

 

Briefly describe a common surgical procedure for aborting a little one.

Study Guide: Quiz 7

 

Quiz Preparation Tasks:

Your Answers and Notes

13

Life Is Ultimate Art

 

13.1

Life and Its Diversity: Ultimate Art or Ultimate Accident?

 

 

Life as Ultimate Art

 

 

The sentence, “O you, who look on this our machine, do not be sad that with others you are fated to die, but rejoice that our Creator has endowed us with such an excellent instrument as the intellect” was first spoken by what great scientist/philosopher?

 

 

Life as Ultimate Accident

 

 

What great observation did Charles Darwin make from nature as a result of his reading and voyage around the world?

 

 

List some organisms observed by Charles Darwin while reading and voyaging the world.

 

 

Charles Darwin’s view of the species was that populations of a species continually experienced new ____________ and continually became more ____________.

 

 

Charles Darwin believed that whole new species originated as a result of populations of the same species reproducing in two distinct, separate ____________ and responding to those ____________ in different ways.

 

 

Complete the following sentence describing how Darwin interpreted his observations of nature: Individuals within populations ____________ with each other for limited ____________; some of these individuals will ____________ better than others.

 

 

List 7 features of Enlightenment thinking.

 

 

The term ____________ represents a predictive theory of how a species might change with time, whereas the term ____________ assumes that nature can create whole new structures and organisms.

 

13.2

Can Life Originate without Artistry?

 

 

Evolution’s First Goal: The Smallest Cell

 

 

Compare Mycoplasma genitalium’s physical size with that of E. coli.

 

 

Compare Mycoplasma genitalium’s genome size (number of genes) with that of E. coli.

 

 

How was Mycoplasma genitalium discovered and what sorts of infection does it cause in humans?

 

 

Evolution’s Starting Materials: Small Geochemicals

 

 

Some have speculated that the origin of life occurred at geothermal vents. What is the problem with the amino acids formed near these vents?

 

 

Evolution’s Highest Hurdle: Creating and Storing Information

 

 

Some scholars have viewed RNA as the original site of information storage in the primitive cell. One advantage of this view is that RNA can both store ____________ and can act catalytically like a(n) ____________.

 

 

Could RNA have been the original site of information storage in the primitive cell? List some difficulties with this possibility.

 

 

One problem associated with evolving a system in which RNA bases code for ____________ acids is that the correct bonding of amino acids to tRNAs requires ____________ catalysis—mature proteins are needed to begin making the first proteins.

 

 

Evolution’s Final Challenge: Spatial Ordering of Biological Activity

 

 

State Francis Crick’s theory of directed panspermia.

 

13.3

Can Life’s Diversity Increase without Artistry?

 

 

The Gap to Be Bridged: Invention of Novel Complex Structures

 

 

Describe 1 popular evolutionary model for the origin of flight in vertebrates. Fliers must have evolved from non-fliers that ____________ and then glided down from ____________.

 

 

List the names of some component structures of a primary flight feather.

 

 

Given its precise shape, what is the role of the barbule in the primary flight feather?

 

 

How does preening behavior enable a bird to continue to fly successfully?

 

 

During the formation of a feather, a tube-like ____________ appears as a result of early induction events within the dermal layer of the wing surface.

 

 

What is a basic evolutionary advance needed to convert a down-like feather into a primary flight feather? The feather’s ____________ must be ____________ and reshaped to help support the bird’s weight.

 

 

Bridging the Gap I: Random Mutations in Primitive Feather Keratinocytes

 

 

What are some new mutations needed to generate appropriate structures for flight feathers? (A mutation that matches barbule ____________ to the space ____________ feather barbs.)

 

 

Bridging the Gap II: Natural Selection in Primitive Feather Keratinocytes

 

 

Distinguish the roles of mutation and natural selection in developing a better organism. Mutation ____________ the genes, and natural selection ____________ the genes.

 

 

Natural selection is an “expensive” process. Explain what this means in terms of the lives of the members of the population in which the selection is occurring.

 

 

In what sort of environmental situation is natural selection particularly limited in its effectiveness in preserving new favorable mutations?

 

 

Define the phrase “selection pressure.”

 

 

“Natural selection is cybernetically blind.” It does not ____________ the structural hierarchies it is required to construct.

 

 

Evaluation of the Naturalistic Hypothesis

 

 

Natural selection is unable to “see” a new useful biological function while protecting a different existing function. Is this a fair statement evaluating the naturalistic hypothesis? If not, what is a better one?

 

13.5

What Is the Product and Value of Evolution?

 

 

Mutations Harmful, Neutral, and Helpful

 

 

How does the design theorist arrive at the conclusion that most mutations occurring today are harmful? What does he or she assume to be true of the living thing in which the mutations are occurring?

