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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Biology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
science
,
biology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Occurs when an individual learns not to respond to a particular stimulus - for instance when a stimulus is repeated many times without consequence.
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Habituation
Biosphere
The Cell Theory
2. The physical place where a particular organism lives. It must include all the factors that will support its life and reproduction.
Pharynx
Habitat
Early hominids...
The Cell Theory
3. Is a social behavior of an organism that is beneficial to the group at the individual's expense.
Silicon
A hydrogen bond
Allopatric speciation
Altruism
4. States that where random mating is occurring within a population that is in equilibrium with its environment - the gene frequencies and genotype ratios will remain constant from generation to generation. It is a mathematical formula that shows why re
The Hardy-Weinberg Law of Equilibrium
The cell's 'powerhouses'
The salivary gland
An enzyme
5. The phyla of round worms.
Cellular Respiration
Kingdom Protista
As energy is transferred through trophic levels
Nematoda
6. Is a substance that changes the speed of a reaction without being affected itself.
Hemophilia
Ecological niches open up
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
A catalyst
7. Are the monomers that form nucleic acids - containing a sugar - phosphate group - and a nitrogenous base.
Nucleotides
A sudden change in the amount of extracellular fluid will be corrected by events following the release of substances from this organ.
About five million years ago...
Adenine
8. Is the organelle where cellular reproductive processes occur.
Chimpanzees
Color blindness
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
The nucleus
9. Produce adrenaline. This hormone is a well-known constrictor of blood vessels.
Chromatin
The adrenal glands
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Scurvy
10. Is a phylum that contains jellyfish - hydra - etc.
Differential reproduction
The synthesis of ATP molecules to store energy is an example of
Cnidaria
The Nitrogen cycle
11. Most chemical pollutants accidentally ingested by humans are __________ - mixed with broken down pigments in the bile - then bile is secreted into the small intestine - proceeds to the large intestine - and is expelled in the feces.
Filtered by the liver
Balance
Blastula
Precambrian period
12. Algae and Protozoa belong to the kingdom...
Nucleotides
Protista
Chlorophyll
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
13. Is the outermost layer of cells of the stem.
Phyla
Epidermal tissue
Morula
Will increase the reaction rate
14. The bronchi lead to the two lungs where they branch out in all directions into smaller tubules known as bronchioles.
Tundra
Ribonucleic acid
Bronchi
The pancreas
15. Mitochondria - they constitute the center of cellular respiration.
16. The part of the earth that contains all living things - including the atmosphere (air) - the lithosphere (earth) - and the hydrosphere (water).
Alveoli
Biosphere
Endocytic vesicles
The cell membrane
17. Nonvascular plants such as mosses which lack tissue for conducting food or water.
Endoderm
Bryophytes
Xylem tissue
The cell's 'powerhouses'
18. Engages in both passive and active transport.
Population
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
So it can be used over and over again.
Adenine
19. Are organic cofactors or coenzymes that are required by some enzymatic reactions.
Vitamins
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
Phosphorous
Enzymes catalyze reactions
20. Layer that will become the skin - some endocrine glands - and the nervous system.
The biosphere
Ectoderm
Plasmodesmata
Common elements found in proteins
21. Is the major component of sand and is the most abundant element found in the lithosphere. It is not recycled.
Attraction of atoms of different polarity
Pharynx
Hydrolysis
Silicon
22. Is weaker than ionic - covalent - disulfide - or double bonds.
Interphase
Characteristics of water valuable to living organisms
A hydrogen bond
The Cambrian Period
23. Are the organelles where cellular respiration occurs.
The biosphere
Mitochondria
Early hominids...
An inhibitor
24. Is the sugar that lactase acts upon.
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
Aganatha
Hypothalamus
Lactose
25. Has an equal (50%) chance of being passed from a carrier mother to a son or a daughter.
A sex linked recessive disease
Recycled environmental factors
Will increase the reaction rate
Paleozoic era
26. Disease causing
pathogenic
The products of the Krebs cycle
Cnidaria
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
27. The pharynx is between the nasal passage and the trachea. Air passes into the body via the nasal passage - then passes through the pharynx and on to the trachea.
