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Test your basic knowledge |
PCAT Biology Evolution
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Subjects
:
pcat
,
biology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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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. Missing link between reptiles (has teeth and scales) and birds (also has feathers)
Hardy-Weinberg Equation
Fossils
Archaepteryx
Gene Pool
2. Preserved in asphalt tar pits
Analogous Structures
Woolly Mammoth
Fossils
Saber-Tooth Tigers
3. The evolution of new species - which are groups of individuals who can interbreed freely with each other but not with members of other speies
Homologous Structures
Geographic Barriers
Speciation
Competition (struggle for survival)
4. Offspring naturally show differences in their characteristics compared to their parents
Development of Autotrophs
Variations
Hardy-Weinberg Principle
Competition (struggle for survival)
5. Organisms in a species have variations that give them an advantage over other members of the species -organisms may have adaptations that are advantageous for survival
Natural Selection
Gene Frequency
Evolution
Isolation
6. Migration of individuals between populations that will result in a loss or gain of genes - thus changing the composition of a population's gene pool
Evolution of New Species
Homologous Structures
Adaptive Radiation
Gene Flow
7. Refers to changes in the composition of the gene pool due to chance -tend to be more pronounced in small populations - where it is sometimes called the founder effect
Genetic Drift (Microevolution)
Development of Autotrophs
Overpopulation
Archaepteryx
8. A cluster of colloidal molecules surrounded by a shell of water -tend to absorb and incorporate substances from the surrounding environment
Deme
Coacervate Droplets
Imprints
Population
9. Discredited theory held that new organs or changes in existing ones arose becaUse of the needs of the organism
Lamarckian Evolution
Actual Remains
Coacervate Droplets
Evolutionary History
10. Only changes in the DNA of the sex cells can be inherited -changes acquired during an individual's life are changes in the characteristics and organization of somatic cells
Casts
Natural Selection
Modern Genetics
Formation of Primitive Cells
11. Fossil resin of trees
Development of Autotrophs
Woolly Mammoth
Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection
Amber
12. First forms of life lacked the ability to synthesize their own nutrients; they required performed molecules which made them heterotrophs -energy was present in the form of heat - electricity - solar radiation - including x rays and ultraviolet light
Dinosaurs
Heterotroph Hypothesis
Hardy-Weinberg Principle
Archaepteryx
13. Real populations have unstable gene pools and migrating populations -agents of this change are natural selection - mutation - assortive mating -genetic drift - and gene flow
Comparative Embryology
Trilobite
Evidence of Organic Synthesis
Microevolution
14. The most direct evidence of evolutionary change -represent the remains of an extinct ancestor -generally found in sedimentary rocks
Genetic Information
Fossils
Inheritance of the Variations
Trilobite
15. Species multiplication is generally accompanied by migration to lessen intraspecific competition
Natural Selection (Microevolution)
Branching Evolutionary Tree
Genetic Drift (Microevolution)
Geographic Barriers
16. Evolutionary history and can be viewed asa branching tree
Phylogeny
Convergent Evolution
Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection
Speciation
17. All members of a particular species inhabiting a given locations
Geographic Barriers
Overpopulation
Hardy-Weinberg Equation
Population
18. Common ancestor is found at the trunk and the modern species at the tips of the branches
Branching Evolutionary Tree
Adaptive Radiation
Hardy-Weinberg conditions
Eohippus
19. Formed by minerals deposited in molds
Genetic Information
Casts
Amber
Evolutionary History
20. Over many generations of natural selection - the favorable changes eventually results in such significant changes of the gene pool that we can say a new species has evolved
Coacervate Droplets
Evolution of New Species
Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection
Natural Selection (Microevolution)
21. Impressions left by an organism ex: footprints
Imprints
Homologous Structures
Microevolution
Evolution
22. Most organisms demonstrate the same basic needs and metabolic processes -require the same nutrients and contain similar cellular organelles and energy storage forms
Comparative Biochemistry (Physiology)
Gene Frequency
Vestigial Structures
Heterotroph Hypothesis
23. Appear to be useless but apparently had some ancestral functions
Natural Selection
Saber-Tooth Tigers
Mutation (Microevolution)
Vestigial Structures
24. If gene pools within a species become sufficiently different so that two individuals can't mate and produce fertile offspring - two different species have developed
Development of New Species
Branching Evolutionary Tree
Casts
Gene Frequency
25. Small local population -closely related genetically since mating between members of the same occurs more frequently =influenced by similar environmental factors and thus are subject to the same selection processes
