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Test your basic knowledge |
Bio 101: Harvard
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
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. Pxp is genotype for AA qxq is genotype for aa and pq is heterozygotes - model shows scientists what mechanisms are causing evolution (p+q=1 and p2 + 2pq+q2=1)
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
Leptin
Microevolution
Fever
2. Fine tuning of adaptive mechanisms (adjusts to climate/temperature- sweating begins sooner and is greater in volume)
Size in BMR
Acclimatization
Meiosis
3 disadvantages of endotherms
3. Heat in must equal heat out - or body temperature changes (metabolism + Rabs= Rout+convection - conduction and evaporation)
Heat budget equation
Endemic
Osmolarity
Non shivering thermogensis
4. Harmful mutation
Basal Metabolic Rate
Fever
Deleterious
Genetic Drift
5. Short term control of feeding - stretch receptors in stomach and small intestines sens signals to the brain - realease hormones to supress appetite
Lateral gene transfer
Genome size
Satiation
Gene Flow
6. Minerals that carry electrical charges that help maintain the body's fluid balance - imbalance can alter membrane potentials/disrupt cell activities
Electrolytes
Selfing
Three theories of Darwin
Heterotherms
7. Change in allele frequencies that occur over time in a population
Microevolution
Sexual selection
Ectotherms
Genetic structure
8. Rate at which an organism uses energy to power these reactions
Disruptive selection
Ectotherms
Metabolic rate
Bowman's capsule
9. Much of variation in size lies in non coding DNA as opposed to functional genes. Also in large populations - slightly deleterious sequences more likely to be purged than in small size (thus more noncoding DNA in large population over small)
Reabsorption
Major blood buffer
Behavioral thermoregulatory adaptation
Genome size
10. Amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius
Calorie
Nitrogenous wastes
Hardy Weinberg equilibrium
Antidiuretic hormone
11. Thermostat of the brain (when cooled - constricts blood vessels in skin and increases metabolic heat production= body temp increases)
Alleles
Hypothalamus
Fitness
Artificial selection
12. Heat production = volume - but heat loss= Surface Area
Intracellular fluid
Alleles
Gluconeogenesis
Size in BMR
13. Time (duration gene active) eg dolphin flipper
Founder effect
Heterochrony
Other guy who came up with natural selection
Post absorptive stage
14. Tissues other than skeletal muscles produce metabolic heat by uncoulping oxidative phosphorylation (burn fuel without producing ATP)
Artificial selection
Honest signal
Non shivering thermogensis
Darwin's book
15. Heat transfers away from a sruface due to evaporation (expensive to sweat and pant - burn more calories)
Other guy who came up with natural selection
Neutral Theory
Habitat patches
Evaporation
16. Change in a single nucleotide in a DnA sequence
Nucleotide Substitution
Gastrulation
Selfing
Diploid
17. Major cell movement - 3 germ layers form
Metabolism
Gastrulation
Sexual recombination vs asexual reproduction
Metabolism
18. Asexual 1. Doesn't need a mate 2. Maintains adaptive genes 3. All kids asexual (able to reproduce) V.S. Sexual 1. Repairs damaged DNA 2. Elimination of deleterious mutations (asexual makes exact copies) 3. Greater genetic variation (genetic combinati
Secretion
Heat budget equation
Sexual recombination vs asexual reproduction
Glomerulus
19. Human based selection (ie cows with more milk or high fat content)
Osmoconformers
Orthologs
Mutation
Artificial directional selection
20. 1. Both copies retain original function 2. Both copies able to produce original gene product - but expression diverges in different tissues or at different times in development 3. One copy may become psuedogene 4. One copy maintains function and seco
3 disadvantages of endotherms
Secretion
Gene duplication
Reabsorption
21. Native to one location and no where else
Endemic
Nervous tissue
Exon shuffling
Population density
22. Two or more homologous genes found in different species
Genetic structure
Mutation
Electrolytes
Orthologs
23. 2NAA + NAa/2N is p and 2aa + NAa/2N is q (however similar frequencies can have very different genotype frequencies)
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
Gene pool
Interstitial fluid
Allele frequency formula
24. Produced in adipose tissue in proportion to fat mass - leptin reduces appetite through hypothalamus (increases BMR). Decrease in leptin decreases BMR - increases appetite
