BIOL 1002 Lab Final
Natural Selection
A process in which individuals with certain inherited traits are more likely to survive and reproduce than are individuals that do not have those traits.
Operculum
A protective flap that covers the gills of fishes
Tropical forests
A terrestrial biome characterized by high levels of precipitation and warm temperatures year-round.
Pathogenic
An agent, such as a virus, bacteria, or fungus, that causes disease
Deforestation
Destruction of forests
Ecology
The study of how living things interact with each other and their environment
Saprobes
organisms that obtain food from decaying organic matter
Cuticle
(1) In animals, a tough, nonliving outer layer of the skin. (2) In plants, a waxy coating on the surface of stems and leaves that helps retain water.
List 5 characteristics of echinoderms
- 3 tissues - Closed circulatory system - Motility via tube feet - No nerve cord- no brain - Bilateral as larvae, radial as adults
Which of the following statements about bacteria is true?
- Bacteria are used in industry to produce many products - Bacteria constitute an overwhelming percentage of the earth's total biomass - Bacteria live in diverse environments
List the 4 hallmark characteristics of chordates
- Dorsal hollow nerve cord - Pharyngeal slits or clefts - Muscular post- anal tail - Notochord
Which of the following statements about sponges is true?
- They are filter feeding invertebrates - Their skeletal structure consists of spicules and/or spongin - They produce both eggs and sperm
Which of the following statements about cnidarians is true?
- They sting their prey with nematocysts on their tentacles - They are radially symmetrical - They have two body forms: Medusa and polyps
Which of the following is true of flatworms?
-They have bilateral symmetry - They have anterior and posterior ends - They can be parasitic
Ecosystem
A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment.
Exoskeleton
A body covering, typically made of chitin, that provides support and protection
Biomes
A community of living organisms of a single major ecological region.
Spermatophore
A gelatinous package of sperm cells that is produced by males of species that have internal fertilization without copulation.
Population
A group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area
Annuals
A plant that complete its life cycle in a single year or growing season.
Biennials
A plant that completes its life cycle in two years.
Perennials
A plant that lives for many years.
Chitin
A structural polysaccharide, consisting of amino sugar monomers, found in many fungal cell walls and in the exoskeletons of all arthropods.
Raduala
A toothed, rasping organ used to scrape up or shred food; found in many molluscs.
Shell
A tough, multilayered structure secreted by the mantle, generally used for protection, but sometimes for body support
Batesian Mimicry
A type of mimicry in which a harmless species looks like a species that is poisonous or otherwise harmful to predators.
Community
All the different populations that live together in an area
Biotic factors
All the living organisms that inhabit an environment
Savanna
An area of grassland with scattered trees and bushes
Organism
An individual living thing
Adaptation
An inherited character that enhances an organism's ability to survive and reproduce in a particular environment
Chemoautotrophism
An organism that obtains both energy and carbon from inorganic chemicals.
Chemoheterotrophism
An organism that obtains both energy and carbon from organic compounds.
Photoautotrophism
An organism that obtains energy from sunlight and carbon from CO2 by photosynthesis.
A medusa is often described as _________________
An umbrella-shaped body with tentacles that hang down
Where does gas exchange occur in turbellarians?
Anus
What is the function of the scolex in a tapeworm?
Attachment to the host
Rod-shaped bacteria are known as ____________________
Bacilli
Describe the 3 major shapes of bacteria
Bacilli- rod-shaped Cocci- spherical-shaped Spirilli- spiral-shaped
Which of the following has sexual spores borne externally on a club-shaped structure?
Basidiomycota
Taiga
Biome in which the winters are cold but summers are mild enough to allow the ground to thaw
Terrestrial biomes
Biomes on land (forests, taiga, tundra, etc.)
Maxillae
Bones of the upper jaw
Setae
Bristles on the segments of an earthworm that helps the earthworm pull itself along the ground.
Gram stain is a laboratory technique used to distinguish between various kinds of bacteria based on the characteristics of the ______________
Cell wall
__________________ acquire energy and carbon from organic molecules
Chemoheterotrophs
Fungi have cell walls composed of ______________
Chitin
Which of the following has flagellated spores?
Chytridiomycota
What type of structures aid in movement of protist?
Cilia Flagella Pseudopods
Which of the following cnidarians exist in a polyp form?
Corals and Sea anemones
Evolution
Descent with modification
Antibiotics
Drugs that block the growth and reproduction of bacteria
How do turbellarians, such as planar, rid themselves of digestive waste products?
Eject wastes through the mouth and diffuse across the surface of the body
Transpiration
Evaporation of water from the leaves of a plant
Mullerian mimicry
Evolution of two species, both of which are unpalatable and, have poisonous stingers or some other defense mechanism, to resemble each other
Parapodia
Fleshy appendages
A lichen is a symbiotic relationship between ____________
Fungus and photosynthetic algae
What are two major differences in gram positive and gram negative bacteria?
Gram positive turns purple and tells you if you have more peptidgylcogen. Gram negative turns pink and tells you if you have less peptidglycogen.
Dioecious
Having male and female reproductive organs in separate plants or animals
Mantle
In a mollusc, the outgrowth of the body surface that drapes over the animal.
Foot
In an invertebrate animal, a structure used for locomotion or attachment, such as the muscular organ extending from the ventral side of a mollusc.
Amnion
Innermost membranous sac surrounding the developing fetus
Ecdysozoan
Member of a group of animal phyla identified as a clade by molecular evidence. Many ecdysozoans are molting animals.
