Deck 32: An Introduction to Animal Diversity

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Question
Sponges and cnidarians are among the fossilized animals found in both the Ediacara Hills and the Burgess Shale from the Rocky Mountains of British Colombia. This observation requires that

A)ancestral sponges and cnidarians had formerly been terrestrial animals.
B)North America and Australia were united to each other about 550 million years ago (mya).
C)land that now comprises the Ediacara Hills and the Rocky Mountains was underwater about 550 million years ago.
D)only sponges and cnidarians existed at the time the sediments were deposited.
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Question
Whatever its ultimate cause(s), the Cambrian explosion is a prime example of

A)mass extinction.
B)evolutionary stasis.
C)adaptive radiation.
D)A and B only
E)A, B, and C
Question
Which of the following terms or structures is properly associated only with animals?

A)Hox genes
B)cell wall
C)autotrophy
D)sexual reproduction
E)chitin
Question
An obsolete taxon, the "Radiata," included all phyla whose adults had True radial symmetry. Today, the "Radiata" is more correctly considered to be
1) a clade.
2) a grade.
3) monophyletic.
4) paraphyletic.
5) polyphyletic.

A)1 and 2
B)1 and 3
C)2 and 4
D)2 and 5
E)1, 2, and 3
Question
The last common ancestor of all animals was probably a

A)unicellular chytrid.
B)unicellular yeast.
C)plant.
D)multicellular fungus.
E)flagellated protist.
Question
What do animals as diverse as corals and monkeys have in common?

A)body cavity between body wall and digestive system
B)number of embryonic tissue layers
C)type of body symmetry
D)presence of Hox genes
E)degree of cephalization
Question
Which statement is most consistent with the hypothesis that the Cambrian explosion was caused by the rise of predator-prey relationships?

A)increased incidence of worm burrows in the fossil record
B)increased incidence of larger animals in the fossil record
C)increased incidence of organic material in the fossil record
D)increased incidence of fern galls in the fossil record
E)increased incidence of hard parts in the fossil record
Question
In individual insects of some species, whole chromosomes that carry larval genes are eliminated from the genomes of somatic cells at the time of metamorphosis. A consequence of this occurrence is that

A)we could not clone a larva from the somatic cells of such an adult insect.
B)such species must reproduce only asexually.
C)the descendents of these adults do not include a larval stage.
D)metamorphosis can no longer occur among the descendents of such adults.
E)both C and D.
Question
The number of legs an insect has, the number of vertebrae in a vertebral column, or the number of joints in a digit (such as a finger)are all strongly influenced by

A)haploid genomes.
B)introns within genes.
C)heterotic genes.
D)heterogeneous genes.
E)Hox genes.
Question
Both animals and fungi are heterotrophic. What distinguishes animal heterotrophy from fungal heterotrophy is that only animals derive their nutrition

A)from organic matter.
B)by preying on animals.
C)by ingesting it.
D)by consuming living, rather than dead, prey.
E)by using enzymes to digest their food.
Question
Evidence of which structure or characteristic would be most surprising to find among fossils of the Ediacaran fauna?

A)True tissues
B)hard parts
C)bilateral symmetry
D)cephalization
E)embryos
Question
What is the probable sequence in which the following clades of animals originated, from earliest to most recent?
1) tetrapods
2) vertebrates
3) deuterostomes
4) amniotes
5) bilaterians

A)5 → 3 → 2 → 4 → 1
B)5 → 3 → 2 → 1 → 4
C)5 → 3 → 4 → 2 → 1
D)3 → 5 → 4 → 2 → 1
E)3 → 5 → 2 → 1 → 4
Question
An adult animal that possesses bilateral symmetry is most certainly also

A)triploblastic.
B)a deuterostome.
C)eucoelomate.
D)the product of metamorphosis.
E)highly cephalized.
Question
Arthropods invaded land about 100 million years before vertebrates did so. This most clearly implies that

A)arthropods evolved before vertebrates did.
B)extant terrestrial arthropods are better adapted to terrestrial life than are extant terrestrial vertebrates.
C)ancestral arthropods must have been poorly adapted to aquatic life, thus experienced a selective pressure to invade land.
D)vertebrates evolved from arthropods.
E)arthropods have had more time to co-evolve with land plants than have vertebrates.
Question
Fossil evidence indicates that the following events occurred in what sequence, from earliest to most recent?
1) Protostomes invade terrestrial environments.
2) Cambrian explosion occurs.
3) Deuterostomes invade terrestrial environments.
4) Vertebrates become top predators in the seas.

A)2 → 4 → 3 → 1
B)2 → 1 → 4 → 3
C)2 → 4 → 1 → 3
D)2 → 3 → 1 → 4
E)2 → 1 → 3 → 4
Question
The Hox genes came to regulate each of the following in what sequence, from earliest to most recent?
1) identity and position of paired appendages in protostome embryos
2) formation of water channels in sponges
3) anterior-posterior orientation of segments in protostome embryos
4) positioning of tentacles in cnidarians
5) anterior-posterior orientation in vertebrate embryos

A)4 → 1 → 3 → 2 → 5
B)4 → 2 → 3 → 1 → 5
C)4 → 2 → 5 → 3 → 1
D)2 → 4 → 5 → 3 → 1
E)2 → 4 → 3 → 1 → 5
Question
The larvae of some insects are merely small versions of the adult, whereas the larvae of other insects look completely different from adults, eat different foods, and may live in different habitats. Which of the following most directly favors the evolution of the latter, more radical, kind of metamorphosis?

A)natural selection of sexually immature forms of insects
B)changes in the homeobox genes governing early development
C)the evolution of meiosis
D)B and C only
E)A, B, and C
Question
Which of these genetic processes may be most helpful in accounting for the Cambrian explosion?

A)binary fission
B)mitosis
C)random segregation
D)gene duplication
E)chromosomal condensation
Question
Which of the following is (are)unique to animals?

A)cells that have mitochondria
B)the structural carbohydrate, chitin
C)nervous conduction and muscular movement
D)heterotrophy
E)both A and C
Question
Almost all of the major animal body plans seen today appeared in the fossil record over 500 million years ago at the beginning of the

A)Cambrian period.
B)Ediacaran period.
C)Permian period.
D)Carboniferous period.
E)Cretaceous period.
Question
What is the correct sequence of the following four events during an animal's development?
1) gastrulation
2) metamorphosis
3) fertilization
4) cleavage

A)4 → 3 → 2 → 1
B)4 → 3 → 1 → 2
C)3 → 2 → 4 → 1
D)3 → 4 → 2 → 1
E)3 → 4 → 1 → 2
Question
Organisms showing radial symmetry would likely

A)be good swimmers.
B)have rapid escape behavior.
C)move from place to place relatively slowly, if at all.
D)be able to fly.
E)have many fins.
Question
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which group contains diploblastic organisms?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V <div style=padding-top: 35px> Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which group contains diploblastic organisms?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
Question
Which of the following is a correct association of an animal germ layer with the tissues or organs to which it gives rise?

