Botney Notes of 1,2,4 Chapter
Botney Notes of 1,2,4 Chapter
Botney Notes of 1,2,4 Chapter
Answer: E
Answer: B
3. Organisms belonging to the same _____ would be the most closely related.
A) kingdom
B) phylum
C) family
D) class
E) order
Answer: C
Answer: E
Answer: C
Answer: C
Answer: E
Answer: D
Answer: E
10. Which of the following organisms is NOT ultimately dependent on the sun as
a source of energy?
A) A night-blooming flower is pollinated by night-flying bats.
B) An underground earthworm avoids the sun.
C) A cave fish feeds on debris that washes down to it.
D) All of the choices ARE ultimately dependent on the sun.
E) None of the choices are ultimately dependent on the sun.
Answer: D
Answer: E
12. What is the process by which the sun's energy is trapped as the source of
energy used by virtually all living organisms?
A) evolution
B) metabolism
C) adaptation
D) homeostasis
E) photosynthesis
Answer: E
13. What is the term which refers to all the chemical energy transformations that
occur within a cell?
A) evolution
B) metabolism
C) adaptation
D) homeostasis
E) photosynthesis
Answer: B
14. Metabolism is the sum of chemical reactions that occur in living cells, and we
are accustomed to living cells continuously using energy and respiring. Even
when plants and seeds are "dormant," we expect that they are carrying on
metabolism but at a very slow rate. "Cryptobiosis" is a state of almost total
loss of water seen in some roundworms, rotifers, and tardigrades and has
been considered a near cessation of metabolism. Recently, a botanist working
in a British museum accidentally spilled fluid on 120+ year old herbarium
mounts. Fearing damage to the plant specimen, he immediately inspected it
under the microscope only to find small tardigrades "waking up." These
observations
A) support the claim that the tardigrades were always alive but respiring at a
Answer: D
Answer: D
16. Which of the following terms is based on the Greek root words for "holding
still" or "to be standing"?
A) evolution
B) metabolism
C) adaptation
D) homeostasis
E) photosynthesis
Answer: D
Answer: D
Answer: C
19. Which of these is the process by which changes occur in the characteristics of
species of organisms over time?
A) evolution
B) metabolism
C) adaptation
D) homeostasis
E) photosynthesis
Answer: A
Answer: B
Answer: C
22. Which of the following sequences correctly gives the different classification
levels of an organism, going from the largest grouping to the smallest? (Some
are left out.)
A) species, genus, family, class, phylum
B) kingdom, phylum, class, order, species
C) class, family, kingdom, species, genus
D) genus, class, phylum, species, family
E) kingdom, phylum, order, species, family
Answer: B
23. Which term is based on the Greek root words for "laws" of "classification"?
A) species, genus, family, class, phylum
B) taxonomy
C) homeostasis
D) nomenclature
E) hypothesis
Answer: B
24. An earlier classification grouped organisms by whether they inhabited the air,
land or sea. However, the five-kingdoms-of-life and three-domains system
divided into class-order-family-genus-species as described in this chapter is
superior because it
A) better represents the origin of features held in commonthe unity of life in
DNA, etc.
B) better reflects the origin of adaptationsthe diversity of life for differing
environments.
C) allows the organization of over 900,000 different species.
D) groups organisms based on similarities related to their structure and
evolution.
E) All of the choices are correct.
Answer: E
25. Which of the following domains contains the most primitive bacteria that live
in extreme environments?
A) Archaea
B) Bacteria
C) Plantae
D) Fungi
E) Eukarya
Answer: A
26. Which of the following domains contains the common advanced plants and
animals and fungi?
A) Archaea
B) Bacteria
C) Plantae
D) Fungi
E) Eukarya
Answer: E
27. Which of the following kingdoms contains multicellular organisms that ingest
their food?
A) Protista
B) Animalia
C) Plantae
D) Archaea
E) Fungi
Answer: B
28. Which of the following kingdoms contains primarily multicellular, largercelled, photosynthetic organisms?
A) Protista
B) Animalia
C) Plantae
D) Archaea
E) Fungi
Answer: C
29. Which of the following kingdoms contains organisms that obtain their food by
absorption through filaments called hyphae?
