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100

How is Trichomonas vaginalis transmitted?

It is a sexually transmitted infection

100

Which group of algae are believed to be the ancestors of all plants?

Charophytes

100

Which form (gametophyte or sporophyte) is dominant in non-vascular plants?

gametophyte

100

Where does a plant embryo get nutrients from?

the endosperm

100

What is the function of the anther in a flower?

houses the microsporangia

200

Define chemoautotroph

an organism that generates its own energy from chemicals in its environment

200

what are some of the advantages and disadvantages of life on land (come up with 2 of each)

Advantage: unfiltered sunlight, less competition (at first), more CO2, Nutrient-rich soils

Disadvantage: gravity, water is scarce, UV radiation, spore/seed disperal

200

In mosses and ferns, which structure produces spores?

The sporangium

200

What are the advantages to miniaturizing the gametophyte?

gametophytes are protected from environmental stresses and receive nutrients from the parent

200

What is the function of the stigma in a flower?

makes a sticky substance to grab pollen

300

Which organism causes Sleeping sickness?

trypanosoma

300

What is sporopollenin?  Its function, how it relates to life on land, and which algae express it.

Function: protect spores 

Evolved to enable life on land

Also found in charophytes

300

Define heterosporous?

two types of sporophytes that make different types of spores

300

Differences between megaspores and microspores?

megaspores are the "female" spore, microspores are the "male" spores and develop into pollen

300

In this diagram, what is the structure that label E is going through? 

A pollen tube

400

What does symbiotic mean?  What does parasitic mean?

Symbiotic means living together.  Parasitic means only one benefits, the other is either left alone or harmed.

400

What is meant by the term “alternating generations?”

Plants have 2 parts to their life cycle, a haploid gametophyte portion and a diploid sporophyte portion

400

Which letters show mitosis and meiosis?

A is meiosis, B is fertilization and mitosis

400

What occurs when the two sperm nuclei fuse with the female gametophyte?

Double fertilization: one sperm fuses with the ovum while the other fuses with the polar bodies to make endosperm

400

If a plant sporophyte has 8 chromosomes, how many chromosomes should be in the pollen nucleus?

4

500

Where are most protists in their food webs?

photosynthetic organisms at the bottom

500

In this generalized plant life cycle, what does number 5 represent?

Spores

500

Know what the different generations of the fern life cycle produce.

Sporophytes make spores, gamteophytes make gametes

500

In this diagram, which letter represents the integument?

C

500

What are 3 characteristics of monocots?

parallel leaf veins, scattered vasculature, fibrous roots, pollen has one opening, flowers in threes

600

What is endosymbiosis?

an organism that lives within another organism.  the theory for the presence of chloroplasts and mitochondria

600

Where are apical meristems found?

ends of shoots and roots

600

What advantages does height give a plant

disperse spores farther, better access to light

600

Which parts of the seed came from the female gametophyte?

B and C

600

Your lab partner asks you to hand over a flower part that will eventually enclose something with endosperm, so you give her a ...?

carpel

700

When is plasmodium haploid/diploid?

Haploid in human, diploid in mosquito

700

What is vascular tissue?

cells arranged into tubes to conduct water or nutrient flow.

700

Differences between phloem and xylem?

Phloem: alive at maturity, carry organic materials

Xylem: dead at maturity, contain lignin, carries water

700

Why are gymnosperms "naked"?

they have no fruit covering the seed.

700

Name two fruit adaptations to help disperse seeds

explosive action, wings, hooks, and yumminess

800

What is protist conjugation?

exchanging genetic material

800

What did the development of vascular tissue enable?

greater height, which then enabled more access to light.

800

In this graph, what conclusions can you draw about the temperatures the plant is adapted to?

Warmer temperatures are better

800

What is the function of the ovary in a flower?

site of ovule development, becomes the fruit

800

What is a disadvantage of asexual reproduction?

reduces variability which can result in less ability to adapt

900

What two things do dinoflagellates cause?

Red tide and bioluminescence

900

What are the three types of non-vascular plant we talked about?

mosses, hornworts, and liverworts

900

What order did the derived traits occur (cuticle, flowers, seeds, and vascular tissue)

cuticle, vascular tissue, seeds, flowers

900

What is the function of the sepal in a flower?

protects the immature flower bud.

900

What are some mechanisms to prevent self-pollination?

timing of pollen release, location of anthers/stigma, self identification molecules

1000

How does paramecium maintain water balance?

It has a contractile vacuole that collects water and expels it.

1000

What do the bryophytes need for reproduction?

liquid water for gametes to swim

1000

What was the first group to develop seeds?

gymnosperms

1000

What is the function of a petal in a flower?

attract pollinators

1000

What does monoecious mean?

male and female parts in the same flower

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