Chapter 37 Mastering Biology
55) If a plant is infected with Rhizobium, what is the probable effect on the plant? A) It gets chlorosis. B) It dies. C) It is supplied with phosphate from the soil. D) It probably will grow faster E) It becomes flaccid due to the loss of water from the roots
Answer: D
39) What is the major function of nitrogen in plants? A) component of lignin-biosynthetic enzymes B) component of DNA and RNA C) a component of chlorophyll D) active in amino acid formation E) required to regenerate phospophenolpyruvate in C4 and CAM plants
Answer: B
56) You are weeding your garden when you accidentally expose some roots. You notice swellings (root nodules) on the roots. Most likely your plant A) suffers from a mineral deficiency. B) is infected with a parasite. C) is benefiting from a mutualistic bacterium. D) is developing offshoots from the root. E) contains developing insect pupa.
Answer: C
50) Most crop plants acquire their nitrogen mainly in the form of A) NH3. B) N2. C) CN2H2. D) NO3.. E) amino acids absorbed from the soil.
Answer: D
11) Draw a simple sketch of cation exchange, showing a root hair, a soil particle with anions, and a hydrogen ion displacing a mineral cation.
Answer:
16) What should be added to soil to prevent minerals from leaching away? A) humus B) sand C) mycorrhizae D) nitrogen E) silt
Answer: A
20) If you were the county agriculture agent, what would be the best advice you could give the farmer who owns the field under study in Figure 37.2? A) Plant a variety of cotton that requires less water and can tolerate salinity. B) Continue to fertilize, but stop irrigating and rely on rainfall. C) Continue to irrigate, but stop fertilizing and rely on organic nutrients in the soil. D) Continue to fertilize and irrigate, but add the nitrogen-fixing bacteria Rhizobium to the irrigation water until the productivity increases. E) Add acid to the soil and increase its cation exchange capabilities so more nutrients are retained in the soil.
Answer: A
42) Which of the following best describes the general role of micronutrients in plants? A) They are cofactors in enzymatic reactions. B) They are necessary for essential regulatory functions. C) They prevent chlorosis. D) They are components of nucleic acids. E) They are necessary for the formation of cell walls.
Answer: A
46) Iron deficiency is often indicated by yellowing in newly formed leaves. This suggests that iron A) is a relatively immobile nutrient in plants. B) is tied up in formed chlorophyll molecules. C) is concentrated in the xylem of older leaves. D) is concentrated in older leaves. E) is found in leghemoglobin and reduces the amount available to new plant parts.
Answer: A
5) For this pair of items, choose the option that best describes their relationship. (A) The number of essential macronutrients required by plants (B) The number of essential micronutrients required by plants A) Item (A) is greater than item (B). B) Item (A) is less than item (B). C) Item (A) is exactly or very approximately equal to item (B). D) Item (A) may stand in more than one of the above relations to item (B).
Answer: A
53) The most efficient way to increase essential amino acids in crop plants for human consumption is to A) breed for higher yield of deficient amino acids. B) increase the amount of fertilizer used on fields. C) use 20-20-20 fertilizer instead of 20-5-5 fertilizer. D) engineer nitrogen-fixing nodules into crop plants lacking them. E) increase irrigation of nitrogen-fixing crops.
Answer: A
62) Hyphae form a covering over roots. Altogether, these hyphae create a large surface area that helps to do which of the following? A) aid in absorbing minerals and ions B) maintain cell shape C) increase cellular respiration D) anchor a plant E) protect the roots from ultraviolet light
Answer: A
8) Mycorrhizae enhance plant nutrition mainly by A) absorbing water and minerals through the fungal hyphae. B) providing sugar to the root cells, which have no chloroplasts of their own. C) converting atmospheric nitrogen to ammonia. D) enabling the roots to parasitize neighboring plants. E) stimulating the development of root hairs.
Answer: A
1) All of the following contributed to the dust bowl in the American southwest during the 1930s except A) overgrazing by cattle. B) clear cutting of forest trees. C) plowing of native grasses. D) planting of field crops. E) lack of soil moisture.