A)ectoderm: outer covering of digestive system
B)endoderm: internal lining of blood vessels
C)mesoderm: central nervous system
D)mesoderm: skin
E)endoderm: linings of liver passageways and lung passageways
Question
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which of these is the basal group of the Eumetazoa?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V <div style=padding-top: 35px> Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which of these is the basal group of the Eumetazoa?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
Question
Cephalization is primarily associated with

A)adaptation to dark environments.
B)method of reproduction.
C)fate of the blastopore.
D)type of digestive system.
E)bilateral symmetry.
Question
Organisms that are neither coelomate nor pseudocoelomate should, apart from their digestive systems, have bodies that

A)are solid with tissue.
B)lack the ability to metabolize food.
C)are incapable of muscular contraction.
D)lack True tissues.
E)lack mesodermally derived tissues.
Question
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which two groups are most clearly represented in the Ediacaran fauna?</strong> A)I and II B)I and III C)II and IV D)II and V E)IV and V <div style=padding-top: 35px> Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which two groups are most clearly represented in the Ediacaran fauna?

A)I and II
B)I and III
C)II and IV
D)II and V
E)IV and V
Question
Cephalization is most closely associated with which of the following?

A)sedentary lifestyle
B)concentration of sensory structures at the anterior end
C)predators, but not prey
D)a backbone
E)a sessile existence
Question
What may have occurred to prevent species that are of the same grade from also belonging to the same clade?

A)similar structures arising independently in different lineages
B)convergent evolution among different lineages
C)adaptation by different lineages to the same selective pressures
D)A and B only
E)A, B, and C
Question
Soon after the coelom begins to form, a researcher injects a dye into the coelom of a deuterostome embryo. Initially, the dye should be able to flow directly into the

A)blastopore.
B)blastocoel.
C)archenteron.
D)pseudocoelom.
Question
During metamorphosis, echinoderms undergo a transformation from motile larvae to a sedentary (or sometimes sessile)existence as adults. What differentiates echinoderm adults, but not their larvae? Adults should

A)be diploblastic.
B)have radial symmetry, or something close to it.
C)lack mesodermally derived tissues.
D)A and B only
E)A, B, and C
Question
A researcher is trying to construct a molecular-based phylogeny of the entire animal kingdom. Assuming that none of the following genes is absolutely conserved, which of the following would be the best choice on which to base the phylogeny?

A)genes involved in chitin synthesis
B)collagen genes
C)beta-catenin genes
D)genes involved in eye-lens synthesis
E)genes that cause radial body symmetry
Question
What distinguishes a coelomate animal from a pseudocoelomate animal is that coelomates

A)have a body cavity, whereas pseudocoelomates have a solid body.
B)contain tissues derived from mesoderm, whereas pseudocoelomates have no such tissue.
C)have a body cavity completely lined by mesodermal tissue, whereas pseudocoelomates do not.
D)have a complete digestive system with mouth and anus, whereas pseudocoelomates have a digestive tract with only one opening.
E)have a gut that lacks suspension within the body cavity, whereas pseudocoelomates have mesenteries that hold the digestive system in place.
Question
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which two groups have members that undergo ecdysis?</strong> A)I and II B)II and III C)III and IV D)III and V E)IV and V <div style=padding-top: 35px> Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which two groups have members that undergo ecdysis?

A)I and II
B)II and III
C)III and IV
D)III and V
E)IV and V
Question
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which group includes both ecdysozoans and lophotrochozoans?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V <div style=padding-top: 35px> Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which group includes both ecdysozoans and lophotrochozoans?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
Question
At which developmental stage should one be able to first distinguish a diploblastic embryo from a triploblastic embryo?

A)fertilization
B)cleavage
C)gastrulation
D)coelom formation
E)metamorphosis
Question
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which group consists of deuterostomes?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V <div style=padding-top: 35px> Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which group consists of deuterostomes?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
Question
At which developmental stage should one be able to first distinguish a protostome embryo from a deuterostome embryo?

A)fertilization
B)cleavage
C)gastrulation
D)coelom formation
E)metamorphosis
Question
You are trying to identify an organism. It is an animal, but it does not have nerve or muscle tissue. It is neither diploblastic nor triploblastic. It is probably a

A)flatworm.
B)jelly.
C)comb jelly.
D)sponge.
E)nematode.
Question
The blastopore denotes the presence of an endoderm-lined cavity in the developing embryo, a cavity that is known as the

A)archenteron.
B)blastula.
C)coelom.
D)germ layer.
E)blastocoel.
Question
Which of the following characteristics generally applies to protostome development?

A)radial cleavage
B)determinate cleavage
C)diploblastic embryo
D)blastopore becomes the anus
E)archenteron absent
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
The most ancient branch point in animal phylogeny is that between having

A)radial or bilateral symmetry.
B)a well-defined head or no head.
C)diploblastic or triploblastic embryos.
D)True tissues or no tissues.
E)a body cavity or no body cavity.
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
Phylogenetic trees are best described as

A)True and inerrant statements about evolutionary relationships.
B)hypothetical portrayals of evolutionary relationships.
C)the most accurate representations possible of genetic relationships among taxa.
D)theories of evolution.
E)the closest things to absolute certainty that modern systematics can produce.
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
What is characteristic of all ecdysozoans?

A)the deuterostome condition
B)some kind of exoskeleton, or hard outer covering
C)a pseudocoelom
D)agile, speedy, and powerful locomotion
E)the diploblastic condition
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
According to the evidence collected so far, the animal kingdom is

A)monophyletic.
B)paraphyletic.
C)polyphyletic.
D)euphyletic.
E)multiphyletic.
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
What does recent evidence from molecular systematics reveal about the relationship between grades and clades?

A)They are one and the same.
B)There is no relationship.
C)Some, but not all, grades reflect evolutionary relatedness.
D)Grades have their basis in, and flow from, clades.
E)Each branch point on a phylogenetic tree is associated with the evolution of a new grade.
Question
Which of the following is descriptive of protostomes?

A)spiral and indeterminate cleavage, blastopore becomes mouth
B)spiral and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes mouth
C)spiral and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes anus
D)radial and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes anus
E)radial and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes mouth
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If an undisturbed embryo is allowed to develop further, then one should expect that

A)the first opening of the gastrula will ultimately serve as the mouth.
B)upon metamorphosis, the resulting trochophore larva will gain a backbone.
C)upon gastrulation, a solid ball of cells will be produced.
D)both A and B
E)both B and C
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If we were to separate these eight cells and attempt to culture them individually, then what is most likely to happen?

A)All eight cells will die immediately.
B)Each cell may continue development, but only into an inviable embryo that lacks many parts.
C)Each cell may develop into a full-sized, normal embryo.
D)Each cell may develop into a smaller-than-average, but otherwise normal, embryo.
Question
The blastopore is a structure that first becomes evident during

A)fertilization.
B)gastrulation.
C)the eight-cell stage of the embryo.
D)coelom formation.
E)cleavage.
Question
You have before you a living organism, which you examine carefully. Which of the following should convince you that the organism is acoelomate?

A)It responds to food by moving toward it.
B)It is triploblastic.
C)It has bilateral symmetry.
D)It possesses sensory structures at its anterior end.
E)Muscular activity of its digestive system distorts the body wall.
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
This embryo may potentially develop into a(n)

A)turtle.
B)earthworm.
C)sea star.
D)fish.
E)sea urchin.
Question
An animal that swims rapidly in search of prey that it captures using visual senses concentrated at its anterior end is likely to be

A)bilaterally symmetrical and cephalized.
B)coelomate and a protostome.
C)eumetazoan and asymmetrical.
D)diploblastic and radially symmetrical.
E)heterotrophic and sessile.
Question
Protostome characteristics generally include which of the following?