Leptin
Endotherms
Excretory organs
Cold fish vs hot fish
25. Liver converts no carbs into glucose (lipolysis-fatty acids and glycerol to glucose)
Gluconeogenesis
Aldosterone
Habitat
Hypoglycemia
26. Q10= Rt/Rt-10 (rate of process or reaction - and rate at 10 degreed celcius lower)-- If not sensititve - Q10 is usually 1 - generally between 2 and 3
Temperature sensitivity
Hemodialysis
Evaporation
Sexual recombination vs asexual reproduction
27. Heat transfers to a surrounding medium ie air or water via surface
Connective tissue
Convection
Genome size
Negative feedback
28. When an organisms phenotype influences ability to attract mates
Antidiuretic hormone
Nervous tissue
Sexual selection
Osmolarity
29. Proportion of genotype in population
P53
Major blood buffer
Genotype frequency
Convection
30. Fluctuating temperatures
Geographic Range
Ammonotelic
Heterotherms
Disruptive selection
31. Harmful mutation
Metabolism
Metabolic rate
Deleterious
Convection
32. Descending loop permeable to waterbut not solutes - ascending not permeable to water and actively transports salts out (desert animals - long Henles - freshwater fish - no Henle)
Population density
Osmoregulators
Loop of Henle
Acclimatization
33. 1. Most variation caused by neutral changes - do not confer advantage or disadvantage. 2. Since netural mutation is constant - can be used as a molecular clock to calculate divergence btwn species. 3. Neutral mutations not dependent on population siz
Neutral Theory
Nonsynonymous vs synonymous
Missense Substitution
Metabolic rate
34. Minerals that carry electrical charges that help maintain the body's fluid balance - imbalance can alter membrane potentials/disrupt cell activities
Radiation
Tubule
Electrolytes
3 disadvantages of endotherms
35. Insects have these which transport uric acid - postassium ions and sodium ions into tubules - but ercovers water (allows insects to live in dry environments
Malpighian tubules
Ammonotelic
Basal Metabolic Rate
Neutral Theory
36. Allow extracellular fluid to equilibrate with seawater
Hypoglycemia
Epithelial tissue
Genetic structure
Osmoconformers
37. Development of offspring from unfertilized eggs
Evolutionary trend
Feedforward information
Dobzhansky Muller Model
Fever
38. Neurons (generate and conduct electrical signals) and glial cells (release chemical signals)
Nervous tissue
Connective tissue
Diploid
Positive feedback
39. Daily decline of body temp to save energy (bouts of torpor last mustiple days in hibernation)
Thermoneutral zone (TNZ)
Insulin
Heterotherms
Daily torpor
40. Deleterious mutations in a non-recombining genome accumulate at each replication (asexual reproductivity)
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41. 2/3 of all useful solute reabsorbed ie Na+ - K+ - Cl- - HCO3- - organic molecule - glucose - amino acids (TRANSPORT MAXIMUM based on saturatino of membrane transport proteins)
Thermal insulation
Reabsorption
Diploid
Interstitial fluid
42. Changes set point altogether (being awake - daytime activity - disease - skin temperature)
Feedforward information
Psuedogenes
Energy expenditure
Diploid
43. Proportion of allele in population
3 germ layers
Daily torpor
Reabsorption
Allele frequency
44. What organisms look like and how they behave
Phenotype
Evaporation
Individuals do not evolve
Heterotopy
45. Rate at which an organism uses energy to power these reactions
Obesity
Metabolic rate
Directional selection
Interstitial fluid
46. Change in allele frequencies that occur over time in a population
Microevolution
Psuedogenes
Dobzhansky Muller Model
Basal Metabolic Rate
47. Trait with true indicator of ability to survive in local environment ie bull frogs lifespan can be determined by its size which determines how low it's voice is
Excretory system functions
Hypothalamus
Honest signal
Glucose Transporters
48. Q10= Rt/Rt-10 (rate of process or reaction - and rate at 10 degreed celcius lower)-- If not sensititve - Q10 is usually 1 - generally between 2 and 3
Brown fat
Temperature sensitivity
Electrolytes
Glucose Transporters
49. Fine tuning of adaptive mechanisms (adjusts to climate/temperature- sweating begins sooner and is greater in volume)
Acclimatization
Founder effect
Heterotopy
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
50. Insects have these which transport uric acid - postassium ions and sodium ions into tubules - but ercovers water (allows insects to live in dry environments
Convection
Evolutionary trend
Malpighian tubules
Three theories of Darwin
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