Inheritance of the Variations
Natural Selection (Microevolution)
Deme
Comparative Embryology
26. The process in which minerals replace the cells of an organism
Genetic Information
Petrification
Trilobite
Imprints
27. Primitive heterotrophs slowly evolved complex biochemical pathways which enabled them to use a wider variety of nutrients -evolved anaerobic respiratory process to convert nutrients into energy -photosynthesis and autotrophic nutrition was developed
Lamarckian Evolution
Vestigial Structures
Evidence of Organic Synthesis
Development of Autotrophs
28. Stanley L. Miller demonstrated the application of UV rays - heat or a combination of these to a mixture of methane - hydrogen - ammonia - and water could result in the formation of complex molecules -after circulation of the gases for one week - he a
Evidence of Organic Synthesis
Vestigial Structures
Woolly Mammoth
Isolation
29. Colloidal protein molecules tend to clump together to form coacervate Droplets
Population
Formation of Primitive Cells
Evolutionary History
Development of Autotrophs
30. Pressures in the environment select for the organism most fit to survive and reproduce -concluded that a member of a particular species that is equipped with beneficial traits - allowing it to cope effectively with the immediate environment - will pr
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31. The sum total of all the alleles for any given trait in the population
Comparative Embryology
Deme
Heterotroph Hypothesis
Gene Pool
32. When the gene frequencies of a population are not changing - the gene pool is stable - and population is not evolving
Mutation (Microevolution)
Hardy-Weinberg Principle
Development of New Species
Actual Remains
33. Individuals that survive (those with favorable variations) live to adulthood - reproduce their own kind - and thus transmit these favorable variations or adaptations to their offspring
Inheritance of the Variations
Woolly Mammoth
Evolution of New Species
Molds
34. P^2+2pq+q^2=1 -p^2=frequency of TT (dominant homozygotes) -2pq=frequency of Tt (heterozygotes) -q^2=frequency of tt (recessive homozygotes)
Population
Homologous Structures
Hardy-Weinberg Equation
Saber-Tooth Tigers
35. Incude teeth - bones - etc. rock - tar pits - ice - and amber
Imprints
Homologous Structures
Population
Actual Remains
36. Results from the geographic isolation of a population
Isolation
Homologous Structures
Competition (struggle for survival)
Deme
37. The decimal fraction representing the presence of an allele for all members of a population that have this particular gene locus
Genetic Drift (Microevolution)
Evolution of New Species
Hardy-Weinberg Principle
Gene Frequency
38. Developing population must compete for the necessities of life. many young must die - and the number of adults in the population generally remains constant from generation to generation
Competition (struggle for survival)
Imprints
Archaepteryx
Evolutionary History
39. Stages of development of the embryo resemble the stages in an organism's evolutionary history
Comparative Embryology
Phylogeny
Genetic Information
Amber
40. Similar functions but may have different evolutionary origins and entirely different patterns of development
Speciation
Variations
Analogous Structures
Genetic Information
41. Hairy elephant found in the Siberian ice
Population
Archaepteryx
Woolly Mammoth
Coacervate Droplets
42. Form in hollow spaces of rocks - as the organisms within decay
Assortive Mating (Microevolution)
Isolation
Molds
Speciation
43. Genotypes with favorable variations are selected thorugh natural selection - and the frequency of favorable genes increases with the genepool. genotypes with low adaptive values tend to disappear
Natural Selection (Microevolution)
Fossils
Woolly Mammoth
Petrification
44. Dissimilar species ahve been found to have evolved from a common ancestor
Evolutionary History
Evolution of New Species
Microevolution
Evidence of Organic Synthesis
45. The emergence of a number of lineages from a single ancestral species -may diverge into a number of distinct species; the differences between them are those adaptive to a distinct lifestyle - or niche
Speciation
Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection
Adaptive Radiation
Variations
46. Primitive crustacean (relative to the lobster) - which was dominant form of the early Paleozoic era
Hardy-Weinberg Equation
Geographic Barriers
Trilobite
Population
47. Change allele frequencies in a population - shifting gene equilibria -can either be favorable or detrimental for the offspring
Mutation (Microevolution)
Isolation
Evidence of Organic Synthesis
Assortive Mating (Microevolution)
48. Population is very large -no mutations affect the gene pool -mating between individuals in the population is random -there is no net migration of individuals into or out of the populations -genes in the population are all equally successful at reprod
Gene Frequency
Hardy-Weinberg conditions
Evolution of New Species
Natural Selection
49. Ancient animals similar to both reptiles and birds and dominant in the Mesozoic era
Analogous Structures
Amber
Dinosaurs
Gene Pool
50. Primitive horse the size of a fox with four toes and short teeth with pointed cusps for feeding on soft leaves
Deme
Eohippus
Woolly Mammoth
Convergent Evolution
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