 

 

The naturalist also comes to the conclusion that most mutations occurring today are harmful because the naturalist and the theist both assume that by now, the living thing is a collection of highly inter-related, well “crafted” systems. So, most mutations occurring today would not contribute to the process of ____________.

 

 

List 3 broad classes of mutations, each of which affects the evolutionary process differently.

 

 

Which class of mutations accumulate silently in the DNA, having no obvious effect on one’s ability to reproduce?

 

 

How would a design theorist define a beneficial mutation?

 

 

What is a Darwinist’s definition of a beneficial mutation?

 

 

What Does Nature Select?

 

 

What does stabilizing selection do among individuals of a population?

 

 

Which sort of selection can eliminate rare individuals whose sexuality is intermediate between male and female?

 

 

Directional selection moves a population phenotypically in a new ____________.

 

 

Which sort of selection has been used to generate a small increase in the number of bristles on the thorax of flies?

 

 

What problem arises when you desire to see if directional selection could move a population of primitive organisms toward long-term change?

 

 

What problem arises when you desire to see if directional selection could move a population of modern, internally-integrated organisms toward long-term change? (A seemingly good change in one direction, ____________.)

 

 

Adding in Revealed Truth

 

 

In the early pages of the Genesis record, how might the first of three stages of life history best be described? (Note the three vertical red arrows in Figure 13.63.)

 

 

Of the three stages of life history implied in the early pages of the Genesis record, which one appears least likely to involve any biological change in populations with time?

 

 

How might the third stage of life history implied in the early pages of the Genesis record best be described?

 

 

What phrase does Romans 8 use to describe modern living organisms?

 

Study Guide: Quiz 8

 

Quiz Preparation Tasks:

Your Answers and Notes

14

An Infinity of Diversity

 

14.1

The Challenge of Classifying Life’s Diversity

 

 

A problem that confounds attempts to organize the entire living world for study is that it is unknown how many separate ____________ of life forms exist on this planet.

 

 

A problem that confounds attempts to organize the entire living world for study is that there are too many organisms with too much overlapping ____________ to support a simple means of classification.

 

 

A problem that confounds attempts to organize the entire living world for study is the need of evolutionists to bring the entire diversity of living things ultimately into ____________ ____________.

 

14.2

Classification: Engaging the Challenge

 

 

Seeking to scientifically name each variety of life form found and relate it to other similar species is a discipline known as ____________.

 

 

The term ____________ refers to attempts to derive a biologically meaningful filing system for organizing genera and species.

 

 

What criteria are used for collecting species of organisms into a genus?

 

 

Compared to a species, a ____________ is more inclusive, with broader structural and functional variations.

 

 

Be able to properly write the scientific name for human beings according to the rules for naming species.

 

 

The convention used for representing scientific names for newly discovered species is that ____________ root words are used in order to name the organism’s primary ____________ ____________.

 

 

List these 4 taxonomic levels in their correct order, from least inclusive to most inclusive: species, genus, family, order

 

 

List these 5 taxonomic levels in their correct order, from least inclusive to most inclusive: family, order, class, phylum, kingdom

 

14.3

Characteristics Used in Classification

 

 

List and describe 7 basic characteristics used to classify living things.

 

14.4

Using Characteristics: Priorities and Presuppositions

 

 

The state of flux in modern systematic groupings could best be described as/seen in a variety of conflicting kingdom or ____________ structures.

 

 

List 2 currently accepted classification schemes shared in your text. Each scheme attempts to take in all known organisms.

 

 

In the mind of evolutionary theorists, separate clades (large groups) derived from a single common ____________ at the point where clade lineages meet.

 

 

In the minds of design theorists, separate clades (large groups) derived from separate ____________ in the Mind of a Designer.

 

14.5

Using Characteristics to Derive Groups

 

 

List the names of 10 groups of living organisms and a representative species of organism belonging to each group.

 

 

List 10 small sets of defining characteristics that can be used to place organisms within each of the 10 groups.

 

 

 

 

15

Ecology: Interactivity by Design

 

 

Your textbook describes two sequential ____________ of interaction between organisms and their environments that have existed since God’s creative work began.

 

15.1

Thinking like an Ecologist: Exploring a Lake

 

 

Name the 3 zones of life found in a lake.

 

 

The phytoplankton of a lake would be found in highest numbers in the ____________ zone.

 

 

During the springtime, a light wind blowing across a lake will foster the process of lake overturn. This timely event will bring together accumulated ____________ with living ____________.

 

 

Explain how the unusual relative densities of water and ice are critical to the viability of life in a deep lake.

 

15.2

Hierarchical Organization in Ecology

 

 

List the names of several different levels of organization at which ecology is studied.

