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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. Nonvascular plants such as mosses which lack tissue for conducting food or water.
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
Interphase
Photolysis is a reaction of photosynthesis where
Bryophytes
2. Provide rigidity to plant cells (and some bacteria) and are not found within animal cells.
Gametogenesis
Cell walls
Nucleotides
A sudden change in the amount of extracellular fluid will be corrected by events following the release of substances from this organ.
3. Are where the sugars synthesized by photosynthesis travel through to various parts of the plant.
Pharynx
Vascular bundles
pH of Water
Bronchi
4. Studied the relationships between traits expressed in parents and offspring and the genes that caused the traits to be expressed.
Gregor Medel
Scurvy
Cell walls
Epidermal tissue
5. The solid mass of cells resulting from the cleavage of the ovum before the formation of a blastula.
Morula
Phosphorous gas
Meristem tissue
Lysosomes
6. 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
Gametocide
A hydrogen bond
Desert
7. Fossilized burrows from multicellular organisms begin to appear in the geological record approximately 700 million years ago during the Precambrian period. These multicellular animals had only soft parts and could not be fossilized.
Alveoli
An inhibitor
Precambrian period
Kingdom Plantae
8. A reaction that adds water to another compound. (2 hydrogens - 1 oxygen).
Hydrolysis
Balance
Chlorophyll has the ability to
Phosphorous
9. The bronchi lead to the two lungs where they branch out in all directions into smaller tubules known as bronchioles.
Stem tissues
Cellular Metabolism
Bronchi
Scurvy
10. Anabolism
Kingdom Fungi
Spiracles
The synthesis of ATP molecules to store energy is an example of
Pharynx
11. Is a protein - which is a polymer of amino acids. They generally have the suffix -ase- like lactase.
The nucleus
Mature sporophyte
An enzyme
Chlorophyll
12. Contain organisms that are multicellular eukaryotes including vertebrates and invertebrates.
Kingdom Animalia
Attraction of atoms of different polarity
Early hominids...
About five million years ago...
13. Engages in both passive and active transport.
Kingdom Animalia
Internodal tissue
Spiracles
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
14. Is the number of organisms that can be supported within a particular ecosystem.
Carrying capacity
Hemophilia
Chlorophyll has the ability to
As energy is transferred through trophic levels
15. Some energy is lost as heat and becomes unusable.
Mitochondria
As energy is transferred through trophic levels
Share electrons
Genetic imprinting
16. Is composed of an anterior and posterior lobe. The stalk of the lobe is connected to the hypothalamus. Antidiuretic Hormone (AH) is produced in the hypothalamus and stored in the posterior pituitary. Upon nervous stimulation from the hypothalamus - t
Genetic screening
The pituitary gland
Ectoderm tissue
Mature sporophyte
17. High temperatures
Destroy most enzymes
B Cells
Nucleotides
Niche
18. Transparency - polarity - high specific heat - and density (lower density when solid than when liquid.).
Hypothalamus
Genetic screening
Characteristics of water valuable to living organisms
Catabolism
19. Contains the chromosomes and is the site of reproduction through mitosis and meiosis.
The nucleus
Habituation
Savanna
Hydrolysis
20. Are produced when water passes through the cell membrane by osmosis from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration - to equalize water concentration.
Isotonic Conditions
Destroy most enzymes
R-selection
Chromatin
21. Can be accounted for by the theory of punctuated equilibrium. The fossil record shows periods of stability with regard to appearance and disappearance of species as well as periods of sudden change.
An inhibitor
A hydrogen bond
Habituation
Sudden appearance and disappearance of fossil species
22. The phyla composed of segmented worms.
Annelida
Cuticle
Genetic maintenance
A catalyst
23. The large brain and upright posture of Homo Sapiens...
Kingdom Protista
Gymnosperms
Alveoli
Did not evolve together
24. Covalent bonds
Chromosome
Forebrain
Share electrons
Catabolism
25. 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.
Did not evolve together
Chlorophyll has the ability to
The Cambrian Period
Multiple fruit
26. Plants and animals obtain usable nitrogen
Population
Spiracles
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
An enzyme
27. Layer that will become the gut lining as well as some accessory structures.
Porifera
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
Cenozoic era
Endoderm
28. A suffix meaning 'to break apart.' O || ||
Biosphere
Non-protein
Lysis
The hormone aldosterone
29. The cells of a developing embryo (at the gastrula stage) differentiate into layers - that will later develop into different tissues and organs - including the mesoderm - ectoderm - and endoderm.
Genetic maintenance
R-selection
An inhibitor
Germ layers
30. Super-class of vertebrae including organisms with jaws.
Interphase
Gnathostomata
Very specific
The biosphere
31. Where protein synthesis occurs. They float unattached in the cytoplasm. They contain RNA that is specific to their function in protein formation.
Free ribosomes
Interphase
Cuticle
Simple fruits
32. The phyla of sponges.
Porifera
The Cell Theory
Electron Transfer System (ETS)
Vitamin C
33. Is found on the stem between nodes.
Epidermal tissue
Hypothalamus
Internodal tissue
Mesozoic era
34. Are organic cofactors or coenzymes that are required by some enzymatic reactions.
Forebrain
The Hardy-Weinberg Law of Equilibrium
Vitamins
Habituation
35. Are membrane-bound organelles that contain digestive enzymes that digest dead or unused material within the cell or materials absorbed by the cell for use.
Chordata
Lysosomes
Cenozoic era
The cuticle
36. An enzyme is unaffected by the reactions it catalyzes
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
Will increase the reaction rate
Germ layers
So it can be used over and over again.
37. Transfers water and does not require sieve plates to allow nutrients through.
DNA produces particular genetic traits through
The nucleus
Xylem tissue
North America
38. Contains multicellular photosynthetic eukaryotic organisms including gymnosperms and angiosperms.
Characteristics of water valuable to living organisms
Mature sporophyte
Allopatric speciation
Kingdom Plantae
39. A length of DNA (with corresponding histones) is responsible for the production of a certain protein that causes a particular trait to be expressed in an organism.
Chordata
Early hominids...
A gene is
Epidermal tissue
40. The total amount of genetic information available for a given species.
The cell membrane
An inhibitor
Allopatric speciation
Genome
41. 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
The nucleus
Niche
Prosthetic groups
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
42. Is made of stacked cells connected by sieve plates that allow nutrients to pass from cell to cell. They transport food made in the leaves (by photosynthesis) to the rest of the plant).
Iisotonic state
A catalyst
Phloem tissue
T Cells
43. Protein synthesis
DNA produces particular genetic traits through
Protista
Gametogenesis
Recycled environmental factors
44. Contain one celled eukaryotes such as algae and protozoa.
Recycled environmental factors
Kingdom Protista
Anabolism
Endoderm
45. Mitochondria - they constitute the center of cellular respiration.
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46. Controls sensory and motor responses - and controls memory - speech - and intelligence factors.
Habitat
Cerebrum
Desert
The cuticle
47. Contains optic lobes - controls sight.
A species role in the food chain is part of its
Ionic bonds involve
Midbrain
Recycled environmental factors
48. Cleave strands of DNA segments at certain sites.
Chlorophyll has the ability to
T Cells
Restriction enzymes
So it can be used over and over again.
49. Carbon - Hydrogen - Oxygen - and Nitrogen
Did not evolve together
Hemophilia
Saprophytic
Common elements found in proteins
50. Include: Vascular tissue - including both xylem and phloem - and sieve plates existing between cells of the stem.
Larynx
Spiracles
Stem tissues
Sudden appearance and disappearance of fossil species