Answer: B
1) Most of the mass of organic material of a plant comes from A) water. B) carbon dioxide. C) soil minerals. D) atmospheric oxygen. E) nitrogen.
Answer: B
10) Carnivorous adaptations of plants mainly compensate for soil that has a relatively low content of A) potassium. B) nitrogen. C) calcium. D) water. E) phosphate.
Answer: B
12) The best conclusion from the data in Figure 37.1 is that the plant A) grows best without air in the soil. B) grows fastest in 5 to 10% air. C) grows best at soil air levels above 15%. D) does not respond differently to different levels of air in the soil. E) would grow to 24 grams in 40% soil air.
Answer: B
2) For this pair of items, choose the option that best describes their relationship. (A) The average size of particles that constitute silt (B) The average size of particles that constitute clay A) Item (A) is greater than item (B). B) Item (A) is less than item (B). C) Item (A) is exactly or very approximately equal to item (B). D) Item (A) may stand in more than one of the above relations to item (B).
Answer: B
2) Micronutrients are needed in very small amounts because A) most of them are mobile in the plant. B) most serve mainly as cofactors of enzymes. C) most are supplied in large enough quantities in seeds. D) they play only a minor role in the growth and health of the plant. E) only the most actively growing regions of the plants require micronutrients.
Answer: B
27) In hydroponic culture, what is the purpose of bubbling air into the solute? A) to keep dissolved nutrients evenly distributed B) to provide oxygen to the root cells C) to inhibit the growth of aerobic algae D) to inhibit the growth of anaerobic bacteria E) to provide CO2 for photosynthesis
Answer: B
32) The bulk of a plant's dry weight is derived from A) soil minerals. B) CO2. C) the hydrogen from H2O. D) the oxygen from H2O. E) the uptake of organic nutrients from the soil.
Answer: B
37) In the 1640s Jan Baptista van Helmont planted a small willow in a pot that contained 90.9 kg of soil. After five years, the plant weighed 76.8 kg, but only 0.06 kg of soil had disappeared from the pot. What did van Helmont conclude from this experiment? A) 80—90% of the tree's mass is the result of C3 photosynthesis. B) The increase in the mass of the tree was from the water that he added over the five years. C) Most of the increase in the mass of the tree was due to the uptake of CO2. D) Soil simply provides physical support for the tree without providing any nutrients. E) The 0.06 kg of soil was mainly nitrogen.
Answer: B
4) For this pair of items, choose the option that best describes their relationship. (A) The amount of molybdenum in a gram of dried plant material (B) The amount of sulfur in a gram of dried plant material A) Item (A) is greater than item (B). B) Item (A) is less than item (B). C) Item (A) is exactly or very approximately equal to item (B). D) Item (A) may stand in more than one of the above relations to item (B).
Answer: B
4) Some of the problems associated with intensive irrigation include all but A) mineral runoff. B) overfertilization. C) land subsidence. D) aquifer depletion. E) soil salinization.
Answer: B
48) Why is nitrogen fixation such an important process? A) Nitrogen fixation can only be done by certain prokaryotes. B) Fixed nitrogen is most often the limiting factor in plant growth. C) Nitrogen fixation is very expensive in terms of metabolic energy. D) Nitrogen fixers are sometimes symbiotic with legumes. E) Nitrogen-fixing capacity can be genetically engineered.
Answer: B
49) In what way do nitrogen compounds differ from other minerals needed by plants? A) Only nitrogen can be lost from the soil. B) Only nitrogen requires the action of bacteria to be made available to plants. C) Only nitrogen is needed for protein synthesis. D) Only nitrogen is held by cation exchange capacity in the soil. E) Only nitrogen can be absorbed by root hairs.
Answer: B
5) A mineral deficiency is likely to affect older leaves more than younger leaves if A) the mineral is a micronutrient. B) the mineral is very mobile within the plant. C) the mineral is required for chlorophyll synthesis. D) the mineral is a macronutrient. E) the older leaves are in direct sunlight.