 

 

Studying competition between the Peaks of Otter salamander and the Eastern redback salamander would be an example of studying ecology at the ____________ level.

 

 

At which of the levels of organization listed above can the Peaks of Otter salamander be studied?

 

15.3

Organismal Ecology

 

 

The functional role of a species within its habitat is referred to as its ____________.

 

 

An area providing cool, moist conditions with rocks and decaying logs at an appropriate elevation and rainfall level constitutes a good ____________ for the Peaks of Otter salamander.

 

15.5

Community Ecology

 

 

A relationship between individuals of two species in which members of one species are benefited and members of the other species are unaffected is termed ____________.

 

 

The relationship between the wildebeest and Thompson’s gazelle represents a good example of commensalism.

 

 

Interspecific Competition

 

 

Define the phrase “interspecific competition” in terms of how the species within its relationship are affected.

 

 

Explain why young Balanus barnacles cannot compete with Chthamalus barnacles in higher intertidal regions.

 

 

How do species of warblers (birds) living in the same general region minimize their interspecific competition?

 

 

One Species Benefits and the Other is Adversely Affected

 

 

Baleen whales use ____________ to prey on herring fish.

 

 

Thorns, toxic products of metabolism, fuzzy structures, and predator satiation are all defense tactics that what large group of organisms use to keep from being preyed upon?

 

 

When a species of fly has a bold coloration very similar to that of an unpalatable (stinging) yellow jacket, the fly’s “strategy” is termed ____________ ____________.

 

 

Both Species Benefit

 

 

The best term to describe the species-species interaction between Pseudomyrmex ants and the bullhorn acacia plant would be ____________.

 

 

In the human and greater honeyguide mutualism, how is the honeyguide bird benefited?

 

15.7

A Final Word about Our Interaction with God’s Household

 

 

Summarize a rationale for why a fallen, decaying created order still needs to be stewarded carefully by its human inhabitants.

·        Question 1

0 out of 3.2 points

Sodium ions are attracted to chloride ions because

·        Question 2

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Chromatography is useful for separating ________ out of a(n) __________.

·        Question 3

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A skillful scientist can use a well-asked question to fashion a testable

·        Question 4

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Electrons are arranged within spherical ________ arranged in concentric ________ in the structure of atoms.

·        Question 5

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Plants and Animals are examples of major groups or organisms within a

·        Question 6

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The smallest particle of a compound (that has all the properties of the compound) is a(n) __________.

·        Question 7

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is a requirement for the growth of a living organism?

·        Question 8

0 out of 3.2 points

A macro-molecular structure in the cell is composed of

·        Question 9

3.2 out of 3.2 points

In the arrangement of particles within any atom, the outermost sort of particle is always the

·        Question 10

3.2 out of 3.2 points

“A mouse runs because natural selection happens to have given it feet.” This statement would be made by

·        Question 11

0 out of 3.2 points

Neutrons are __________ charged particles.

·        Question 12

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is a major group of organisms within a three-domain system?

·        Question 13

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Although your text presents scientific truth as error-prone, it still asserts that it is a valid source of truth because

·        Question 14

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A Brazilian student wondered why the leaves began changing colors on the trees in Virginia right around the time of Fall Break. This is an example of:

·        Question 15

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Your mouth, an alpine valley or a swamp are all examples of ecosystems. All ecosystems on the earth taken together are called

·        Question 16

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following statements represents an interpretation of scientific data?

·        Question 17

3.2 out of 3.2 points

DNA is a molecule found in living things. It is the physical starting point of the principle that

·        Question 18

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Many evolutionists believe that Pakicetus, a terrestrial mammal, is the evolutionary ancestor of modern whales because Pakicetus fossils are found below whale fossils in the geologic column.  This belief is an example of:

·        Question 19

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A Bible reader can discover a reason for biological life’s significance by meditating on

·        Question 20

3.2 out of 3.2 points

What is one limitation scientists face in being sure they possess scientific “truth”?

·        Question 21

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A source of information and a source of energy are required in order for an organism to

·        Question 22

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Decreases in oxygen level at high altitudes cause hemoglobin levels in the bloodstream to rise because

·        Question 23

0 out of 3.2 points

Your textbook discussed two separate approaches to truth. They were

·        Question 24

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A condensation reaction joins two organic molecules together creating an H+ ion and an –OH ion. These then

·        Question 25

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following processes would come last or latest in a sequence of scientific activities?

·        Question 1

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following processes is involved in muscle contraction?

·        Question 2

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The function of the urinary bladder is to

·        Question 3

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following sequences would best describe how a signal moves through a reflex arc?

·        Question 4

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The nervous system interacts with the ___________ system to coordinate the internal integration of all the other body systems together.

