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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. The number of osmoles of solute particles per liter of solvent - must be maintained between extracellular and intracellular fluid or cells can change volume and burst/die
Secretion
Radiation
Endotherms
Osmolarity
2. Creates new genes by inserting exons and flanking introns into a different gene sequence - there by introducing a new domain in the gene product
Disruptive selection
Exon shuffling
Sexual recombination vs asexual reproduction
Glomerular Filtration Rate
3. Change salt water balance: 1. respiration - 2. metabolism - 3. waste elimination - 4. food ingestion 5. body temperature regulation
Phenotype
Obligatory Exchanges
Neutral Theory
Habitat patches
4. Most of the water in an animal's body located within its cells
Natural selection
Allele frequency formula
Intracellular fluid
Tubule
5. Functional unit of kidney - millions per - renal corpuscle forms filtrate - tubule performs secretion and reabsorption
Disruptive selection
Microevolution
Nervous tissue
Nephron
6. Amount of fuel used during a given time to power all of its metabolic requirement - = MR - sometimes appears as heat
Dehydration
Microevolution
Energy expenditure
Basal Metabolic Rate
7. Liver converts no carbs into glucose (lipolysis-fatty acids and glycerol to glucose)
Gluconeogenesis
Exon shuffling
Qualitative
Hypoglycemia
8. 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)
Reabsorption
Individuals do not evolve
Other guy who came up with natural selection
Glomerular Filtration Rate
9. Bicarbonate ions (Co2+H2O= h2Co3= H+ + HCO3-) Co2 removed by lungs - H+ removed by urine
Fitness
Ketones
Stabilizing Selection
Major blood buffer
10. Creates new genes by inserting exons and flanking introns into a different gene sequence - there by introducing a new domain in the gene product
Epithelial tissue
Intrasexual Selection
Exon shuffling
Hardy Weinberg equilibrium
11. Occurs when ingested nutrients enter the blood stream from the GI tract
Absorptive phase
Artificial selection
Habitat
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
12. Glucose-used to syntheisize ATP (and triglycerides) - galactose - and fructose
Ammonotelic
Evaporation
MR equation
Chief monomers absorbed
13. Favors the mean - selection against any deleterious mutations (baby size)
Stabilizing Selection
Muscle tissue
Satiation
Aldosterone
14. 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
Metabolism
Vasa recta
Lipoprotein lipase
Neutral Theory
15. One loci
Homeotherms
Hypothalamus
Reabsorption
Qualitative
16. Development of offspring from unfertilized eggs
Loop of Henle
Directional selection
Microevolution
Dobzhansky Muller Model
17. Amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree Celsius
Intracellular fluid
Qualitative
Calorie
Absorbed triglycerides
18. Amount of fuel used during a given time to power all of its metabolic requirement - = MR - sometimes appears as heat
Major blood buffer
Nervous tissue
Energy expenditure
Habitat patches
19. 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)
Loop of Henle
Intracellular fluid
Intracellular fluid
Founder effect
20. Rate at which an organism uses energy to power these reactions
Satiation
Metabolic rate
Geographic Range
Nucleotide Substitution
21. Sum of all alleles
Glucose Transporters
Gastrulation
Gene pool
Natural selection
22. The body's resting rate of energy expenditure
3 disadvantages of endotherms
Exon shuffling
Basal Metabolic Rate
Exon shuffling
23. Tissues other than skeletal muscles produce metabolic heat by uncoulping oxidative phosphorylation (burn fuel without producing ATP)
Intracellular fluid
Epithelial tissue
Genome size
Non shivering thermogensis
24. Short term control of feeding - stretch receptors in stomach and small intestines sens signals to the brain - realease hormones to supress appetite
Intrasexual Selection
Satiation
Deleterious
Microevolution
25. Environments where species can survive within their geographic range
Habitat
Qualitative
3 germ layers
Geographic Range
26. Refers to all the bodily activities and chemical reactions in an organism that maintain life
Allele frequency
Bowman's capsule
3 germ layers
Metabolism
27. Populations do
Malpighian tubules
Individuals do not evolve
Brown fat
Founder effect
28. Amplifies deviation frokm set point
Osmoconformers
Hypothalamus
Intrasexual Selection
Positive feedback
29. Prolonged energy source for many tissues - and brain - less protein breakdown required
Ketones
Exon shuffling
Interstitial fluid
Lateral gene transfer
30. In ECM - protein fibers makeup cartilage and bone (mineralized) - ECM of plasma liquid - Adipose=fat cells - energy storing
Qualitative
Mutation
Connective tissue
Heterotherms
31. Cells or organisms having two sets of chromosomes
Qualitative
Natural selection
Diploid
Feedforward information
32. Neurons (generate and conduct electrical signals) and glial cells (release chemical signals)
Connective tissue
Nervous tissue
Artificial directional selection
Satiation
33. Refers to all the bodily activities and chemical reactions in an organism that maintain life
Hemodialysis
Metabolism
Intrasexual Selection
Allele frequency formula
34. Stored as either glycogen in liver or as triglycerides
Natural selection
Excess Glucose
Hemodialysis
Artificial selection
35. Human based selection (ie cows with more milk or high fat content)
Intracellular fluid
Hardy Weinberg equilibrium
Connective tissue
Artificial directional selection
36. Below TNZ must increase metabolic heat production (shivering increase four times above BMR)
Lower critical temperature
MR equation
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
Heterozygote populations
37. Major cell movement - 3 germ layers form
Osmoregulators
Hemodialysis
Gastrulation
Natural selection
38. Continuous within Bowman's capsule - Loop of Henle
Diploid
Tubule
Heterotherms
Metabolism
39. Occurs when GI tract is empty of nutrients so body's stores are used
Metabolic rate
Habitat patches
Silent substitution
Post absorptive stage
40. Development of offspring from unfertilized eggs
Three theories of Darwin
Lateral gene transfer
Dobzhansky Muller Model
Fitness
41. Change in a single nucleotide in a DnA sequence
Nucleotide Substitution
Genotype frequency
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
Population density
42. If directional selection occurs for generations - however can be stopped due to change in environment or when optimal phenotype reached (then stabilizing)
Evolutionary trend
Osmoconformers
Negative feedback
Heterozygote populations
43. 20%of plasma leaves capillaries and filters into bowman's space. GFR= Rate of filtrate production (controlled by dilation and constriction of afferent arteriole)
Glomerular Filtration Rate
Reabsorption
Glycogenolysis
Honest signal
44. Maintenance of stable conditions within the internal environment (temperature - PH level - ion concentrations - 02 levels - co2 levels - fuel molecules ie glucose)
Tubule
Homeostasis
Aldosterone
Metanephridia
45. When an organisms phenotype influences ability to attract mates
Endemic
Thermal insulation
Heat budget equation
Sexual selection
46. When a few pioneers colonize a new region - they possess fewer alleles than their source population creating a bottleneck effect
Absorbed triglycerides
Ammonotelic
Founder effect
Energy expenditure
47. Does not change the encoded amino acid. Occurs at highest rate (also synonymous substitution)
Size in BMR
Leptin
Silent substitution
Evolutionary trend
48. Low glucose level in blood
Muller's Ratchet
Major blood buffer
Lateral gene transfer
Hypoglycemia
49. Copies of genes that are no longer functional
Psuedogenes
Absorbed amino acids
Sexual recombination vs asexual reproduction
Why Hardy Weinberg is Important
50. Number of individuals per unit of area/volume (dynamic - change over time)
Stabilizing Selection
Population density
Chief monomers absorbed
Cold fish vs hot fish