A)a mouth that develops secondarily, and far away from the blastopore
B)radial body symmetry
C)radial cleavage
D)determinate cleavage
E)absence of a body cavity
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If a multicellular animal lacks True tissues, then it can properly be included among the

A)eumetazoans.
B)metazoans.
C)choanoflagellates.
D)lophotrochozoans.
E)bilateria.
Question
Which of the following functions is an advantage of a fluid-filled body cavity?

A)Internal organs are cushioned and protected from injury.
B)Organs can grow and move independently of the outer body wall.
C)The fluid within the cavity acts as a hydrostatic skeleton.
D)A and C only
E)A, B, and C
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
Which of the following organisms are deuterostomes?

A)molluscs
B)annelids
C)echinoderms
D)chordates
E)both C and D
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
With the current molecular-based phylogeny in mind, rank the following from most inclusive to least inclusive. 1. ecdysozoan
2) protostome
3) eumetazoan
4) triploblastic

A)4, 2, 3, 1
B)4, 3, 1, 2
C)3, 4, 1, 2
D)3, 4, 2, 1
E)4, 3, 2, 1
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
What kind of data should probably have the greatest impact on animal taxonomy in the coming decades?

A)fossil evidence
B)comparative morphology of living species
C)nucleotide sequences of homologous genes
D)similarities in metabolic pathways
E)the number and size of chromosomes within nuclei
Question
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the sponges are considered to be a clade, whereas in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), sponges</strong> A)do not all have a common ancestor that is unique only to them. B)are polyphyletic. C)called the Calcarea should actually be included among the eumetazoa. D)called the Silicea are the sole organisms that should be properly called sponges. E)called the Calcarea diverged from the lineage that eventually produced the eumetazoa earlier than did the Silicea. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the sponges are considered to be a clade, whereas in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), sponges</strong> A)do not all have a common ancestor that is unique only to them. B)are polyphyletic. C)called the Calcarea should actually be included among the eumetazoa. D)called the Silicea are the sole organisms that should be properly called sponges. E)called the Calcarea diverged from the lineage that eventually produced the eumetazoa earlier than did the Silicea. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the sponges are considered to be a clade, whereas in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), sponges

A)do not all have a common ancestor that is unique only to them.
B)are polyphyletic.
C)called the Calcarea should actually be included among the eumetazoa.
D)called the Silicea are the sole organisms that should be properly called "sponges."
E)called the Calcarea diverged from the lineage that eventually produced the eumetazoa earlier than did the Silicea.
Question
Which of the following was the least likely factor causing the Cambrian explosion?

A)the emergence of predator-prey relationships between animals
B)the accumulation of diverse adaptations, such as shells and different modes of locomotion
C)the movement of animals onto land
D)the evolution of Hox genes that controlled development
E)the accumulation of sufficient atmospheric oxygen to support the more active metabolism of mobile animals
Question
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), Platyhelminthes is depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this change?</strong> A)Platyhelminthes ceased to be recognized as True protostomes. B)The removal of the acoel flatworms (Acoela)from the Platyhelminthes allowed the remaining flatworms to be clearly tied to the lophotrochozoa. C)All Platyhelminthes must have a well-developed lophophore as their feeding apparatus. D)Platyhelminthes' close genetic ties to the arthropods became clear as their Hox gene sequences were studied. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), Platyhelminthes is depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this change?</strong> A)Platyhelminthes ceased to be recognized as True protostomes. B)The removal of the acoel flatworms (Acoela)from the Platyhelminthes allowed the remaining flatworms to be clearly tied to the lophotrochozoa. C)All Platyhelminthes must have a well-developed lophophore as their feeding apparatus. D)Platyhelminthes' close genetic ties to the arthropods became clear as their Hox gene sequences were studied. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), Platyhelminthes is depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this change?

A)Platyhelminthes ceased to be recognized as True protostomes.
B)The removal of the acoel flatworms (Acoela)from the Platyhelminthes allowed the remaining flatworms to be clearly tied to the lophotrochozoa.
C)All Platyhelminthes must have a well-developed lophophore as their feeding apparatus.
D)Platyhelminthes' close genetic ties to the arthropods became clear as their Hox gene sequences were studied.
Question
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny According to both phylogenies depicted in Fig. 32.2, if one were to create a taxon called Radiata that included all animal species whose members have True radial symmetry, then such a taxon would be</strong> A)paraphyletic. B)polyphyletic. C)monophyletic. D)a clade. E)both C and D <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny According to both phylogenies depicted in Fig. 32.2, if one were to create a taxon called Radiata that included all animal species whose members have True radial symmetry, then such a taxon would be</strong> A)paraphyletic. B)polyphyletic. C)monophyletic. D)a clade. E)both C and D <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
According to both phylogenies depicted in Fig. 32.2, if one were to create a taxon called "Radiata" that included all animal species whose members have True radial symmetry, then such a taxon would be

A)paraphyletic.
B)polyphyletic.
C)monophyletic.
D)a clade.
E)both C and D
Question
Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals
<strong>Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals   What conclusion is apparent from the data in Table 32.1?</strong> A)Land animals have more Hox genes than do those that live in water. B)All bilaterian phyla have had the same degree of expansion in their numbers of Hox genes. C)Acoel flatworms should be expected to contain 7 Hox genes. D)The expansion in number of Hox genes throughout vertebrate evolution cannot be explained merely by three duplications of the ancestral vertebrate Hox cluster. E)Extant insects all have 7 Hox genes. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
What conclusion is apparent from the data in Table 32.1?

A)Land animals have more Hox genes than do those that live in water.
B)All bilaterian phyla have had the same degree of expansion in their numbers of Hox genes.
C)Acoel flatworms should be expected to contain 7 Hox genes.
D)The expansion in number of Hox genes throughout vertebrate evolution cannot be explained merely by three duplications of the ancestral vertebrate Hox cluster.
E)Extant insects all have 7 Hox genes.
Question
Among the characteristics unique to animals is

A)gastrulation.
B)multicellularity.
C)sexual reproduction.
D)flagellated sperm.
E)heterotrophic nutrition.
Question
Some researchers claim that sponge genomes have homeotic genes, but no Hox genes. If True, this finding would

A)strengthen sponges' evolutionary ties to the eumetazoa.
B)mean that sponges must no longer be classified as animals.
C)confirm the identity of sponges as "basal animals."
D)mean that extinct sponges must have been the last common ancestor of animals and fungi.
E)require sponges to be reclassified as choanoflagellates.
Question
Acoelomates are characterized by

A)the absence of a brain.
B)the absence of mesoderm.
C)deuterostome development.
D)a coelom that is not completely lined with mesoderm.
E)a solid body without a cavity surrounding internal organs.
Question
Which of these, if True, would support the claim that the ancestral cnidarians had bilateral symmetry?
1) Cnidarian larvae possess anterior-posterior, left-right, and dorsal-ventral aspects.
2) Cnidarians have fewer Hox genes than bilaterians.
3) All extant cnidarians, including Nematostella, are diploblastic.
4) Beta-catenin turns out to be essential for gastrulation in all animals in which it occurs.
5) All cnidarians are acoelomate.