·        Question 5

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The efferent or motor branch of the peripheral nervous system is subdivided into the ______ (voluntary) and ____________ (involuntary) nervous systems.

·        Question 6

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following systems of the body interact with the nervous system?

·        Question 7

0 out of 3.2 points

Systolic blood pressure:

·        Question 8

3.2 out of 3.2 points

All of the following are systems of the body except the:

·        Question 9

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The entire human nervous system is organized into the central nervous system and the _______ nervous system.

·        Question 10

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following brain regions and their functions are improperly matched?

·        Question 11

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The role of the ___________ branch of the autonomic nervous system mediates control of organ processes when the body is essentially ______.

·        Question 12

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The function of the kidney is

·        Question 13

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is part of the human digestive system, correctly matched to the role it plays in the digestion process?

·        Question 14

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following types of tissue helps to keep both our blood pressure regulated and our digestive processes effective?

·        Question 15

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The function of the urethra is to

·        Question 16

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Your adaptive immune response has all of the following characteristics except that it is not

·        Question 17

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which is not a sign or symptom of inflammation?

·        Question 18

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Macrophages seek out foreign invaders in the ______________, while neutrophils, at least initially are on patrol in the ___________.

·        Question 19

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Vaccination works because

·        Question 20

0 out of 3.2 points

The structure of a human neuron uniquely and perfectly fits it for its signal-carrying role. The neuron is

·        Question 21

3.2 out of 3.2 points

In the basic structure of the human heart, blood first flows through the right atrium, then it travels to the:

·        Question 22

0 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is part of the human digestive system, correctly matched to the role it plays in the digestion process?

·        Question 23

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Caffeine affects synapses by

·        Question 24

3.2 out of 3.2 points

When a vaccine is given to a person with a healthy immune system, the result is

·        Question 25

3.2 out of 3.2 points

As a student runs up a flight of stairs, the first system needed to support the activities of the muscular system would be the _________ system.

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following processes is involved in muscle contraction?

·        Question 2

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The function of the urinary bladder is to

·        Question 3

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following sequences would best describe how a signal moves through a reflex arc?

·        Question 4

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The nervous system interacts with the ___________ system to coordinate the internal integration of all the other body systems together.

·        Question 5

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The efferent or motor branch of the peripheral nervous system is subdivided into the ______ (voluntary) and ____________ (involuntary) nervous systems.

·        Question 6

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following systems of the body interact with the nervous system?

·        Question 7

0 out of 3.2 points

Systolic blood pressure:

·        Question 8

3.2 out of 3.2 points

All of the following are systems of the body except the:

·        Question 9

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The entire human nervous system is organized into the central nervous system and the _______ nervous system.

·        Question 10

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following brain regions and their functions are improperly matched?

·        Question 11

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The role of the ___________ branch of the autonomic nervous system mediates control of organ processes when the body is essentially ______.

·        Question 12

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The function of the kidney is

·        Question 13

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is part of the human digestive system, correctly matched to the role it plays in the digestion process?

·        Question 14

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following types of tissue helps to keep both our blood pressure regulated and our digestive processes effective?

·        Question 15

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The function of the urethra is to

·        Question 16

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Your adaptive immune response has all of the following characteristics except that it is not

·        Question 17

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which is not a sign or symptom of inflammation?

·        Question 18

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Macrophages seek out foreign invaders in the ______________, while neutrophils, at least initially are on patrol in the ___________.

·        Question 19

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Vaccination works because

·        Question 20

0 out of 3.2 points

The structure of a human neuron uniquely and perfectly fits it for its signal-carrying role. The neuron is

·        Question 21

3.2 out of 3.2 points

In the basic structure of the human heart, blood first flows through the right atrium, then it travels to the:

·        Question 22

0 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is part of the human digestive system, correctly matched to the role it plays in the digestion process?

·        Question 23

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Caffeine affects synapses by

·        Question 24

3.2 out of 3.2 points

When a vaccine is given to a person with a healthy immune system, the result is

·        Question 25

3.2 out of 3.2 points

As a student runs up a flight of stairs, the first system needed to support the activities of the muscular system would be the _________ system

Question 1

0 out of 3.2 points

In the process of transcription, the base sequence in the molecule _______ is read by the molecule _________ , an enzyme that makes an RNA molecule.

·        Question 2

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Successful differentiation of early brain regions requires that cells destined to form these regions

·        Question 3

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The term “transcription” means the process of

·        Question 4

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A collection of interacting glands that secrete hormones into the blood stream would best describe the ___________ system.

·        Question 5

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The genetic code is said to be degenerate. This means that

·        Question 6

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The “S” phase of the cell cycle represents the activity of

·        Question 7

0 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following is tRNA’s role in translation?

