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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. 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.
The community
Lysosomes
Porifera
Iisotonic state
2. Are cells involved in immunity and are produced in bone marrow as stem cells.
Free ribosomes
Share electrons
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
Lymphocytes
3. 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
Ectoderm tissue
Fixed Action Pattern (FAP)
Restriction enzymes
Genome
4. Is a coenzyme required in the synthesis of collagen.
Meristem tissue
The hormone aldosterone
Color blindness
Vitamin C
5. Is a substance that changes the speed of a reaction without being affected itself.
pH of Water
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
The Hardy-Weinberg Law of Equilibrium
A catalyst
6. Is the sugar that lactase acts upon.
Electron Transfer System (ETS)
Altruism
Lactose
The hormone aldosterone
7. The most recent and present era. It includes the radiation of flowering plants - the angiosperms.
Chordata
Cenozoic era
The synthesis of ATP molecules to store energy is an example of
Ectoderm
8. Controls olfactory lobes (smell)
Circadian rhythms
Genetic imprinting
Vitamin C
Forebrain
9. The physical place where a particular organism lives. It must include all the factors that will support its life and reproduction.
Ribonucleic acid
Hydrolysis
Habitat
Isotonic Conditions
10. Has an equal (50%) chance of being passed from a carrier mother to a son or a daughter.
Hypothalamus
Habitat
A sex linked recessive disease
Stomach secretions
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.
Mature sporophyte
Filtered by the liver
Desert
A gene is
12. 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
A sex linked recessive disease
Phyla
Silicon
13. Subsets below the kingdom level
Cytosine
Meristem tissue
Hypothalamus
Phyla
14. In DNA Guanine pairs with...
Carbon
An enzyme
Cytosine
Ectoderm tissue
15. Is the outermost of the three main layers of an embryo.
Ecotone
Hydrolysis
Protista
Ectoderm tissue
16. Allows for the genetic code to be preserved in future generations of cells.
The primary role of DNA in the cell
A mutation
Adenine
DNA replication
17. Covalent bonds
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Phyla
Share electrons
Annelida
18. Are tubes constructed of a geometrical arrangement of microtubules in a pinwheel shape. Their function includes the formation of new microtubules - but is primarily to form the structural skeleton around which cells split during mitosis and meiosis.
Chimpanzees
Centrioles
pathogenic
Natality
19. Has loosely packed cells that allow for gas and moisture exchange.
Plasmodesmata
Parenchyma tissue
A species role in the food chain is part of its
Kingdom Protista
20. In DNA Thymine pairs with...
Adenine
Mitochondria
Genetic screening
Alveoli
21. 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 catalyst
A mutation
The nucleus
Xylem tissue
22. An opportunistic life strategy strategy. Lichens invading a bare rock area after a volcanic eruption is an example.
Phosphorous
R-selection
The primary role of DNA in the cell
Angiosperms
23. 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.
Stomach secretions
Through nitrogen fixing bacteria and lighting
Photolysis is a reaction of photosynthesis where
Phosphorous
24. An enzyme is unaffected by the reactions it catalyzes
Catabolism
Cytosine
So it can be used over and over again.
Epidermal tissue
25. Contains many genes and is a structure comprised of linear DNA and associated proteins.
Gene Migration
Nucleotides
Chromosome
Endoderm
26. Layer that will become the gut lining as well as some accessory structures.
A hydrogen bond
About five million years ago...
Endoderm
Endocytic vesicles
27. Is a social behavior of an organism that is beneficial to the group at the individual's expense.
Altruism
Ecotone
Chordata
Share electrons
28. Is a molecule that stores information for protein synthesis and genetic coding.
Mitochondria
Lysosomes
Genetic screening
Ribonucleic acid
29. Are organic cofactors or coenzymes that are required by some enzymatic reactions.
Lymphocytes
Angiosperms
Genome
Vitamins
30. A cell will only remain stable if the surface area of the plasma membrane maintains a __________ with the volume of the cytoplasm.
The habitat of an organism includes
Meristem tissue
Balance
Cnidaria
31. Is a kind of plain characterized by a warm climate - grassland - and seasonally dry climate conditions.
Kingdom Plantae
Lysis
Savanna
Gnathostomata
32. 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.
Catabolism
Angiosperms
The theory of punctuated equilibrium
Vitamins
33. 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.
Biogeochemical cycles
Successful reproduction
Endocytic vesicles
Gymnosperms
34. The lineage that led to the modern Homo Sapiens diverged from the lineage that led to the modern chimpanzee.
About five million years ago...
Blastula
Population
Tundra
35. Include: Vascular tissue - including both xylem and phloem - and sieve plates existing between cells of the stem.
Stem tissues
Destroy most enzymes
Genetic maintenance
The cell's 'powerhouses'
36. Is an abundant element found in protoplasm. Together with oxygen - hydrogen - and nitrogen - it composes over 90% of cellular structure.
Restriction enzymes
Aganatha
Kingdom Animalia
Carbon
37. Is the outermost layer of cells of the stem.
Epidermal tissue
Larynx
The community
Chlorophyll
38. Veins in the leaf and are also distributed throughout the stem
Epidermal tissue
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
Vascular bundles make up the
A hydrogen bond
39. 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).
Habitat
A mutation
Phloem tissue
Morula
40. 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
Attraction of atoms of different polarity
parasitic
Ectoderm
Endocytic vesicles
41. Is a behavior that is learned during a critical point (often very early) in an individual's life. Imprinting enables the young the recognize members of their own species.
Tundra
Imprinting
T Cells
The cell membrane (plasma membrane)
42. 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
The nucleus
Imprinting
DNA replication
The pituitary gland
43. Develops from the morula as a thin layer of cells surrounding an internal cavity.
The primary role of DNA in the cell
Ecological niches open up
Germ layers
Blastula
44. Are the monomers that form nucleic acids - containing a sugar - phosphate group - and a nitrogenous base.
As energy is transferred through trophic levels
Nucleotides
The key limiting factor on cell size
An inhibitor
45. Attaches to an enzyme and blocks the enzyme reaction rather than enhancing it - like a prosthetic group would.
Lactose
An inhibitor
An enzyme
The nucleus
46. 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.
Aganatha
Color blindness
A gene is
Chlorophyll has the ability to
47. Are where the sugars synthesized by photosynthesis travel through to various parts of the plant.
A mutation
Vascular bundles make up the
Vascular bundles
Stomach secretions
48. The phyla of round worms.
The cell membrane
Isotonic Conditions
Prosthetic groups
Nematoda
49. Is the control of protein synthesis. Genetic traits are expressed and specialization of cells occur as a result of the combination of proteins produced by the DNA of a cell.
About five million years ago...
Cerebellum
Isotonic Conditions
The primary role of DNA in the cell
50. Contains organisms that are multicellular eukaryotes including molds and mushrooms.
The nucleus
DNA produces particular genetic traits through
Kingdom Fungi
Ectoderm