A)1 only
B)1 and 4
C)2 and 3
D)2 and 4
E)4 and 5
Question
Which distinction is given more emphasis by the morphological phylogeny than by the molecular phylogeny?

A)metazoan and eumetazoan
B)radial and bilateral
C)True coelom and pseudocoelom
D)protostome and deuterostome
E)molting and lack of molting
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If the current molecular evidence regarding animal origins is well substantiated in the future, then what will be True of any contrary evidence regarding the origin of animals derived from the fossil record?

A)The contrary fossil evidence will be seen as a hoax.
B)The fossil evidence will be understood to have been incorrect because it is incomplete.
C)The fossil record will henceforth be ignored.
D)Phylogenies involving even the smallest bit of fossil evidence will need to be discarded.
E)Only phylogenies based solely on fossil evidence will need to be discarded.
Question
Phylogenetic trees, such as those in Fig. 32.2, are best understood as being scientific

A)theories.
B)laws.
C)principles.
D)hypotheses.
E)dogmas.
Question
What is True of the clade Ecdysozoa?

A)It includes all animals that molt at some time during their lives.
B)It includes all animals that undergo metamorphosis at some time during their lives.
C)It includes all animals that have body cavities known as pseudocoeloms.
D)It includes all animals with genetic similarities that are shared with no other animals.
E)It includes all animals in the former clade "Protostomia" that truly do have protostome development.
Question
The distinction between sponges and other animal phyla is based mainly on the absence versus the presence of

A)a body cavity.
B)a complete digestive tract.
C)a circulatory system.
D)True tissues.
E)mesoderm.
Question
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
Which of the following statements concerning animal taxonomy is (are)True?
1) Animals are more closely related to plants than to fungi.
2) All animal clades based on body plan have been found to be incorrect.
3) Kingdom Animalia is monophyletic.
4) Only animals reproduce by sexual means.
5) Animals are thought to have evolved from flagellated protists similar to modern choanoflagellates.

A)5
B)1, 3
C)2, 4
D)3, 5
E)3, 4, 5
Question
The last common ancestor of all bilaterians is thought to have had four Hox genes. Most extant cnidarians have two Hox genes, except Nematostella (of beta-catenin fame), which has three Hox genes. On the basis of these observations, some have proposed that the ancestral cnidarians were originally bilateral and, in stages, lost Hox genes from their genomes. If True, this would mean that

A)"Radiata" should be a True clade.
B)The radial symmetry of extant cnidarians is secondarily derived, rather than being an ancestral trait.
C)Hox genes play little actual role in coding for an animal's "body plan."
D)Cnidaria may someday replace Acoela as the basal bilaterians.
E)both B and D
Question
Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals
<strong>Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals   Two competing hypotheses to account for the increase in the number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor all bilaterians to the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates are: (1)a single duplication of the entire 4-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one gene, and (2)3 independent duplications of individual Hox genes. To prefer the first hypothesis on the basis of parsimony requires the assumption that</strong> A)the duplication of a cluster of four Hox genes is equally likely as the duplication of a single Hox gene. B)there is an actual process by which individual genes can be duplicated. C)genes can exist is spatial groupings called clusters. D)clusters of genes can undergo disruption, with individual genes moving to different chromosomes during evolution. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Two competing hypotheses to account for the increase in the number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor all bilaterians to the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates are: (1)a single duplication of the entire 4-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one gene, and (2)3 independent duplications of individual Hox genes. To prefer the first hypothesis on the basis of parsimony requires the assumption that

A)the duplication of a cluster of four Hox genes is equally likely as the duplication of a single Hox gene.
B)there is an actual process by which individual genes can be duplicated.
C)genes can exist is spatial groupings called "clusters."
D)clusters of genes can undergo disruption, with individual genes moving to different chromosomes during evolution.
Question
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny If the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)eventually becomes obsolete, the formerly close relationship depicted between the annelids and arthropods will probably be viewed, in retrospect, as an instance of</strong> A)scientific fraud. B)lack of objectivity on the parts of arrogant or egotistical scientists. C)scientists having mistakenly identified analogous features as homologous features. D)the inherent invalidity of all evolutionary biology. E)an evolutionary relationship that modern scientists had set in stone, now having crumbled. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny If the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)eventually becomes obsolete, the formerly close relationship depicted between the annelids and arthropods will probably be viewed, in retrospect, as an instance of</strong> A)scientific fraud. B)lack of objectivity on the parts of arrogant or egotistical scientists. C)scientists having mistakenly identified analogous features as homologous features. D)the inherent invalidity of all evolutionary biology. E)an evolutionary relationship that modern scientists had set in stone, now having crumbled. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
If the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)eventually becomes obsolete, the formerly close relationship depicted between the annelids and arthropods will probably be viewed, in retrospect, as an instance of

A)scientific fraud.
B)lack of objectivity on the parts of arrogant or egotistical scientists.
C)scientists having mistakenly identified analogous features as homologous features.
D)the inherent invalidity of all evolutionary biology.
E)an evolutionary relationship that modern scientists had "set in stone," now having crumbled.
Question
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny What is True of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B)that is NOT True in the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)?</strong> A)Deuterostomia is a clade. B)to maintain Deuterostoia as a clade, some phyla had to be removed from it. C)Deuterostomia now includes the Acoela. D)It is actually a grade, rather than a clade. E)It diverged from the rest of the Bilateria earlier than did the Acoela. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny What is True of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B)that is NOT True in the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)?</strong> A)Deuterostomia is a clade. B)to maintain Deuterostoia as a clade, some phyla had to be removed from it. C)Deuterostomia now includes the Acoela. D)It is actually a grade, rather than a clade. E)It diverged from the rest of the Bilateria earlier than did the Acoela. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
What is True of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B)that is NOT True in the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)?

A)"Deuterostomia" is a clade.
B)to maintain Deuterostoia as a clade, some phyla had to be removed from it.
C)Deuterostomia now includes the Acoela.
D)It is actually a grade, rather than a clade.
E)It diverged from the rest of the Bilateria earlier than did the Acoela.
Question
Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals
<strong>Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals   All things being equal, which of these is the most parsimonious explanation for the change in number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates to ancestral vertebrates, as shown in Table 32.1?</strong> A)The occurrence of 7 independent duplications of individual Hox genes. B)The occurrence of 2 distinct duplications of the entire 7-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one cluster. C)The occurrence of a single duplication of the entire 7-gene cluster. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
All things being equal, which of these is the most parsimonious explanation for the change in number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates to ancestral vertebrates, as shown in Table 32.1?

A)The occurrence of 7 independent duplications of individual Hox genes.
B)The occurrence of 2 distinct duplications of the entire 7-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one cluster.
C)The occurrence of a single duplication of the entire 7-gene cluster.
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Deck 32: An Introduction to Animal Diversity
1
Sponges and cnidarians are among the fossilized animals found in both the Ediacara Hills and the Burgess Shale from the Rocky Mountains of British Colombia. This observation requires that

A)ancestral sponges and cnidarians had formerly been terrestrial animals.
B)North America and Australia were united to each other about 550 million years ago (mya).
C)land that now comprises the Ediacara Hills and the Rocky Mountains was underwater about 550 million years ago.
D)only sponges and cnidarians existed at the time the sediments were deposited.
C
2
Whatever its ultimate cause(s), the Cambrian explosion is a prime example of

A)mass extinction.
B)evolutionary stasis.
C)adaptive radiation.
D)A and B only
E)A, B, and C
C
3
Which of the following terms or structures is properly associated only with animals?