Answer: B
51) The enzyme complex nitrogenase catalyzes the reaction that reduces atmospheric nitrogen to A) N2. B) NH3. C) NO2. D) NO+. E) NO-.
Answer: B
54) Among important crop plants, nitrogen-fixing root nodules are most commonly an attribute of A) corn. B) legumes. C) wheat. D) members of the potato family. E) cabbage and other members of the brassica family.
Answer: B
58) What is the function of a root nodule's leghemoglobin? A) extract macronutrients from the soil. B) regulate the supply of oxygen to Rhizobium. C) promote ion exchange in the soil. D) form a mutualistic relationship with insects. E) supply the legume with fixed nitrogen.
Answer: B
6) For this pair of items, choose the option that best describes their relationship. (A) The percent of plant species that form ectomycorrhizae (B) The percent of plant species that form arbuscular mycorrhizae A) Item (A) is greater than item (B). B) Item (A) is less than item (B). C) Item (A) is exactly or very approximately equal to item (B). D) Item (A) may stand in more than one of the above relations to item (B).
Answer: B
7) If you wanted to increase the cation exchange and water retention capacity of loamy soil, what should you do? A) Adjust the soil pH to 7.9. B) Add clay to the soil. C) Practice no-till agriculture. D) Add fertilizer containing potassium, calcium and magnesium to the soil. E) Increase the number of sand particles in the soil.
Answer: B
15) Why does over-watering a plant kill it? A) Water does not have all the necessary minerals a plant needs to grow. B) Water neutralizes the pH of the soil. C) The roots are deprived of oxygen. D) Water supports the growth of root parasites. E) Water lowers the water potential of the roots.
Answer: C
24) Most of the dry weight of a plant is the result of uptake of A) water and minerals through root hairs. B) water and minerals through mycorrhizae. C) CO2 through stoma. D) CO2 and O2 through stomata in leaves. E) carbohydrates in the root hairs and concentration in the root cortex.
Answer: C
28) When performing a mineral nutrition experiment, researchers use water from a glass still. Why is it not a good idea to use regular distilled water from a stainless steel still? A) With a steel still, lime deposits from hard water will build up too quickly. B) Salts in the water corrode steel more quickly than glass. C) Metal ions dissolving off the steel may serve as micronutrients. D) A glass still allows the distillation process to be observed. E) There is no difference; both kinds of stills produce distilled water.
Answer: C
3) For this pair of items, choose the option that best describes their relationship. (A) The amount of nitrogen in a fertilizer marked "15-10-5" (B) The amount of nitrogen in a fertilizer marked "15-5-5" A) Item (A) is greater than item (B). B) Item (A) is less than item (B). C) Item (A) is exactly or very approximately equal to item (B). D) Item (A) may stand in more than one of the above relations to item (B).
Answer: C
3) The rhizosphere would best be described as A) legume root swellings that are involved in nitrogen fixation. B) the part of the topsoil that supplies carbohydrates to plants. C) soil that is bound to roots and differs from the surrounding soil in containing many more microbes. D) the spherical soil horizon in which roots typically grow. E) all of the living organisms that inhabit the soil.
Answer: C
33) What are the three main elements on which plant growth and development depend? A) nitrogen; carbon; oxygen B) potassium; carbon; oxygen C) oxygen; carbon; hydrogen D) phosphorus; nitrogen; oxygen E) sulfur; nitrogen; phosphorus
Answer: C
34) A growing plant exhibits chlorosis of the leaves of the entire plant. The chlorosis is probably due to a deficiency of which of the following macronutrients? A) carbon B) oxygen C) nitrogen D) calcium E) hydrogen
Answer: C
36) Which element is important in the formation and stability of cell walls? A) zinc B) chlorine C) calcium D) molybdenum E) manganese
Answer: C
40) What is the major function of magnesium in plants? A) component of lignin-biosynthetic enzymes B) component of DNA and RNA C) a component of chlorophyll D) active in amino acid formation E) required to regenerate phospophenolpyruvate in C4 and CAM plants
Answer: C
44) What is meant by the term chlorosis? A) the uptake of the micronutrient chlorine by a plant B) the formation of chlorophyll within the thylakoid membranes of a plant C) the yellowing of leaves due to decreased chlorophyll production D) a contamination of glassware in hydroponic culture E) release of negatively charged minerals such as chloride from clay particles in soil
Answer: C
57) Which of the following is a true statement about nitrogen fixation in root nodules? A) The plant contributes the nitrogenase enzyme. B) The process is relatively inexpensive in terms of ATP costs. C) Leghemoglobin helps maintain a low O2 concentration within the nodule. D) The process tends to deplete nitrogen compounds in the soil. E) The bacteria of the nodule are autotrophic.
