Phyllotaxy and Development
Biomes and Stress
QTL and Crop Genetics
Monocots and Plant Evolution
Photoreceptors and Flowering Time
100

The arrangement of leaves around a stem is known as this.

What is phyllotaxy?

100

This biome is characterized by permafrost and low-growing vegetation.

What is the tundra?

100

QTL stands for this.

What is quantitative trait locus?

100

Monocots typically possess this type of leaf venation.


What is parallel venation?

100

Phytochromes primarily absorb these wavelengths of light.

What are red and far-red wavelengths?

200

A spiral phyllotactic pattern often approximates this mathematical sequence.

What is the Fibonacci sequence?

200

Plants in deserts commonly reduce water loss through this physiological process.

What is stomatal closure?

200

Traits controlled by multiple genes with continuous variation are described as this.

What are quantitative traits?

200

The vascular bundles in monocot stems are arranged in this manner.

What is scattered?

200

This photoreceptor is most associated with blue light responses.

What is cryptochrome?

300

This plant hormone is primarily responsible for positioning new leaf primordia at the shoot apical meristem.

What is auxin?

300

Abiotic stress refers to stress caused by these types of environmental factors.

What are nonliving factors?

300

A genomic region repeatedly associated with increased plant height across populations would likely contain this.

What is a QTL?

300

This embryonic feature distinguishes monocots from dicots.

What is a single cotyledon?

300

Flowering triggered by seasonal day length is known as this.

What is photoperiodism?

400

A mutation disrupting auxin transport would most directly alter this developmental feature.

What is phyllotactic patterning?

400

Excess soil salinity creates this immediate challenge for plant roots.

What is osmotic stress?

400

Tomato and corn are frequently used in genetic studies because they serve as these.

What are model crop systems?

400

Grasses are evolutionarily successful in part because their basal meristems allow this advantage.

What is regrowth after grazing?

400

Long-day plants flower when daylight exceeds this threshold.

What is a critical photoperiod?

500

If organ initiation repeatedly occurs at the same location on the meristem, the most likely defect involves this process.


What is auxin redistribution/polar transport?

500

A plant preconditioned to mild drought stress later survives severe drought more effectively due to this phenomenon.

What is stress acclimation/priming?

500

If a trait shows high environmental influence but low heritability, selection for that trait becomes this.


What is less effective/difficult?

500

A plant with fibrous roots, parallel veins, and floral parts in multiples of three is most likely this.

What is a monocot?

500
A mutant unable to detect changes in day length would most likely exhibit defects in this developmental process.




What is flowering time regulation?