A)Hox genes
B)cell wall
C)autotrophy
D)sexual reproduction
E)chitin
A
4
An obsolete taxon, the "Radiata," included all phyla whose adults had True radial symmetry. Today, the "Radiata" is more correctly considered to be
1) a clade.
2) a grade.
3) monophyletic.
4) paraphyletic.
5) polyphyletic.

A)1 and 2
B)1 and 3
C)2 and 4
D)2 and 5
E)1, 2, and 3
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5
The last common ancestor of all animals was probably a

A)unicellular chytrid.
B)unicellular yeast.
C)plant.
D)multicellular fungus.
E)flagellated protist.
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6
What do animals as diverse as corals and monkeys have in common?

A)body cavity between body wall and digestive system
B)number of embryonic tissue layers
C)type of body symmetry
D)presence of Hox genes
E)degree of cephalization
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7
Which statement is most consistent with the hypothesis that the Cambrian explosion was caused by the rise of predator-prey relationships?

A)increased incidence of worm burrows in the fossil record
B)increased incidence of larger animals in the fossil record
C)increased incidence of organic material in the fossil record
D)increased incidence of fern galls in the fossil record
E)increased incidence of hard parts in the fossil record
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8
In individual insects of some species, whole chromosomes that carry larval genes are eliminated from the genomes of somatic cells at the time of metamorphosis. A consequence of this occurrence is that

A)we could not clone a larva from the somatic cells of such an adult insect.
B)such species must reproduce only asexually.
C)the descendents of these adults do not include a larval stage.
D)metamorphosis can no longer occur among the descendents of such adults.
E)both C and D.
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9
The number of legs an insect has, the number of vertebrae in a vertebral column, or the number of joints in a digit (such as a finger)are all strongly influenced by

A)haploid genomes.
B)introns within genes.
C)heterotic genes.
D)heterogeneous genes.
E)Hox genes.
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10
Both animals and fungi are heterotrophic. What distinguishes animal heterotrophy from fungal heterotrophy is that only animals derive their nutrition

A)from organic matter.
B)by preying on animals.
C)by ingesting it.
D)by consuming living, rather than dead, prey.
E)by using enzymes to digest their food.
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11
Evidence of which structure or characteristic would be most surprising to find among fossils of the Ediacaran fauna?

A)True tissues
B)hard parts
C)bilateral symmetry
D)cephalization
E)embryos
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12
What is the probable sequence in which the following clades of animals originated, from earliest to most recent?
1) tetrapods
2) vertebrates
3) deuterostomes
4) amniotes
5) bilaterians

A)5 → 3 → 2 → 4 → 1
B)5 → 3 → 2 → 1 → 4
C)5 → 3 → 4 → 2 → 1
D)3 → 5 → 4 → 2 → 1
E)3 → 5 → 2 → 1 → 4
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13
An adult animal that possesses bilateral symmetry is most certainly also

A)triploblastic.
B)a deuterostome.
C)eucoelomate.
D)the product of metamorphosis.
E)highly cephalized.
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14
Arthropods invaded land about 100 million years before vertebrates did so. This most clearly implies that

A)arthropods evolved before vertebrates did.
B)extant terrestrial arthropods are better adapted to terrestrial life than are extant terrestrial vertebrates.
C)ancestral arthropods must have been poorly adapted to aquatic life, thus experienced a selective pressure to invade land.
D)vertebrates evolved from arthropods.
E)arthropods have had more time to co-evolve with land plants than have vertebrates.
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15
Fossil evidence indicates that the following events occurred in what sequence, from earliest to most recent?
1) Protostomes invade terrestrial environments.
2) Cambrian explosion occurs.
3) Deuterostomes invade terrestrial environments.
4) Vertebrates become top predators in the seas.

A)2 → 4 → 3 → 1
B)2 → 1 → 4 → 3
C)2 → 4 → 1 → 3
D)2 → 3 → 1 → 4
E)2 → 1 → 3 → 4
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16
The Hox genes came to regulate each of the following in what sequence, from earliest to most recent?
1) identity and position of paired appendages in protostome embryos
2) formation of water channels in sponges
3) anterior-posterior orientation of segments in protostome embryos
4) positioning of tentacles in cnidarians
5) anterior-posterior orientation in vertebrate embryos

A)4 → 1 → 3 → 2 → 5
B)4 → 2 → 3 → 1 → 5
C)4 → 2 → 5 → 3 → 1
D)2 → 4 → 5 → 3 → 1
E)2 → 4 → 3 → 1 → 5
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17
The larvae of some insects are merely small versions of the adult, whereas the larvae of other insects look completely different from adults, eat different foods, and may live in different habitats. Which of the following most directly favors the evolution of the latter, more radical, kind of metamorphosis?

A)natural selection of sexually immature forms of insects
B)changes in the homeobox genes governing early development
C)the evolution of meiosis
D)B and C only
E)A, B, and C
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18
Which of these genetic processes may be most helpful in accounting for the Cambrian explosion?

A)binary fission
B)mitosis
C)random segregation
D)gene duplication
E)chromosomal condensation
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19
Which of the following is (are)unique to animals?

A)cells that have mitochondria
B)the structural carbohydrate, chitin
C)nervous conduction and muscular movement
D)heterotrophy
E)both A and C
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20
Almost all of the major animal body plans seen today appeared in the fossil record over 500 million years ago at the beginning of the

A)Cambrian period.
B)Ediacaran period.
C)Permian period.
D)Carboniferous period.
E)Cretaceous period.
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21
What is the correct sequence of the following four events during an animal's development?
1) gastrulation
2) metamorphosis
3) fertilization
4) cleavage

A)4 → 3 → 2 → 1
B)4 → 3 → 1 → 2
C)3 → 2 → 4 → 1
D)3 → 4 → 2 → 1
E)3 → 4 → 1 → 2
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22
Organisms showing radial symmetry would likely

A)be good swimmers.
B)have rapid escape behavior.
C)move from place to place relatively slowly, if at all.
D)be able to fly.
E)have many fins.
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23
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which group contains diploblastic organisms?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which group contains diploblastic organisms?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
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24
Which of the following is a correct association of an animal germ layer with the tissues or organs to which it gives rise?

A)ectoderm: outer covering of digestive system
B)endoderm: internal lining of blood vessels
C)mesoderm: central nervous system
D)mesoderm: skin
E)endoderm: linings of liver passageways and lung passageways
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25
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which of these is the basal group of the Eumetazoa?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which of these is the basal group of the Eumetazoa?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
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26
Cephalization is primarily associated with

A)adaptation to dark environments.
B)method of reproduction.
C)fate of the blastopore.
D)type of digestive system.
E)bilateral symmetry.
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27
Organisms that are neither coelomate nor pseudocoelomate should, apart from their digestive systems, have bodies that

A)are solid with tissue.
B)lack the ability to metabolize food.
C)are incapable of muscular contraction.
D)lack True tissues.
E)lack mesodermally derived tissues.
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28
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which two groups are most clearly represented in the Ediacaran fauna?</strong> A)I and II B)I and III C)II and IV D)II and V E)IV and V Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which two groups are most clearly represented in the Ediacaran fauna?