·        Question 8

3.2 out of 3.2 points

An oncogene is a mutated form of a gene that normally directs

·        Question 9

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The nuclear membrane of the cell disintegrates during which phase of the cell cycle?

·        Question 10

3.2 out of 3.2 points

In healthy cells, the normal function of the activated Ras protein is to

·        Question 11

0 out of 3.2 points

Animal development and automobile development differ in that

·        Question 12

3.2 out of 3.2 points

In the three-dimensional form of the adult Dalmatian dog, the “front” end of the animal would be named the _____ aspect.

·        Question 13

3.2 out of 3.2 points

The ________________ is often represented as a chart in which a specific sequence of bases in mRNA (a codon) is used to represent each amino acid building block found in the world of proteins.

·        Question 14

3.2 out of 3.2 points

When the organism expresses a set of genes, the result is the characteristics of that organism. These characteristics are called its

·        Question 15

3.2 out of 3.2 points

_____________ is a disease state characterized by cells that divide uncontrollably and no longer respect their confinement within their tissue of origin.

·        Question 16

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Life perpetuates itself at the cellular level

·        Question 17

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Peptide bonds are formed during the __________ stage of translation.

·        Question 18

3.2 out of 3.2 points

There are more than four kinds of amino acids in proteins. Each kind of amino acid must be coded for in mRNA. Thus, a short sequence of mRNA bases called a(n) _________ is used to code for each amino acid in the translation process.

·        Question 19

3.2 out of 3.2 points

A three-dimensional, folded molecule shaped like an “L” with an anticodon at one end and an amino acid attachment site at the other end:

·        Question 20

3.2 out of 3.2 points

What are the essential resources that a daughter cell must get from a parent cell or from nature in order to succeed in living life?

·        Question 21

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following terms would not be used to describe an aspect of the three-dimensional adult form?

·        Question 22

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Your primordial (early) heart began as

·        Question 23

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following phrases best describes the role of mRNA in gene expression?

·        Question 24

3.2 out of 3.2 points

Which of the following choices lists in order the stages of mitosis?

·        Question 25

3.2 out of 3.2 points

When DNA is replicated, the two strands are first separated through _________; each strand then becomes a _________ against which two new strands are made.

 

Question

1 of 25

Which of the following describes structures from the conduction zone?

Pharynx, alveolar sacs, alveoli, trachea

Bronchus, nasal cavity, trachea, pharynx

Nasal cavity, respiratory membrane, alveoli, bronchus

Trachea, bronchus, bronchioles, alveoli

Pharynx, larynx, bronchus, alveoli

Question 2 of 25What structure in the nasal cavity serves to increase the surface area of the mucosa exposed to air?

Palate

Conchae

Nasal septum

Nares

Paranasal sinuses

Question 3 of 25 What is internal respiration?

The intake of atmospheric air into the body

Gas exchange between the atmospheric air and the blood

Gas exchange between the lungs and the body tissues

Gas exchange between the blood and the tissue cells

Intake of oxygen and release of carbon dioxide from tissue cells

Question 4 of 25What is the role of the diaphragm in breathing?

When the diaphragm contracts, the thoracic cavity decreases in size and inspiration occurs.

When the diaphragm contracts, the thoracic cavity increases in size and expiration occurs.

When the diaphragm contracts, the thoracic cavity decreases in size and expiration occurs.

When the diaphragm contracts, the thoracic cavity decreases in size and external respiration occurs.

When the diaphragm contracts, the thoracic cavity increases in size and inspiration occurs.

Question 5 of 25What determines the flow of gases across the respiratory membrane?

Gases are dissolved in the plasma and flow through the respiratory membrane gaps.

Gases flow from lower to higher concentration using simple diffusion.

Gases flow from a higher to lower concentration using simple diffusion.

Gases attach to a hemoglobin molecule and then travel across the membrane.

Gases are dissolved in the plasma and cross using facilitated diffusion.

Question 6 of 25 Which of the following describes the movement of carbon dioxide?

Carbon dioxide moves from alveolar air into pulmonary capillaries.

Carbon dioxide moves from pulmonary capillaries into alveolar air.

Carbon dioxide moves from blood to tissue cells.

Carbon dioxide binds to hemoglobin and is removed through the kidneys.

Carbon dioxide moves from blood to oxyhemoglobin.

Question 7 of 25What is the significant function of the residual volume?

It expands the lung volume.

It increases the surfactant of the alveoli.

It allows gas exchange to continue even between breaths.

It represents the total lung capacity of a body.

It keeps the oxygen levels as low as possible.

Question 8 of 25 What area(s) of the brain are involved in the control of breathing?

Medulla only

Cerebellum only

Pons only

Medulla and the cerebellum

Medulla and the pons

Question 9 of 25 What is an important chemical stimulus that affects breathing rate?

