SI End of the Semester Review
Bio 211 (1)
- Complete the following chart:
Organism / Phylum / Class or subphylum
Jelly
Crayfish
Snail
Leech
Tapeworm
Cricket
Tick
Sea Urchin
Hydra
Planaria
Chambered nautilus
- Which of the following is the best description of the sponges?
- No real symmetry, diploblastic, cnidocytes for capturing prey
- Radial symmetry, triploblastic, nematocysts
- No real symmetry, without true tissues, choanoctyes for trapping food particles
- Bilateral symmetry, pseudocoel, flame bulbs for excretion
- Bilateral symmetry, osculum and spongocoel for filtering water
- Hermaphrodites
- Contain male and female sex organs but usually cross-fertilize
- Include sponges, earthworms, and most insects
- Are characteristically parthenogenic rotifers
- Are both a and b
- Are a, b, and c
- Which of the following is not true of cnidarians?
- An alternation of medusa and polyp stage is common in class hydrozoa
- They use a ring of tentacles armed with stinging cells to capture prey
- They include hydras, jellies, sponges, and sea anemones
- They have a nerve net that coordinates contraction of microfilaments for movement
- They have a gastrovascular cavity
- The exoskeleton of arthropods
- Functions in protection and anchorage for muscles
- Is composed of chitin and cellulose
- Is absent in millipedes and centipedes
- Expands at the joints when the arthropod grows
- Functions in respiration and movement
- Which of the following does not function in suspension feeding?
- Lophophore of ectoprocts
- Radula of snails
- Choanocytes of spones
- Mucus-coated gills of clams
- Crown of cilia of rotifers
- What do nematodes and arthropods have in common?
- They are both segmented
- They are both pseudocoelomates
- They include important members of plankton communities
- They both have exoskeletons and undergo ecdysis
- Both a and d are correct
- Which of the following structures is not associated with prey capture?
- Chaetae of earthworm
- Mandibles of centipedes
- Cnidocytes of hydra
- Tentacles of squid
- Tube feet of sea star
- Many animals are parasitic. Which of the following is an incorrect description of one of these parasites?
- Ticks are bloodsucking parasites belonging to class Arachnida.
- Some roundworms (Nematoda) are internal parasites of humans.
- Lice are wingless ectoparasites in class Insecta.
- Flukes are flatworms and may have complex life cycles.
- Tapeworms are annelids that reproduce by shedding proglottids.
- What are the key characteristics that distinguish the phylum echinodermata?
- What are the chelicerae?
- What are the three main parts of the molluscan body plan?
- Compare the feeding behaviors and activity levels of snails, clams, and squid.
- Sponges differ from the rest of the animals because:
- They are completely sessile
- They have radial symmetry and are suspension feeders
- Their simple body structure has no true tissues, and they have no symmetry
- They are not multicellular
- They have no flagellated cells
- What is cephalization?
- Complete the following chart about fungi:
Phylum / Examples / Key Features and Reproduction
Chytridiomycota
Zygomycota
Glomeromycota
Ascomycota
Basidiomycota
- The major difference between fungi and plants is that fungi:
- Have an absorptive form of nutrition
- Do not have a cell wall
- Are not eukaryotic
- Are multinucleate but not multicellular
- Reproduce by spores
- Chytrids have previously been classified with protists because they:
- Do not have chitin in their cell walls
- Do not have absorptive nutrition
- Have flagellated zoospores, whereas most fungi lack flagella
- Have metabolic pathways like those of protists
- Are aquatic and fungi are terrestrial
- The fact that karyogamy and meiosis do not immediately follow plasmogamy:
- Is necessary to create coenocytic hyphae
- Is characteristic of all fungi
- Allows fungi to reproduce asexually most often
- Results in heterokaryotic cells that benefit from the variation present in two genomes
- Is characteristic of yeasts
- In the ascomycota,
- Sexual reproduction occurs by conjugation
- Spores often line up in a sac in the order in which they were formed by meiosis
- Asexual spores form in sporangia on erect hyphae
- Most hyphae are dikaryotic
- Reproduction is always sexual
- Briefly define the following terms: mycelium, septa, coenocytic, heterokaryotic, plasmogamy, dikaryotic, karyogamy