Answer: C
6) Two groups of tomatoes were grown under laboratory conditions, one with humus added to the soil and one a control without the humus. The leaves of the plants grown without humus were yellowish (less green) compared with those of the plants grown in humus-enriched soil. The best explanation for this difference is that A) the healthy plants used the food in the decomposing leaves of the humus for energy to make chlorophyll. B) the humus made the soil more loosely packed, so water penetrated more easily to the roots. C) the humus contained minerals such as magnesium and iron, needed for the synthesis of chlorophyll. D) chlorophyll synthesis. E) the healthy plants absorbed chlorophyll from the humus.
Answer: C
60) A woodlot was sprayed with a fungicide. What would be the most serious effect of such spraying? A) a decrease in food for animals that eat mushrooms B) an increase in rates of wood decay C) a decrease in tree growth due to the death of mycorrhizae D) an increase in the number of decomposing bacteria E) A and B
Answer: C
61) What is the mutualistic association between roots and fungi called? A) nitrogen fixation B) Rhizobium infection C) mycorrhizae D) parasitism E) root hair enhancement
Answer: C
63) Which of the following is a primary difference between ectomycorrhizae and endomycorrhizae? A) Endomycorrhizae have thicker, shorter hyphae than ectomycorrhizae. B) Endomycorrhizae, but not ectomycorrhizae, form a dense sheath over the surface of the root. C) Ectomycorrhizae do not penetrate root cells, whereas endomycorrhizae grow into invaginations of the root cell membranes. D) Ectomycorrhizae are found in woody plant species; about 85% of plant families form ectomycorrhizae. E) There are no significant differences between ectomycorrhizae and endomycorrhizae.
Answer: C
64) The earliest vascular plants on land had underground stems (rhizomes) but no roots. Water and mineral nutrients were most likely obtained by A) absorption by hairs and trichomes. B) diffusion through stomata. C) absorption by mycorrhizae. D) osmosis through the root hairs. E) diffusion across the cuticle of the rhizome.
Answer: C
8) Which of the following describes the fate of most of the water taken up by a plant? A) It is used as a solvent. B) It is used as a hydrogen source in photosynthesis. C) It is lost during transpiration. D) It makes cell elongation possible. E) It is used to keep cells turgid.
Answer: C
9) There are several properties of a soil in which typical plants would grow well. Of the following, which would be the least conducive to plant growth? A) abundant humus B) numerous soil organisms C) compacted soil D) high porosity E) high cation exchange capacity
Answer: C
13) The data in Figure 37.1 indicate that that the plant A) grows best at the lower levels of air in the soil. B) grows about the same in 15% and 20% soil air percent. C) grows best in soil air levels above 15%. D) B and C only E) A, B and C
Answer: D
17) Which soil mineral is most likely leached away during a hard rain? A) Na+ B) K+ C) Ca++ D) NO3- E) H+
Answer: D
18) The N-P-K percentages on a package of fertilizer refer to the A) total protein content of the three major ingredients of the fertilizer. B) percentages of manure collected from different types of animals. C) relative percentages of organic and inorganic nutrients in the fertilizer. D) percentages of three important mineral nutrients. E) proportions of three different nitrogen sources.