A)I and II
B)I and III
C)II and IV
D)II and V
E)IV and V
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29
Cephalization is most closely associated with which of the following?

A)sedentary lifestyle
B)concentration of sensory structures at the anterior end
C)predators, but not prey
D)a backbone
E)a sessile existence
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30
What may have occurred to prevent species that are of the same grade from also belonging to the same clade?

A)similar structures arising independently in different lineages
B)convergent evolution among different lineages
C)adaptation by different lineages to the same selective pressures
D)A and B only
E)A, B, and C
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31
Soon after the coelom begins to form, a researcher injects a dye into the coelom of a deuterostome embryo. Initially, the dye should be able to flow directly into the

A)blastopore.
B)blastocoel.
C)archenteron.
D)pseudocoelom.
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32
During metamorphosis, echinoderms undergo a transformation from motile larvae to a sedentary (or sometimes sessile)existence as adults. What differentiates echinoderm adults, but not their larvae? Adults should

A)be diploblastic.
B)have radial symmetry, or something close to it.
C)lack mesodermally derived tissues.
D)A and B only
E)A, B, and C
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33
A researcher is trying to construct a molecular-based phylogeny of the entire animal kingdom. Assuming that none of the following genes is absolutely conserved, which of the following would be the best choice on which to base the phylogeny?

A)genes involved in chitin synthesis
B)collagen genes
C)beta-catenin genes
D)genes involved in eye-lens synthesis
E)genes that cause radial body symmetry
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34
What distinguishes a coelomate animal from a pseudocoelomate animal is that coelomates

A)have a body cavity, whereas pseudocoelomates have a solid body.
B)contain tissues derived from mesoderm, whereas pseudocoelomates have no such tissue.
C)have a body cavity completely lined by mesodermal tissue, whereas pseudocoelomates do not.
D)have a complete digestive system with mouth and anus, whereas pseudocoelomates have a digestive tract with only one opening.
E)have a gut that lacks suspension within the body cavity, whereas pseudocoelomates have mesenteries that hold the digestive system in place.
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35
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which two groups have members that undergo ecdysis?</strong> A)I and II B)II and III C)III and IV D)III and V E)IV and V Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which two groups have members that undergo ecdysis?

A)I and II
B)II and III
C)III and IV
D)III and V
E)IV and V
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36
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which group includes both ecdysozoans and lophotrochozoans?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which group includes both ecdysozoans and lophotrochozoans?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
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37
At which developmental stage should one be able to first distinguish a diploblastic embryo from a triploblastic embryo?

A)fertilization
B)cleavage
C)gastrulation
D)coelom formation
E)metamorphosis
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38
<strong>  Figure 32.1 Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions. Which group consists of deuterostomes?</strong> A)I B)II C)III D)IV E)V Figure 32.1
Figure 32.1 shows a chart of the animal kingdom set up as a modified phylogenetic tree. Use the diagram to answer the following questions.
Which group consists of deuterostomes?

A)I
B)II
C)III
D)IV
E)V
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39
At which developmental stage should one be able to first distinguish a protostome embryo from a deuterostome embryo?

A)fertilization
B)cleavage
C)gastrulation
D)coelom formation
E)metamorphosis
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40
You are trying to identify an organism. It is an animal, but it does not have nerve or muscle tissue. It is neither diploblastic nor triploblastic. It is probably a

A)flatworm.
B)jelly.
C)comb jelly.
D)sponge.
E)nematode.
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41
The blastopore denotes the presence of an endoderm-lined cavity in the developing embryo, a cavity that is known as the

A)archenteron.
B)blastula.
C)coelom.
D)germ layer.
E)blastocoel.
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42
Which of the following characteristics generally applies to protostome development?

A)radial cleavage
B)determinate cleavage
C)diploblastic embryo
D)blastopore becomes the anus
E)archenteron absent
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43
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
The most ancient branch point in animal phylogeny is that between having

A)radial or bilateral symmetry.
B)a well-defined head or no head.
C)diploblastic or triploblastic embryos.
D)True tissues or no tissues.
E)a body cavity or no body cavity.
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44
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
Phylogenetic trees are best described as

A)True and inerrant statements about evolutionary relationships.
B)hypothetical portrayals of evolutionary relationships.
C)the most accurate representations possible of genetic relationships among taxa.
D)theories of evolution.
E)the closest things to absolute certainty that modern systematics can produce.
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45
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
What is characteristic of all ecdysozoans?

A)the deuterostome condition
B)some kind of exoskeleton, or hard outer covering
C)a pseudocoelom
D)agile, speedy, and powerful locomotion
E)the diploblastic condition
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46
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
According to the evidence collected so far, the animal kingdom is

A)monophyletic.
B)paraphyletic.
C)polyphyletic.
D)euphyletic.
E)multiphyletic.
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47
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
What does recent evidence from molecular systematics reveal about the relationship between grades and clades?

A)They are one and the same.
B)There is no relationship.
C)Some, but not all, grades reflect evolutionary relatedness.
D)Grades have their basis in, and flow from, clades.
E)Each branch point on a phylogenetic tree is associated with the evolution of a new grade.
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48
Which of the following is descriptive of protostomes?

A)spiral and indeterminate cleavage, blastopore becomes mouth
B)spiral and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes mouth
C)spiral and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes anus
D)radial and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes anus
E)radial and determinate cleavage, blastopore becomes mouth
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49
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If an undisturbed embryo is allowed to develop further, then one should expect that

A)the first opening of the gastrula will ultimately serve as the mouth.
B)upon metamorphosis, the resulting trochophore larva will gain a backbone.
C)upon gastrulation, a solid ball of cells will be produced.
D)both A and B
E)both B and C
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50
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If we were to separate these eight cells and attempt to culture them individually, then what is most likely to happen?

A)All eight cells will die immediately.
B)Each cell may continue development, but only into an inviable embryo that lacks many parts.
C)Each cell may develop into a full-sized, normal embryo.
D)Each cell may develop into a smaller-than-average, but otherwise normal, embryo.
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51
The blastopore is a structure that first becomes evident during

A)fertilization.
B)gastrulation.
C)the eight-cell stage of the embryo.
D)coelom formation.
E)cleavage.
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52
You have before you a living organism, which you examine carefully. Which of the following should convince you that the organism is acoelomate?

A)It responds to food by moving toward it.
B)It is triploblastic.
C)It has bilateral symmetry.
D)It possesses sensory structures at its anterior end.
E)Muscular activity of its digestive system distorts the body wall.
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53
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
This embryo may potentially develop into a(n)

A)turtle.
B)earthworm.
C)sea star.
D)fish.
E)sea urchin.
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54
An animal that swims rapidly in search of prey that it captures using visual senses concentrated at its anterior end is likely to be

A)bilaterally symmetrical and cephalized.
B)coelomate and a protostome.
C)eumetazoan and asymmetrical.
D)diploblastic and radially symmetrical.
E)heterotrophic and sessile.
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55
Protostome characteristics generally include which of the following?

A)a mouth that develops secondarily, and far away from the blastopore
B)radial body symmetry
C)radial cleavage
D)determinate cleavage
E)absence of a body cavity
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56
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If a multicellular animal lacks True tissues, then it can properly be included among the

A)eumetazoans.
B)metazoans.
C)choanoflagellates.
D)lophotrochozoans.
E)bilateria.
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57
Which of the following functions is an advantage of a fluid-filled body cavity?

