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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. 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.
Balance
The products of the Krebs cycle
Meristem tissue
Sudden appearance and disappearance of fossil species
2. Provide rigidity to plant cells (and some bacteria) and are not found within animal cells.
Catabolism
Aggregate fruit
Cell walls
Common elements found in proteins
3. Is a phylum that contains jellyfish - hydra - etc.
Cnidaria
Ectoderm
Porifera
Xylem tissue
4. Small - green - heart-shaped gametophyte plant form of a fern that can make its own food and absorb water and nutrients from the soil
A gene is
Prothallus
The nucleus
Desert
5. Layer that will become the gut lining as well as some accessory structures.
Ecotone
Hypothalamus
Lysosomes
Endoderm
6. Is a coenzyme required in the synthesis of collagen.
Vitamin C
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
A gene is
Annelida
7. 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
Biosphere
A sex linked recessive disease
Chimpanzees
8. 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
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
Ectoderm
Stem tissues
Phyla
9. Occurs when two populations are geographically isolated from each other. Over time this results in the production of two separate species.
Allopatric speciation
Genetic imprinting
pH of Water
So it can be used over and over again.
10. The most recent and present era. It includes the radiation of flowering plants - the angiosperms.
Lysis
Iisotonic state
Recycled environmental factors
Cenozoic era
11. Contains multicellular photosynthetic eukaryotic organisms including gymnosperms and angiosperms.
The adrenal glands
Kingdom Plantae
Endoderm
Biosphere
12. Are formed when the plasma membrane of a cell encloses a molecule outside the membrane - then releases a membrane bound sack containing the desired molecule into the cytoplasm. This process allows the cell to absorb molecules that are larger in size
Cytosine
Share electrons
Endocytic vesicles
Successful reproduction
13. Is an accidental change of the DNA sequence of the gene that can result in creating a change of trait that is not found in the parent.
A mutation
Germ layers
Biogeochemical cycles
Porifera
14. 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
Genetic screening
Biogeochemical cycles
Mesozoic era
The Nitrogen cycle
15. Are surrounded by capillaries that allow for carbon dioxide to diffuse into the lungs and oxygen to diffuse out.
Alveoli
Cuticle
An enzyme
Biogeochemical cycles
16. Process in which elements - chemical compounds - and other forms of matter are passed from one organism to another and from one part of the biosphere to another.
Prothallus
Biogeochemical cycles
Pharynx
Phototropism
17. May be ions or non-protein molecules - they are similar to cofactors - but differ in that they are tightly attached by covalent bonds to the enzyme - rather than being separate atoms or molecules.
Catabolism
Prosthetic groups
Bronchi
Endoderm
18. Is weaker than ionic - covalent - disulfide - or double bonds.
A hydrogen bond
Prosthetic groups
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Epidermal tissue
19. Is a compound fruit that develops from many ovaries of a single flower fusing together (raspberry).
Cuticle
The cuticle
Aggregate fruit
A hydrogen bond
20. Chlorophyll pigments absorb photons of light - leaving the chlorophyll in a higher energy (excited) state - these then supply energy to reactions that produce ATP from ADP and Pi.
Habituation
Chlorophyll has the ability to
Photolysis is a reaction of photosynthesis where
Cellulose - starch - lipid - and sugar molecules
21. Produce antibodies into the bloodstream that find and attach themselves to foreign antigens (toxins - bacteria).
Vascular bundles make up the
B Cells
Catabolism
Aggregate fruit
22. Is the major component of sand and is the most abundant element found in the lithosphere. It is not recycled.
Internodal tissue
Cellular Respiration
Silicon
Will increase the reaction rate
23. Internally generated patterns of body functions - including hormonal signals - sleep - blood pressure - and temperature regulation - which have approximately a 24-hour cycle and occur even in the absence of normal cues about whether it is day or nigh
The pituitary gland
Porifera
Circadian rhythms
The Nitrogen cycle
24. Cleave strands of DNA segments at certain sites.
Restriction enzymes
Gymnosperms
DNA produces particular genetic traits through
A lysosome
25. The solid mass of cells resulting from the cleavage of the ovum before the formation of a blastula.
Biosphere
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
Cell walls
Morula
26. Niche
Bryophytes
Chordata
B Cells
A species role in the food chain is part of its
27. (of some plants or fungi) feeding on dead or decaying organic matter
Restriction enzymes
The biosphere
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Saprophytic
28. Synthesis
Anabolism
Phyla
Kingdom Fungi
A sudden change in the amount of extracellular fluid will be corrected by events following the release of substances from this organ.