Answer: D
19) Based on the information provided above, what is the most likely cause of the decline in productivity? A) The farmer used the wrong kind of fertilizer. B) The cotton is developing a resistance to the fertilizer and to irrigation water. C) Water has accumulated in the soil due to irrigation. D) The soil water potential has become more negative due to salination. E) The rate of photosynthesis has declined due to irrigation.
Answer: D
21) A young farmer purchases some land in a relatively arid area and is interested in earning a reasonable profit for many years. Which of the following strategies would best allow such a goal to be achieved? A) establishing an extensive irrigation system B) using plenty of the best fertilizers C) finding a way to sell all parts of crop plants D) selecting crops adapted to arid areas E) converting hillsides into fields
Answer: D
26) You are conducting an experiment on plant growth. You take a plant fresh from the soil that weighs 5 kg. Then you dry the plant overnight and determine the dry weight to be 1 kg. Of this dry weight, how much would you expect to be made up of organic molecules? A) 1 gram B) 4 grams C) 40 grams D) 960 grams E) 1 kg
Answer: D
30) Which of the following is of least concern to a researcher in a mineral nutrition experiment? A) purity of the chemicals used to make the nutrient solutions B) purity of the water used to make the nutrient solutions C) chemical inertness of the container used to make and store the nutrient solutions D) ability of a laboratory balance to weigh very small quantities of chemicals E) medium in which the test seedlings were grown
Answer: D
31) Which two elements make up more than 90% of the dry weight of plants? A) carbon and nitrogen B) oxygen and hydrogen C) nitrogen and oxygen D) oxygen and carbon E) carbon and potassium
Answer: D
41) Reddish-purple coloring of leaves, especially along the margins of young leaves, is a typical symptom of deficiency of which element? A) C B) M++ C) N D) P E) K+
Answer: D
43) Which of the following is not true of micronutrients in plants? A) They are the elements required in relatively small amounts. B) They are required for a plant to grow from a seed and complete its life cycle. C) They generally help in catalytic functions in the plant. D) They are the essential elements of small size and molecular weight. E) Overdoses of them can be toxic.
Answer: D
47) Nitrogen fixation is a process that A) recycles nitrogen compounds from dead and decaying materials. B) converts ammonia to nitrate. C) releases nitrate from the rock substrate. D) converts nitrogen gas into ammonia. E) A and B
Answer: D
66) What are epiphytes? A) aerial vines common in tropical regions B) haustoria used for anchoring to host plants and obtaining xylem sap C) plants that live in poor soil and digest insects to obtain nitrogen D) plants that grow on other plants but do not obtain nutrients from their hosts E) plants that have a symbiotic relationship with fungi
Answer: D
67) Carnivorous plants have evolved mechanisms that trap and digest small animals. The products of this digestion are used to supplement the plant's supply of A) energy. B) carbohydrates. C) lipids and steroids. D) minerals. E) water.
Answer: D
7) The specific relationship between a legume and its mutualistic Rhizobium strain probably depends on A) each legume having a chemical dialog with fungus. B) each Rhizobium strain having a form of nitrogenase that works only in the appropriate legume host. C) each legume being found where the soil has only the Rhizobium specific to that legume. D) specific recognition between the chemical signals and signal receptors of the Rhizobium strain and legume species. E) destruction of all incompatible Rhizobium strains by enzymes secreted from the legume's roots.
Answer: D
9) We would expect the greatest difference in plant health between two groups of plants of the same species, one group with mycorrhizae and one group without mycorrhizae, in an environment A) where nitrogen-fixing bacteria are abundant. B) that has soil with poor drainage. C) that has hot summers and cold winters. D) in which the soil is relatively deficient in mineral nutrients. E) that is near a body of water, such as a pond or river.
Answer: D
10) A soil well suited for the growth of most plants would have all of the following properties except A) abundant humus. B) air spaces. C) good drainage. D) high cation exchange capacity. E) a high pH.