A)Internal organs are cushioned and protected from injury.
B)Organs can grow and move independently of the outer body wall.
C)The fluid within the cavity acts as a hydrostatic skeleton.
D)A and C only
E)A, B, and C
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58
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
Which of the following organisms are deuterostomes?

A)molluscs
B)annelids
C)echinoderms
D)chordates
E)both C and D
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59
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
With the current molecular-based phylogeny in mind, rank the following from most inclusive to least inclusive. 1. ecdysozoan
2) protostome
3) eumetazoan
4) triploblastic

A)4, 2, 3, 1
B)4, 3, 1, 2
C)3, 4, 1, 2
D)3, 4, 2, 1
E)4, 3, 2, 1
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60
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
What kind of data should probably have the greatest impact on animal taxonomy in the coming decades?

A)fossil evidence
B)comparative morphology of living species
C)nucleotide sequences of homologous genes
D)similarities in metabolic pathways
E)the number and size of chromosomes within nuclei
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61
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the sponges are considered to be a clade, whereas in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), sponges</strong> A)do not all have a common ancestor that is unique only to them. B)are polyphyletic. C)called the Calcarea should actually be included among the eumetazoa. D)called the Silicea are the sole organisms that should be properly called sponges. E)called the Calcarea diverged from the lineage that eventually produced the eumetazoa earlier than did the Silicea.
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the sponges are considered to be a clade, whereas in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), sponges</strong> A)do not all have a common ancestor that is unique only to them. B)are polyphyletic. C)called the Calcarea should actually be included among the eumetazoa. D)called the Silicea are the sole organisms that should be properly called sponges. E)called the Calcarea diverged from the lineage that eventually produced the eumetazoa earlier than did the Silicea.
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the sponges are considered to be a clade, whereas in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), sponges

A)do not all have a common ancestor that is unique only to them.
B)are polyphyletic.
C)called the Calcarea should actually be included among the eumetazoa.
D)called the Silicea are the sole organisms that should be properly called "sponges."
E)called the Calcarea diverged from the lineage that eventually produced the eumetazoa earlier than did the Silicea.
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62
Which of the following was the least likely factor causing the Cambrian explosion?

A)the emergence of predator-prey relationships between animals
B)the accumulation of diverse adaptations, such as shells and different modes of locomotion
C)the movement of animals onto land
D)the evolution of Hox genes that controlled development
E)the accumulation of sufficient atmospheric oxygen to support the more active metabolism of mobile animals
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63
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), Platyhelminthes is depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this change?</strong> A)Platyhelminthes ceased to be recognized as True protostomes. B)The removal of the acoel flatworms (Acoela)from the Platyhelminthes allowed the remaining flatworms to be clearly tied to the lophotrochozoa. C)All Platyhelminthes must have a well-developed lophophore as their feeding apparatus. D)Platyhelminthes' close genetic ties to the arthropods became clear as their Hox gene sequences were studied.
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), Platyhelminthes is depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this change?</strong> A)Platyhelminthes ceased to be recognized as True protostomes. B)The removal of the acoel flatworms (Acoela)from the Platyhelminthes allowed the remaining flatworms to be clearly tied to the lophotrochozoa. C)All Platyhelminthes must have a well-developed lophophore as their feeding apparatus. D)Platyhelminthes' close genetic ties to the arthropods became clear as their Hox gene sequences were studied.
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
In the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A), the phylum Platyhelminthes is depicted as a sister taxon to the rest of the protostome phyla, and as having diverged earlier from the lineage that led to the rest of the protostomes. In the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B), Platyhelminthes is depicted as a lophotrochozoan phylum. What probably led to this change?

A)Platyhelminthes ceased to be recognized as True protostomes.
B)The removal of the acoel flatworms (Acoela)from the Platyhelminthes allowed the remaining flatworms to be clearly tied to the lophotrochozoa.
C)All Platyhelminthes must have a well-developed lophophore as their feeding apparatus.
D)Platyhelminthes' close genetic ties to the arthropods became clear as their Hox gene sequences were studied.
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64
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny According to both phylogenies depicted in Fig. 32.2, if one were to create a taxon called Radiata that included all animal species whose members have True radial symmetry, then such a taxon would be</strong> A)paraphyletic. B)polyphyletic. C)monophyletic. D)a clade. E)both C and D
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny According to both phylogenies depicted in Fig. 32.2, if one were to create a taxon called Radiata that included all animal species whose members have True radial symmetry, then such a taxon would be</strong> A)paraphyletic. B)polyphyletic. C)monophyletic. D)a clade. E)both C and D
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
According to both phylogenies depicted in Fig. 32.2, if one were to create a taxon called "Radiata" that included all animal species whose members have True radial symmetry, then such a taxon would be

A)paraphyletic.
B)polyphyletic.
C)monophyletic.
D)a clade.
E)both C and D
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65
Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals
<strong>Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals   What conclusion is apparent from the data in Table 32.1?</strong> A)Land animals have more Hox genes than do those that live in water. B)All bilaterian phyla have had the same degree of expansion in their numbers of Hox genes. C)Acoel flatworms should be expected to contain 7 Hox genes. D)The expansion in number of Hox genes throughout vertebrate evolution cannot be explained merely by three duplications of the ancestral vertebrate Hox cluster. E)Extant insects all have 7 Hox genes.
What conclusion is apparent from the data in Table 32.1?

A)Land animals have more Hox genes than do those that live in water.
B)All bilaterian phyla have had the same degree of expansion in their numbers of Hox genes.
C)Acoel flatworms should be expected to contain 7 Hox genes.
D)The expansion in number of Hox genes throughout vertebrate evolution cannot be explained merely by three duplications of the ancestral vertebrate Hox cluster.
E)Extant insects all have 7 Hox genes.
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66
Among the characteristics unique to animals is

A)gastrulation.
B)multicellularity.
C)sexual reproduction.
D)flagellated sperm.
E)heterotrophic nutrition.
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67
Some researchers claim that sponge genomes have homeotic genes, but no Hox genes. If True, this finding would

A)strengthen sponges' evolutionary ties to the eumetazoa.
B)mean that sponges must no longer be classified as animals.
C)confirm the identity of sponges as "basal animals."
D)mean that extinct sponges must have been the last common ancestor of animals and fungi.
E)require sponges to be reclassified as choanoflagellates.
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68
Acoelomates are characterized by

A)the absence of a brain.
B)the absence of mesoderm.
C)deuterostome development.
D)a coelom that is not completely lined with mesoderm.
E)a solid body without a cavity surrounding internal organs.
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69
Which of these, if True, would support the claim that the ancestral cnidarians had bilateral symmetry?
1) Cnidarian larvae possess anterior-posterior, left-right, and dorsal-ventral aspects.
2) Cnidarians have fewer Hox genes than bilaterians.
3) All extant cnidarians, including Nematostella, are diploblastic.
4) Beta-catenin turns out to be essential for gastrulation in all animals in which it occurs.
5) All cnidarians are acoelomate.

A)1 only
B)1 and 4
C)2 and 3
D)2 and 4
E)4 and 5
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70
Which distinction is given more emphasis by the morphological phylogeny than by the molecular phylogeny?