Pharynx
Aganatha
Kingdom Fungi
The salivary gland
28. Between the endoderm and ectoderm - layer that will eventually form the muscles - and organs of the skeletal - circulatory - respiratory - reproductive - and excretory systems.
Gene Migration
Phosphorous gas
Chordata
Mesoderm
29. There was extensive radiation of fish during the Devonian and Silurian periods within the Paleozoic Era.
About five million years ago...
Lysosomes
Paleozoic era
Chromosome
30. Proposes that those individuals within a population that are most adapted to the environment are also the most likely individuals to produce viable offspring.
Aganatha
Differential reproduction
Lymphocytes
The hormone aldosterone
31. Contains organisms that are multicellular eukaryotes including molds and mushrooms.
Mesozoic era
Kingdom Fungi
An enzyme
A mutation
32. Is the outermost of the three main layers of an embryo.
A prosthetic group
The Cell Theory
Ectoderm tissue
Mature sporophyte
33. Is the waxy protective outer coating of leaves.
The cuticle
Lysosomes
A species role in the food chain is part of its
Phyla
34. Is a disease caused by lack of vitamin C in which the body is unable to build enough collagen (a major component of connective tissue).
A sex linked recessive disease
Scurvy
Will increase the reaction rate
The hormone aldosterone
35. Secretes insulin to lower blood sugar and maintain equilibrium. A person eats three candy bars. Within minutes this endocrine gland affects blood-glucose homeostasis.
So it can be used over and over again.
Paleozoic era
The pancreas
Ectoderm tissue
36. The phyla composed of segmented worms.
Scurvy
Annelida
Phloem tissue
As energy is transferred through trophic levels
37. An enzyme is unaffected by the reactions it catalyzes
A hydrogen bond
So it can be used over and over again.
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
Biosphere
38. Plants and animals obtain usable nitrogen
Altruism
Lymphocytes
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Allopatric speciation
39. Consists of undifferentiated cells capable of quick growth and specialization. It is responsible for elongation of the stem.
Meristem tissue
Angiosperms
Forebrain
North America
40. Is the earliest period of the Paleozoic era. Began with the Cambrian explosion - this explosion of life resulted in the representatives of most of the modern phyla being present.
The Cambrian Period
Kingdom Fungi
Spiracles
A hydrogen bond
41. Attaches to an enzyme and blocks the enzyme reaction rather than enhancing it - like a prosthetic group would.
Kingdom Plantae
Biogeochemical cycles
An inhibitor
Germ layers
42. Assumes that there are periods of stability during which little evolutionary change occurs - and that speciation can occur rapidly over a very short period of time.
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
Vascular bundles
A catalyst
Aggregate fruit
43. Contain one celled eukaryotes such as algae and protozoa.
Habituation
Niche
Kingdom Plantae
Kingdom Protista
44. A type of innate behavior (instinct.) The FAP is a preprogrammed response to a particular stimulus (known as a releaser stimulus). FAP's include courtship behaviors and feeding of young. These are not learned behaviors - they are automatically perfor
About five million years ago...
DNA replication
Color blindness
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
45. Bacteria break ammonia into nitrites - then into nitrates that are usable by plants; volcanic activity produces ammonia and nitrates that enter the soil and can be absorbed by plants; lightning reacts with atmospheric nitrogen to form nitrates that a
A species role in the food chain is part of its
Carrying capacity
The Nitrogen cycle
Meristem tissue
46. Developed by the German scientists Schleiden and Schwann - States that all living things are made of cells - cells are the basic units of life - all cells come from pre-existing cells.
Meristem tissue
Blastula
Precambrian period
The Cell Theory
47. Energy transformations that occur as chemicals are broken down or synthesized within the cell.
Ionic bonds involve
Phosphorous
Cellular Metabolism
Genetic screening
48. Provide rigidity to plant cells (and some bacteria) and are not found within animal cells.
Scurvy
Anabolsim
Paleozoic era
Cell walls
49. Anabolism
Photolysis is a reaction of photosynthesis where
The synthesis of ATP molecules to store energy is an example of
T Cells
Free ribosomes
50. The most recent and present era. It includes the radiation of flowering plants - the angiosperms.
Alveoli
Adenine
Cenozoic era
Centrioles