Answer: E
11) What soil(s) is(are) the most fertile? A) humus only B) loam only C) silt only D) clay only E) both humus and loam
Answer: E
14) The best explanation for the shape of the growth response curve in figure 37.1 is that A) the plant requires air in the soil for photosynthesis. B) the roots are able to absorb more nitrogen (N2) in high levels of air. C) most of the decrease in weight at low air levels is due to transpiration from the leaves. D) increased soil air produces more root mass in the soil but does not affect the top stems and leaves. E) the roots require oxygen for respiration and growth.
Answer: E
22) A farming commitment that embraces a variety of methods that are conservation-minded, environmentally safe, and profitable is called A) hydroponics. B) nitrogen fixation. C) responsible irrigation. D) genetic engineering. E) sustainable agriculture.
Answer: E
23) Some plants extract and concentrate heavy metals from the soil. A current use for such plants is A) to help locate suitable sites for toxic waste storage. B) to concentrate rare metals for medicinal use. C) to minimize soil erosion in arid lands. D) nitrogen fixation by symbiotic bacteria in root nodules. E) photoremediation of polluted sites.
Answer: E
25) Organic molecules make up what percentage of the dry weight of a plant? A) 6% B) 17% C) 67% D) 81% E) 96%
Answer: E
29) Which of the following essential nutrients plays an essential role in the opening and closing of the stomatal aperture? A) Fe B) Bo C) Mg D) H E) K
Answer: E
35) Which of the following elements is incorrectly paired with its function in a plant? A) nitrogencomponent of nucleic acids, proteins, hormones, coenzymes B) magnesiumcomponent of chlorophyll; activates many enzymes C) phosphoruscomponent of nucleic acids, phospholipids, ATP, several coenzymes D) potassiumcofactor functional in protein synthesis; osmosis; operation of stomata E) sulfurcomponent of DNA; activates some enzymes
Answer: E
38) What is the major function of sodium in plants? A) component of lignin-biosynthetic enzymes B) component of DNA and RNA C) a component of chlorophyll D) active in amino acid formation E) required to regenerate phospophenolpyruvate in C4 and CAM plants
Answer: E
45) If an African violet has chlorosis, which of the following elements might be a useful addition to the soil? A) chlorine B) molybdenum C) copper D) iodine E) magnesium
Answer: E
52) In a root nodule, the gene coding for nitrogenase A) is inactivated by leghemoglobin. B) is absent in active bacteroids. C) is found in the cells of the pericycle. D) protects the nodule from nitrogen. E) is part of the Rhizobium chromosome.
Answer: E
59) Which of the following is not a function of rhizobacteria? A) produce hormones that stimulate plant growth B) produce antibiotics that protect roots from disease C) absorb toxic metals D) carry out nitrogen fixation E) supply growing roots with glucose
Answer: E
65) Dwarf mistletoe grows on many pine trees in the Rockies. Although the mistletoe is green, it is probably not sufficiently active in photosynthesis to produce all the sugar it needs. The mistletoe also produces haustoria. Thus, dwarf mistletoe growing on pine trees is best classified as A) an epiphyte. B) a nitrogen-fixing plant. C) a carnivorous plant. D) a symbiotic plant. E) a parasite.
Answer: E
69) Plant roots excrete substances that bind the soil particles and raise the soil pH.
Answer: FALSE
70) Macronutrients, elements required in relatively large amounts, typically have catalytic functions as cofactors of enzymes.
Answer: FALSE
73) Plants acquire most of their nitrogen in the form of N2 that they obtain from rhizobacteria.
Answer: FALSE
68) Phytoremediation is a biotechnology that uses the ability of some plants to extract soil pollutants and concentrate them in portions of the plant that can be easily removed for safe disposal.
Answer: TRUE
71) Deficiency of a mobile nutrient usually affects older organs more than younger ones.
Answer: TRUE
72) Young seedlings rarely show mineral deficiency symptoms because their mineral requirements are met largely by minerals released from stored reserves in the seed itself.
Answer: TRUE
74) The fungal hyphae of both ectomycorrhizae and arbuscular mycorrhizae absorb water and minerals, which they supply to their plant hosts.
Answer: TRUE