Increased calcium levels

Increased anxiety

Increased carbon dioxide levels

Increased potassium levels

Increased mucous production in the bronchus

Question 10 of 25What is the proposed reason for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS)?

Decreased oxygen flow across the respiratory membrane

Impaired neural control of respiration

Increased build-up of carbon dioxide

Impaired respiratory membranes

Decreased alveolar elasticity

Question 11 of 25Which of the following is associated with COPD?

Lack of mucous production resulting in excessive coughing

Cessation of breathing due to anxiety

Hyperventilation resulting in metabolic alkalosis

A genetic disorder with excessive mucous production

Respiratory failure and respiratory acidosis

Question 12 of 25In which major digestive organ does most food absorption occur?

Stomach

Small intestine

Large intestine

Liver

Colon

Question 13 of 25 What layer of the alimentary canal contains nerve fibers and lymphatic tissue?

Mucosa

Submucosa

Muscularis externa

Serosa

Visceral peritoneum

 

Question 14 of 25 What is the process of chewing called?

Deglutition

Absorption

Segmentation

Defecation

Mastication

Question 15 of 25 The absorptive effectiveness of the small intestine is enhanced by which of the following structures?

Plicae circularis and intestinal villi

Brunner’s glands

Digestive enzymes

Rugae

Gastric pits

Question 16 of 25 Which of the following describes permanent teeth?

There are 32 permanent teeth, and the wisdom teeth are the last to emerge

There are 27 permanent teeth, and the first molars are usually the last to emerge

The number of permanent teeth is always equal to the number of primary teeth.

The number of upper permanent teeth is not equal to the number of lower permanent teeth.

The number of permanent teeth varies widely from person to person.

Question 17 of 25Which of the following describes saliva?

It is composed of water only.

It contains enzymes that begin the breakdown of proteins.

It is produced by the palatine tonsils.

It serves to warm food before it is swallowed.

It dissolves food chemicals so they can be tasted.

Question 18 of 25Hydrochloric acid is secreted by which of the secretory cells of the stomach?

Chief cells

Parietal cells

Serous cells

Alpha cells

Mucous neck cells

Question 19 of 25What is the enzymatic breakdown of a food molecule called?

Diffusion

Active transport

Hydrolysis

Synthesis

Denatured

Question 20 of 25The mucosa tunica of the esophagus is lined with what type of cells?

Stratified squamous epithelium

Stratified columnar epithelium

Microvilli epithelium

Pseudostratified squamous epithelium

Ciliated columnar

Question 21 of 25Digestion of which of the following would be most affected if the liver were severely damaged?

Lipids

Carbohydrates

Proteins

Starches

Monosaccharide

Question 22 of 25 The ingestion of a meal high in fat content would cause which of the following to occur?

Severe indigestion would occur, caused by the lack of sufficient digestive enzymes.

This type of food would cause secretion of gastrin to cease, causing digestive upset.

Bile would be released from the gall bladder to emulsify the fat in the duodenum.

The acid secretions from the stomach would be sufficient to digest this food.

Acid reflux would develop and cause damage to the esophagus.

Question 23 of 25

What are the essential amino acids?

Amino acids produced by the human body.

Amino acids that must be obtained through diet.

Amino acids that are building blocks of carbohydrates.

Amino acids released from the hydrolysis of lipids.

Amino acids that make up the essential vitamins.

Question 24 of 25What is basal metabolic rate?

Total amount of kilocalories needed to fuel daily activities

Total amount of kilocalories burned in a day

Total amount of heat produced by the body per unit of time at rest

Total amount of heat produced in a day

Total difference between energy used and kilocalories consumed in a day

Question 25 of 25A person who has collapsed due to dehydration but still maintains effective heat loss mechanisms is experiencing what disorder?

Heat exhaustion

Heat stroke

Fever due to pyrogens

Dysfunction of the hypothalamus

Question

1 of 25

The epipelagic is divided into two components: the oceanic waters and the

photic zone.

neritic zone.

pelagic realm.

upper photic zone.

subtidal zone.

Question

2 of 25

Most of the primary production carried out in the open ocean is performed by

seaweeds.

kelps.

phytoplankton.

seagrasses.

zooxanthellae.

Question

3 of 25

Net phytoplankton consist mostly of

copepods.

diatoms and dinoflagellates.

nanoplankton.

cyanobacteria (blue-green algae).

nanoplankton and diatoms.

Question

4 of 25

Typically the most abundant group in the zooplankton are the.

larvaceans.

krill.

fish larvae.

nanoplankton.

copepods.

Question

5 of 25

Which of these is least likely to be seen in the epipelagic?

