Exam 25: The Angiosperms: Form and Function in Flowering Plants
Exam 1: Science As a Way of Learning: a Guide to the Natural World54 Questions
Exam 2: Fundamental Building Blocks: Chemistry, water, and Ph74 Questions
Exam 3: Lifes Components: Biological Molecules79 Questions
Exam 4: Lifes Home: the Cell79 Questions
Exam 5: Lifes Border: the Plasma Membrane88 Questions
Exam 6: Lifes Mainspring: an Introduction to Energy78 Questions
Exam 7: Vital Harvest: Deriving Energy From Food74 Questions
Exam 8: The Green Worlds Gift: Photosynthesis79 Questions
Exam 9: The Links in Lifes Chain: Genetics and Cell Division77 Questions
Exam 10: Preparing for Sexual Reproduction: Meiosis77 Questions
Exam 11: The First Geneticist: Mendel and His Discoveries74 Questions
Exam 12: Units of Heredity: Chromosomes and Inheritance69 Questions
Exam 13: Passing on Lifes Information: Dna Structure and Replication72 Questions
Exam 14: How Proteins Are Made: Genetic Transcription, translation, and Regulation77 Questions
Exam 15: The Future Isnt What It Used to Be: Biotechnology74 Questions
Exam 16: An Introduction to Evolution: Charles Darwin, evolutionary Thought, and the Evidence for Evolution67 Questions
Exam 17: The Means of Evolution: Microevolution71 Questions
Exam 18: The Outcomes of Evolution: Macroevolution69 Questions
Exam 19: A Slow Unfolding: the History of Life on Earth80 Questions
Exam 20: Arriving Late,traveling Far: the Evolution of Human Beings56 Questions
Exam 21: Viruses,bacteria,archaea,and Protists: the Diversity of Life 168 Questions
Exam 22: Fungi: the Diversity of Life 251 Questions
Exam 23: Animals: the Diversity of Life 371 Questions
Exam 24: Plants: the Diversity of Life 453 Questions
Exam 25: The Angiosperms: Form and Function in Flowering Plants72 Questions
Exam 26: Body Support and Movement: the Integumentary, skeletal, and Muscular Systems71 Questions
Exam 27: Communication and Control 1: the Nervous System70 Questions
Exam 28: Communication and Control 2: the Endocrine System49 Questions
Exam 29: Defending the Body: the Immune System76 Questions
Exam 30: Transport and Exchange 1: Blood and Breath77 Questions
Exam 31: Transport and Exchange 2: Digestion, nutrition, and Elimination76 Questions
Exam 32: An Amazingly Detailed Script: Animal Development74 Questions
Exam 33: How the Baby Came to Be: Human Reproduction78 Questions
Exam 34: An Interactive Living World 1: Populations in Ecology76 Questions
Exam 35: An Interactive Living World 2: Communities in Ecology75 Questions
Exam 36: An Interactive Living World 3: Ecosystems and Biomes82 Questions
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Angiosperm flowers always self-pollinate because they have both male and female reproductive structures.
(True/False)
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Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s).
-The missing label indicated by a "2" corresponds to the:

(Multiple Choice)
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After pollination,sperm cells travel through the carpel in a structure called the ________.
(Short Answer)
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Fusion of a sperm cell with the large central cell in an angiosperm embryo sac produces:
(Multiple Choice)
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The type of root system more common in monocots is the ________ root system.
(Short Answer)
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The fruit that surrounds a seed provides the primary nourishment for the germinating embryo.
(True/False)
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Guard cells open stomata when they engorge with water and bow outward.
(True/False)
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Carpels are the often-colorful parts of a flower that attract pollinators.
(True/False)
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Although they may look different,all fruits come from one carpel and produce one seed.
(True/False)
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The outer portion of the "ground tissue" of a stem is referred to as its:
(Multiple Choice)
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A fibrous root system is made of roots that are all about the same size.
(True/False)
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The structure that attaches a leaf to the rest of the plant is the:
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