29. Occurs when an individual from an adjacent population of the same species immigrates and breeds with a member of a previously locally isolated group - resulting in a change in the gene pool.
Gene Migration
Mesoderm
Prothallus
Phosphorous
30. The vocal cords are found in the larynx.
Destroy most enzymes
Vascular bundles make up the
Larynx
Arthropoda
31. The phyla of round worms.
Hydrolysis
Nematoda
Gymnosperms
Habituation
32. When stems bend toward the light it is due to _____________ the hormone auxin - in response to light - migrates from the light to the dark side of the shoot tip. The cells on the dark side now contain more auxin - which causes the cells on that side
A sudden change in the amount of extracellular fluid will be corrected by events following the release of substances from this organ.
Angiosperms
The community
Phototropism
33. Produce adrenaline. This hormone is a well-known constrictor of blood vessels.
The adrenal glands
Lactose
Hydrolysis
Meristem tissue
34. The effect of a substrate concentration on the initial reaction rate in the presence of a limited amount of enzyme: _________________ as the concentration of substrate is increased until all the enzymes are used - then the reaction rate will level of
Endoderm
Will increase the reaction rate
T Cells
Meristem tissue
35. Is a substance that changes the speed of a reaction without being affected itself.
Angiosperms
A catalyst
Carrying capacity
DNA produces particular genetic traits through
36. Enzymes are usually __________ to certain reactions.
Tundra
The habitat of an organism includes
Cellular Metabolism
Very specific
37. The process whereby cells build molecules and store energy (in the form of covalent chemical bonds).
Endoderm
Endocytic vesicles
The Hardy-Weinberg Law of Equilibrium
Anabolsim
38. Nonvascular plants such as mosses which lack tissue for conducting food or water.
Kingdom Fungi
Bryophytes
So it can be used over and over again.
Biosphere
39. Produces the most ATP molecules - yielding 34 ATPs per glucose molecule.
Electron Transfer System (ETS)
Gnathostomata
The hormone aldosterone
The Hardy-Weinberg Law of Equilibrium
40. Is a molecule that stores information for protein synthesis and genetic coding.
Ribonucleic acid
Hemophilia
The biosphere
The evolution leading to Homo Sapiens...
41. Becomes available for erosion as undersea sedimentary rocks are up-thrust by volcanic activity - erosion releases it from rocks into streams where it combines with oxygen to form phosphates in lakes that are then absorbed by plants - it is recycled t
pathogenic
Phosphorous
Cnidaria
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
42. Some patrol the blood for antigens - but are also equipped to destroy antigens. They may regulate immune responses as well.
T Cells
Annelida
Altruism
An enzyme
43. Is when expression of genetic traits is determined by weather the trait is inherited from the mother or the father.
Genetic imprinting
An enzyme
Kingdom Fungi
Early hominids...
44. The process of forming eggs and sperm cells in the reproductive organs.
Non-protein
Carrying capacity
Gametogenesis
Xylem tissue
45. All store energy within their chemical bonds.
Lymphocytes
Cellulose - starch - lipid - and sugar molecules
Prothallus
Did not evolve together
46. Layer that will become the skin - some endocrine glands - and the nervous system.
Ectoderm
Ecological niches open up
Chordata
Vascular bundles
47. Is found on the stem between nodes.
Adenine
Nematoda
Anabolsim
Internodal tissue
48. The bronchi lead to the two lungs where they branch out in all directions into smaller tubules known as bronchioles.
Ecological niches open up
Did not evolve together
The cell membrane
Bronchi
49. In order to become an established part of an island ecosystem there must be a populations large enough to ensure _________ - a food source - a suitable habitat - and a source of moisture.
Common elements found in proteins
The biosphere
Successful reproduction
An enzyme
50. 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.
Phototropism
Ecological niches open up
Meristem tissue
Filtered by the liver