Suspension feeders

Deposit feeders

Primary production

First-level carnivores

Second-level carnivores

Question

6 of 25

Which of these groups builds a mucus “house?”

Copepods

Arrow worms

Larvaceans

Planktonic snails such as pteropods

Snail larvae

Question

7 of 25

Which of the following accounts for about 50% of the primary production in epipelagic waters?

Diatoms

Cyanobacteria

Dinoflagellates

Coccolithophorids

Silicoflagellates

Question

8 of 25

The following are an adaptation to the planktonic way of life except

spines.

small size.

decrease in drag.

substitution of heavy ions by light ones.

gas-filled bladders.

Question

9 of 25

The storage of lipids within the body is an adaptation in plankton since lipids

make cells heavier.

increase body density.

contain air pockets so they help in buoyancy.

contain a larger amount of energy.

are less dense than water.

Question

10 of 25

The neuston consists of animals that

swim against currents.

sink to the bottom portion of the water column.

are top carnivores in the pelagic realm.

spend their entire lives in the plankton.

live at the surface, but remain underwater.

Question

11 of 25

Counter shading is a form of

shading with bioluminescence.

warning coloration.

structural coloration.

protective coloration.

cryptic coloration.

Question

12 of 25

The rete mirabile found in some fishes is involved in.

increasing speed.

decreasing buoyancy.

digesting food.

increasing buoyancy.

conserving body heat.

Question

13 of 25

Zooplankton that migrate vertically

hibernate at night and feed during the day.

feed at the surface during the day, and migrate below the photic zone at night.

feed in the photic zone during the day, and migrate to the surface at night.

stay below the photic zone during the day, and feed at the surface at night.

migrate up and down but always stay below the photic zone.

Question

14 of 25

Most animals in the epipelagic are omnivores. This means that they eat

producers and consumers.

part of the neuston.

zooplankton.

detritus.

phytoplankton.

Question

15 of 25

What is the relationship between dissolved organic matter (DOM) and bacteria in the epipelagic?

Bacteria feed on the DOM, making it available to other animals in the food chain that feed on bacteria.

Bacteria supply most of the DOM.

Bacteria feed on DOM and thus it is unavailable to other animals.

Bacteria cannot utilize DOM and thus feed on detritus, depleting it through most of the epipelagic.

Bacteria cannot utilize DOM, making it available to animals.

Question

16 of 25

The most common limiting nutrient in the ocean is

silicon.

oxygen.

nitrogen.

carbonate.

phosphorus.

Question

17 of 25

The fall bloom in temperate waters is caused when

primary production decreases as nutrients increase.

primary production decreases due to light limitation.

primary production decreases as nutrients decrease.

primary production increases as nutrients increase.

primary production increases as the number of zooplankton increases.

Question

18 of 25

Equatorial upwelling occurs as a result of

temperature changes at the Equator.

the divergence of equatorial surface currents.

the convergence of equatorial surface currents.

winds causing the Ekman transport of surface water offshore.

El Niño conditions north and south of the Equator.

Question

19 of 25

The Southern Oscillation can be best described as

relative changes between two pressure systems.

variation in wind speed over the Pacific Ocean.

relationship between sea-surface and high-altitude pressures.

tidal differences between the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

wind-speed differences along the Equator.

Question

20 of 25

The long spines and projections seen in many epipelagic plankton are used for

feeding.

reproduction.

increasing drag.

increasing buoyancy.

gathering nutrients.

Question

21 of 25

Most epipelagic fish have a tail that is

short and wide.

short and narrow.

short and thin.

high and wide.

high and narrow.

Question

22 of 25

Which of the following adaptations is least likely to be seen in epipelagic fish?

Stiff fins

A smooth, scaleless body

Increased white muscle

Grove in body for fins

Eyes flush with body

Question

23 of 25

The largest source of dissolved organic material (DOM) in the epipelagic is

viruses.

bacteria.

phytoplankton.

zooplankton.

nekton.

Question

24 of 25

The lateral line system in fishes functions in ________________.

sensing vibrations in the water

detecting magnetic lines of force in water

sensing light in aphotic zones

sweeping surrounding water for plankton

bioluminescence

Question

25 of 25

The remote sensing system found in dolphins and some other cetaceans is ___________.

communal mutualistic behavior

extrasensory perception

echolocation

underwater acoustic sensitivity

heightened smell

 

 

Question

1 of 25

The epipelagic is divided into two components: the oceanic waters and the

photic zone.

neritic zone.

pelagic realm.

upper photic zone.

subtidal zone.

Question

2 of 25

Most of the primary production carried out in the open ocean is performed by

seaweeds.

kelps.

phytoplankton.

seagrasses.

zooxanthellae.

