Exam 32: Deuterostomes: Vertebrates and Their Closest Relatives
Exam 1: Introduction to Biological Concepts and Research86 Questions
Exam 2: Life, Chemistry, and Water87 Questions
Exam 3: Biological Molecules: the Carbon Compounds of Life86 Questions
Exam 4: Cells87 Questions
Exam 5: Membranes and Transport88 Questions
Exam 6: Energy, Enzymes, and Biological Reactions87 Questions
Exam 7: Cellular Respiration: Harvesting Chemical Energy88 Questions
Exam 8: Photosynthesis83 Questions
Exam 9: Cell Communication87 Questions
Exam 10: Cell Division and Mitosis88 Questions
Exam 11: Meiosis: the Cellular Basis of Sexual Reproduction80 Questions
Exam 12: Mendel, Genes, and Inheritance79 Questions
Exam 13: Genes, Chromosomes, and Human Genetics92 Questions
Exam 14: Dna Structure, Replication, and Organization79 Questions
Exam 15: Gene Expression: From Dna to Protein83 Questions
Exam 16: Regulation of Gene Expression84 Questions
Exam 17: Bacterial and Viral Genetics85 Questions
Exam 18: Dna Technology: Making and Using Genetically Altered Organisms, and Other Applications90 Questions
Exam 19: Genomes and Proteomes81 Questions
Exam 20: The Development of Evolutionary Thought92 Questions
Exam 21: Microevolution: Genetic Changes Within Populations88 Questions
Exam 22: Speciation89 Questions
Exam 23: Paleobiology and Macroevolution87 Questions
Exam 24: Systematic Biology: Phylogeny and Classification95 Questions
Exam 25: The Origin of Life86 Questions
Exam 26: Prokaryotes and Viruses86 Questions
Exam 27: Protists90 Questions
Exam 28: Seedless Plants88 Questions
Exam 29: Seed Plants90 Questions
Exam 30: Fungi88 Questions
Exam 31: Animal Phylogeny, Acoelomates, and Protostomes95 Questions
Exam 32: Deuterostomes: Vertebrates and Their Closest Relatives93 Questions
Exam 33: The Plant Body90 Questions
Exam 34: Transport in Plants94 Questions
Exam 35: Plant Nutrition85 Questions
Exam 36: Reproduction and Development in Flowering Plants89 Questions
Exam 37: Plant Signals and Responses to the Environment90 Questions
Exam 38: Introduction to Animal Organization and Physiology87 Questions
Exam 39: Information Flow and the Neuron88 Questions
Exam 40: Nervous Systems88 Questions
Exam 41: Sensory Systems87 Questions
Exam 42: The Endocrine System94 Questions
Exam 43: Muscles, Bones, and Body Movements87 Questions
Exam 44: The Circulatory System87 Questions
Exam 45: Defenses Against Disease83 Questions
Exam 46: Gas Exchange: the Respiratory System87 Questions
Exam 47: Digestive Systems and Animal Nutrition92 Questions
Exam 48: Regulating the Internal Environment: Osmoregulation, Excretion, and Thermoregulation88 Questions
Exam 49: Animal Reproduction76 Questions
Exam 50: Animal Development88 Questions
Exam 51: Ecology and the Biosphere88 Questions
Exam 52: Population Ecology92 Questions
Exam 53: Population Interactions and Community Ecology89 Questions
Exam 54: Ecosystems90 Questions
Exam 55: Biodiversity and Conservation Biology89 Questions
Exam 56: Animal Behavior87 Questions
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Tunicates, members of one major class of the ____ lineage, have tadpolelike larvae, but their sessile adult forms are usually encased in a leathery "tunic."
Free
(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
D
Frogs and toads belong to the ____ lineage.
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
E
The living descendants of the clade Reptilia include lizards, snakes, turtles, crocodiles, and birds.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
True
The ___ Echinoderm lineage is made up of sea urchins and sand dollars, whose ossicles are fused into solid tests that restrict flexibility but provide excellent protection.
(Multiple Choice)
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Water enters the water vascular system of a sea star through a structure called the ____.
(Multiple Choice)
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Occupying Europe and western Asia from about 150,000 to 28,000 years ago, ____ had a heavier build, more pronounced brow ridges and slightly larger brains than modern humans, and were culturally and technologically sophisticated.
(Multiple Choice)
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Match each group of organisms with the correct lineage.
Premises:
birds
Responses:
Eutheria
Testudines
Squamata
Correct Answer:
Premises:
Responses:
(Matching)
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Why is the absence of bone in Chondrichthyes considered a derived trait?
(Essay)
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Tarsiers, new world monkeys, old world monkeys, and apes are all living members of the ____ mammalian lineage.
(Multiple Choice)
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Which structure is a covering for the gill chamber in ray-finned fishes?
(Multiple Choice)
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Which structure is derived from an ancestral air-breathing lung in ray-finned fishes and is used to increase buoyancy?
(Multiple Choice)
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The majority of mammal species living today are ____, or placentals, including such diverse groups as rodents, bats, whales, and primates.
(Multiple Choice)
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Members of the ____ phylum have bilaterally symmetrical larvae, but exhibit secondary radial symmetry as adults, usually organized around five rays, or "arms."
(Multiple Choice)
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In animals, one group of homeobox genes, the Hox gene family, regulates the development and location of structures such as legs and wings along the anterior-posterior axis of the body.
(True/False)
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