Cnidarians have all the following expect _________________
Mesoderm
Gram Stain
Microbiological technique to identify the cell wall composition of bacteria. Results categorize bacteria as gram-positive or gram-negative.
Compare and contrast monocot and dicots
Monocots have one cotyledon and dicots have 2
Difference between monocots and dicots are ________________________
Monocots have one cotyledon and dicots have two
Cnidarians have _________________ between the epidermis and the gastrodermis
Nematocysts
While swimming in the ocean, you feel a sting on your leg from a Portuguese man-of-war. The sting was caused by ___________________
Nematocysts
Abiotic factors
Nonliving components of environment.
Bacteria that require oxygen for survival are known as ________________
Obligate aerobes
Clostridium Botulinum is a bacteria that can't live in oxygen. It is described as a/an _____________________
Obligate anaerobe
Mandibles
One of a pair of jaw-like feeding appendages found in myriapods, hexapods, and crustaceans.
Hyphae
One of many filaments making up the body of a fungus
Why do protists present a unique problem for taxonomist?
Originally, protists were all classified as a single kingdom. They have been divided into plant-like, animal-like, and fungal-like protist. The taxonomy of protists is still changing.
Chorion
Outermost layer of the two membranes surrounding the embryo; it forms the fetal part of the placenta.
_____________ Capture energy from sunlight
Phototrophs
Gram-positive bacteria stain __________________
Purple
Which of the following is a characteristic of jellyfish?
Radial symmetry and incomplete digestive tract
Cutting a planarian in half results in the subsequent formation of two fully formed individuals. What is this process called?
Regeneration
In a sponge with an asconoid canal system, water is filtered and exits via the ________________
Spicules
The central cavity of a sponge, the ______________ is lined with ______________
Spongocoel, choanocysts
Segmentation
Subdivision along the length of an animal body into a series of repeated parts called segments.
Which of the following are acoelomates?
Tapeworms, flukes, and free-living planarians
Water Cycle
The continuous process by which water moves from Earth's surface to the atmosphere and back
Sporophyte
The multicellular diploid form in the life cycle of organisms undergoing alternation of generations; results from a union of gametes and meiotically produces haploid spores that grow into the gametophyte generation.
Gametophyte
The multicellular haploid form in the life cycle of organisms undergoing alternation of generations; mitotically produces haploid gametes that unite and grow into the sporophyte generation.
Xylem
The nonliving portion of a plant's vascular system that provides support and conveys xylem sap from the roots to the rest of the plant. Xylem is made up of vessel elements and/or tracheids, water-conducting cells. Primary xylem is derived from the procambium. Secondary xylem is derived from the vascular cambium in plants exhibiting secondary growth.
Phloem
The portion of a plant's vascular tissue system that transports sugars and other organic nutrients from leaves or storage tissues to other parts of the plant.
What factors may account for the ubiquitous occurrence and great structural diversity of unicellular organisms?
Their size and adaptability. Protists can function as heterotrophs, autotrophs, and decomposers, and there are photosynthetic protist. Some protist also produce oxygen, and have different type of pigments.
Why is Euglenas called a mixotroph?
They produce their own food through photosynthesis and they are heterotrophic because they absorb food.
Deserts
a barren region with little or no rainfall, usually sandy and without trees..
Learned Avoidance
a behavior in which predators quickly learn to recognize poisonous or distasteful species by remembering adverse reactions from attempted predation events
Coniferous forests
a biome characterized by conifers, cone-bearing evergreen trees
Temperate broadleaf forests
a biome located throughout midlatitude regions where there is sufficient moisture to support the growth of large, broadleaf deciduous trees
Lateral Line
a faint line visible on both sides of a fish's body that runs the length of the body and marks the location of sense organs that detect vibrations in water
Yolk Sac
a specialized structure that leads to the digestive tract of a developing organism and provides it with food during early development
Ovipositor
a tubular organ through which a female insect or fish deposits eggs.
Tundra
a vast, flat, treeless Arctic region of Europe, Asia, and North America in which the subsoil is permanently frozen.
Pharyngeal gill slits
all chordates share this, appear in the pharynx at some stage in their development, evolved to aid in respiration and filter feeding
Temperate grasslands
biome characterized by deep, nutrient-rich soil that supports many grass species
Pedipalps
each of the second pair of appendages attached to the cephalothorax of most arachnids. They are variously specialized as pincers in scorpions, sensory organs in spiders, and locomotory organs in horseshoe crabs.
Temperate rain forests
found in scattered coastal temperate areas with ample rainfall, along the coast of North America from Canada to Northern California
Compare and contrast gymnosperms and angiosperms
gymnosperms-seeds are exposed (naked) &found in cones & rely on wind for pollination angiosperms-have flowers & fruit helps distribute seeds,
Endoskeleton
internal skeleton or supporting framework in an animal
Aquatic Biomes
oceans, estuaries, lakes, and ponds
Chelicerae
pair of mouthparts in chelicerates that contain fangs and are used to stab and paralyze prey
Permafrost
permanently frozen layer of soil beneath the surface of the ground
Jacobson's organ
saclike, odor-sensing structure on the roof of a snake's mouth
Spiracle
small opening located along the side of the body through which air enters and leaves the body of many terrestrial arthropods
Allantois
the extraembyonic membrane of birds, reptiles and mammals that serves as an area of gaseous exchange and as a site for the storage of noxious excretion products
Habitat
the natural home or environment of an animal, plant, or other organism.
Ossicles
three tiny bones in the middle ear
Chaparral
vegetation consisting chiefly of tangled shrubs and thorny bushes.