Question

3 of 25

Net phytoplankton consist mostly of

copepods.

diatoms and dinoflagellates.

nanoplankton.

cyanobacteria (blue-green algae).

nanoplankton and diatoms.

Question

4 of 25

Typically the most abundant group in the zooplankton are the.

larvaceans.

krill.

fish larvae.

nanoplankton.

copepods.

Question

5 of 25

Which of these is least likely to be seen in the epipelagic?

Suspension feeders

Deposit feeders

Primary production

First-level carnivores

Second-level carnivores

Question

6 of 25

Which of these groups builds a mucus “house?”

Copepods

Arrow worms

Larvaceans

Planktonic snails such as pteropods

Snail larvae

Question

7 of 25

Which of the following accounts for about 50% of the primary production in epipelagic waters?

Diatoms

Cyanobacteria

Dinoflagellates

Coccolithophorids

Silicoflagellates

Question

8 of 25

The following are an adaptation to the planktonic way of life except

spines.

small size.

decrease in drag.

substitution of heavy ions by light ones.

gas-filled bladders.

Question

9 of 25

The storage of lipids within the body is an adaptation in plankton since lipids

make cells heavier.

increase body density.

contain air pockets so they help in buoyancy.

contain a larger amount of energy.

are less dense than water.

Question

10 of 25

The neuston consists of animals that

swim against currents.

sink to the bottom portion of the water column.

are top carnivores in the pelagic realm.

spend their entire lives in the plankton.

live at the surface, but remain underwater.

Question

11 of 25

Counter shading is a form of

shading with bioluminescence.

warning coloration.

structural coloration.

protective coloration.

cryptic coloration.

Question

12 of 25

The rete mirabile found in some fishes is involved in.

increasing speed.

decreasing buoyancy.

digesting food.

increasing buoyancy.

conserving body heat.

Question

13 of 25

Zooplankton that migrate vertically

hibernate at night and feed during the day.

feed at the surface during the day, and migrate below the photic zone at night.

feed in the photic zone during the day, and migrate to the surface at night.

stay below the photic zone during the day, and feed at the surface at night.

migrate up and down but always stay below the photic zone.

Question

14 of 25

Most animals in the epipelagic are omnivores. This means that they eat

producers and consumers.

part of the neuston.

zooplankton.

detritus.

phytoplankton.

Question

15 of 25

What is the relationship between dissolved organic matter (DOM) and bacteria in the epipelagic?

Bacteria feed on the DOM, making it available to other animals in the food chain that feed on bacteria.

Bacteria supply most of the DOM.

Bacteria feed on DOM and thus it is unavailable to other animals.

Bacteria cannot utilize DOM and thus feed on detritus, depleting it through most of the epipelagic.

Bacteria cannot utilize DOM, making it available to animals.

Question

16 of 25

The most common limiting nutrient in the ocean is

silicon.

oxygen.

nitrogen.

carbonate.

phosphorus.

Question

17 of 25

The fall bloom in temperate waters is caused when

primary production decreases as nutrients increase.

primary production decreases due to light limitation.

primary production decreases as nutrients decrease.

primary production increases as nutrients increase.

primary production increases as the number of zooplankton increases.

Question

18 of 25

Equatorial upwelling occurs as a result of

temperature changes at the Equator.

the divergence of equatorial surface currents.

the convergence of equatorial surface currents.

winds causing the Ekman transport of surface water offshore.

El Niño conditions north and south of the Equator.

Question

19 of 25

The Southern Oscillation can be best described as

relative changes between two pressure systems.

variation in wind speed over the Pacific Ocean.

relationship between sea-surface and high-altitude pressures.

tidal differences between the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

wind-speed differences along the Equator.

Question

20 of 25

The long spines and projections seen in many epipelagic plankton are used for

feeding.

reproduction.

increasing drag.

increasing buoyancy.

gathering nutrients.

Question

21 of 25

Most epipelagic fish have a tail that is

short and wide.

short and narrow.

short and thin.

high and wide.

high and narrow.

Question

22 of 25

Which of the following adaptations is least likely to be seen in epipelagic fish?

Stiff fins

A smooth, scaleless body

Increased white muscle

Grove in body for fins

Eyes flush with body

Question

23 of 25

The largest source of dissolved organic material (DOM) in the epipelagic is

viruses.

bacteria.

phytoplankton.

zooplankton.

nekton.

Question

24 of 25

The lateral line system in fishes functions in ________________.

sensing vibrations in the water

detecting magnetic lines of force in water

sensing light in aphotic zones

sweeping surrounding water for plankton

bioluminescence

Question

25 of 25

The remote sensing system found in dolphins and some other cetaceans is ___________.

communal mutualistic behavior

extrasensory perception

echolocation

underwater acoustic sensitivity

heightened smell