A)metazoan and eumetazoan
B)radial and bilateral
C)True coelom and pseudocoelom
D)protostome and deuterostome
E)molting and lack of molting
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71
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
If the current molecular evidence regarding animal origins is well substantiated in the future, then what will be True of any contrary evidence regarding the origin of animals derived from the fossil record?

A)The contrary fossil evidence will be seen as a hoax.
B)The fossil evidence will be understood to have been incorrect because it is incomplete.
C)The fossil record will henceforth be ignored.
D)Phylogenies involving even the smallest bit of fossil evidence will need to be discarded.
E)Only phylogenies based solely on fossil evidence will need to be discarded.
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72
Phylogenetic trees, such as those in Fig. 32.2, are best understood as being scientific

A)theories.
B)laws.
C)principles.
D)hypotheses.
E)dogmas.
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73
What is True of the clade Ecdysozoa?

A)It includes all animals that molt at some time during their lives.
B)It includes all animals that undergo metamorphosis at some time during their lives.
C)It includes all animals that have body cavities known as pseudocoeloms.
D)It includes all animals with genetic similarities that are shared with no other animals.
E)It includes all animals in the former clade "Protostomia" that truly do have protostome development.
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74
The distinction between sponges and other animal phyla is based mainly on the absence versus the presence of

A)a body cavity.
B)a complete digestive tract.
C)a circulatory system.
D)True tissues.
E)mesoderm.
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75
The following questions are based on the description below.
A student encounters an animal embryo at the eight-cell stage. The four smaller cells that comprise one hemisphere of the embryo seem to be rotated 45 degrees and lie in the grooves between larger, underlying cells (spiral cleavage).
Which of the following statements concerning animal taxonomy is (are)True?
1) Animals are more closely related to plants than to fungi.
2) All animal clades based on body plan have been found to be incorrect.
3) Kingdom Animalia is monophyletic.
4) Only animals reproduce by sexual means.
5) Animals are thought to have evolved from flagellated protists similar to modern choanoflagellates.

A)5
B)1, 3
C)2, 4
D)3, 5
E)3, 4, 5
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76
The last common ancestor of all bilaterians is thought to have had four Hox genes. Most extant cnidarians have two Hox genes, except Nematostella (of beta-catenin fame), which has three Hox genes. On the basis of these observations, some have proposed that the ancestral cnidarians were originally bilateral and, in stages, lost Hox genes from their genomes. If True, this would mean that

A)"Radiata" should be a True clade.
B)The radial symmetry of extant cnidarians is secondarily derived, rather than being an ancestral trait.
C)Hox genes play little actual role in coding for an animal's "body plan."
D)Cnidaria may someday replace Acoela as the basal bilaterians.
E)both B and D
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77
Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals
<strong>Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals   Two competing hypotheses to account for the increase in the number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor all bilaterians to the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates are: (1)a single duplication of the entire 4-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one gene, and (2)3 independent duplications of individual Hox genes. To prefer the first hypothesis on the basis of parsimony requires the assumption that</strong> A)the duplication of a cluster of four Hox genes is equally likely as the duplication of a single Hox gene. B)there is an actual process by which individual genes can be duplicated. C)genes can exist is spatial groupings called clusters. D)clusters of genes can undergo disruption, with individual genes moving to different chromosomes during evolution.
Two competing hypotheses to account for the increase in the number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor all bilaterians to the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates are: (1)a single duplication of the entire 4-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one gene, and (2)3 independent duplications of individual Hox genes. To prefer the first hypothesis on the basis of parsimony requires the assumption that

A)the duplication of a cluster of four Hox genes is equally likely as the duplication of a single Hox gene.
B)there is an actual process by which individual genes can be duplicated.
C)genes can exist is spatial groupings called "clusters."
D)clusters of genes can undergo disruption, with individual genes moving to different chromosomes during evolution.
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78
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny If the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)eventually becomes obsolete, the formerly close relationship depicted between the annelids and arthropods will probably be viewed, in retrospect, as an instance of</strong> A)scientific fraud. B)lack of objectivity on the parts of arrogant or egotistical scientists. C)scientists having mistakenly identified analogous features as homologous features. D)the inherent invalidity of all evolutionary biology. E)an evolutionary relationship that modern scientists had set in stone, now having crumbled.
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny If the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)eventually becomes obsolete, the formerly close relationship depicted between the annelids and arthropods will probably be viewed, in retrospect, as an instance of</strong> A)scientific fraud. B)lack of objectivity on the parts of arrogant or egotistical scientists. C)scientists having mistakenly identified analogous features as homologous features. D)the inherent invalidity of all evolutionary biology. E)an evolutionary relationship that modern scientists had set in stone, now having crumbled.
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
If the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)eventually becomes obsolete, the formerly close relationship depicted between the annelids and arthropods will probably be viewed, in retrospect, as an instance of

A)scientific fraud.
B)lack of objectivity on the parts of arrogant or egotistical scientists.
C)scientists having mistakenly identified analogous features as homologous features.
D)the inherent invalidity of all evolutionary biology.
E)an evolutionary relationship that modern scientists had "set in stone," now having crumbled.
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79
The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny What is True of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B)that is NOT True in the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)?</strong> A)Deuterostomia is a clade. B)to maintain Deuterostoia as a clade, some phyla had to be removed from it. C)Deuterostomia now includes the Acoela. D)It is actually a grade, rather than a clade. E)It diverged from the rest of the Bilateria earlier than did the Acoela.
Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny
<strong>The following eight questions refer to Figure 32.2A (morphological) and Figure 32.2B (molecular) phylogenetic trees of the animal kingdom.   Figure 32.2A: Morphological Phylogeny   Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny What is True of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B)that is NOT True in the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)?</strong> A)Deuterostomia is a clade. B)to maintain Deuterostoia as a clade, some phyla had to be removed from it. C)Deuterostomia now includes the Acoela. D)It is actually a grade, rather than a clade. E)It diverged from the rest of the Bilateria earlier than did the Acoela.
Figure 32.2B: Molecular Phylogeny
What is True of the deuterostomes in the molecular phylogeny (Fig. 32.2B)that is NOT True in the traditional phylogeny (Fig. 32.2A)?

A)"Deuterostomia" is a clade.
B)to maintain Deuterostoia as a clade, some phyla had to be removed from it.
C)Deuterostomia now includes the Acoela.
D)It is actually a grade, rather than a clade.
E)It diverged from the rest of the Bilateria earlier than did the Acoela.
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80
Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals
<strong>Table 32.1. Proposed Number of Hox Genes in Various Extant and Extinct Animals   All things being equal, which of these is the most parsimonious explanation for the change in number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates to ancestral vertebrates, as shown in Table 32.1?</strong> A)The occurrence of 7 independent duplications of individual Hox genes. B)The occurrence of 2 distinct duplications of the entire 7-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one cluster. C)The occurrence of a single duplication of the entire 7-gene cluster.
All things being equal, which of these is the most parsimonious explanation for the change in number of Hox genes from the last common ancestor of insects and vertebrates to ancestral vertebrates, as shown in Table 32.1?

A)The occurrence of 7 independent duplications of individual Hox genes.
B)The occurrence of 2 distinct duplications of the entire 7-gene cluster, followed by the loss of one cluster.
C)The occurrence of a single duplication of the entire 7-gene cluster.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.