A) Protista
B) Animalia
C) Plantae
D) Archaea
E) Fungi
Answer: E
Answer: C
Answer: D
Answer: D
Answer: C
Answer: C
Answer: B
36. Four groups of mice consume different amounts of sweetener in their food.
The control group is the one that receives
A) 10 mg/day of sweetener.
B) 50 mg/day of sweetener.
C) no sweetener.
D) extra food.
E) milk instead of water.
Answer: C
Answer: D
38. Which of the following terms best describes the collection of scientific data
through observation in the field, such as observing the behavior of birds?
A) a scientific model
B) an experiment
C) descriptive research
D) a scientific theory or principle
E) experimental results
Answer: C
39. Some biologists study the complex interactions of animals and plants in
forests or prairies. Such ecology field research often produces slightly
different results for different researchers. In contrast, ecology experiments
that are run indoors with one organism in a terrarium usually produce results
that are repeatable. What is the most likely explanation?
A) The scientific method is only useful in laboratory settings.
B) It is not possible to establish a control group outside of a laboratory.
C) It is easier to hold all but one variable constant in a laboratory.
D) Field research is only descriptive, and descriptive research is not strictly
"science."
E) Fieldwork is inductive; lab work is deductive.
Answer: C
40. You are interested in the effect of increased carbon dioxide versus normal air,
and also in the effect of green light versus full sunlight on the growth of corn
plants in a greenhouse. Although you can set up your experiment inside a
greenhouse, it is possible that there will be plant growth effects due to effects
that you do not know and may never know. Which of the following are
important to ensure control of unknown variables?
A) An increase in carbon dioxide should not result in a substantial decrease
of other necessary gases.
B) All seedlings should be from one uniform strain.
C) The intensity or brightness of the green light should equal the intensity of
the full sunlight.
D) All temperatures and available water should remain the same.
E) All of the choices are important.
Answer: E
41. You probably believe that the earth is spherical, but it is obvious that the
earth is flat. Look around; where do you see the curvature? One classmate
suggests that if you call someone on the "other side" of the world by phone,
he or she will answer and, for instance, it will be midnight there at the instant
it is noon here. Another student reminds you of the picture taken of the
spherical earth from the moon landing. Your teacher explains the ancient
observation that when the sun was directly overhead on one day near the
equator, a pole some hundreds of miles away to the north still cast a shadow.
What is the best scientific basis for still considering that the earth is
spherical?
A) "Seeing is believing" and, therefore, you must suspend judgment until you
can ride on the Concorde and see the curvature of the earth for yourself.
B) If scientists say it, it must be correct until they vote otherwise.
C) If it is in a science book, it is correct until another explanation is
published.
D) The observation that the earth is flat is direct and objective, whereas all of
the other observations are indirect and subjective or based on
extrapolated judgment.
Answer: E
42. For five years, you wake up before the alarm is set to ring each morning. This
leads you to conclude that people have a built-in "alarm clock" capable of
waking them up. From a science viewpoint, this conclusion
A) is science because it is based on real observations.
B) is science because it is predictive of what will happen tomorrow morning.
C) is scientifically valid because 5 years x 365 days is a large number of
trials.
D) may not be valid because it generalizes about all people, and there may
have been other variables that could awaken you without a built-in clock.
E) cannot be scientifically treated because it involves human behavior.
Answer: D
Answer: B
44. Which of the following terms best describes a conceptual scheme in science
that is strongly supported, has not yet been found incorrect, and is based on
the results of many observations?
A) a scientific model
B) an experiment
C) descriptive research
D) a scientific theory or principle
E) experimental results
Answer: D
45. Which of the following concepts is NOT one of the unifying theories of
biology?
A) Virtually all organisms are composed of cells.
B) Life may arise through spontaneous generation.
C) Life comes only from life.
D) Organisms contain coded information that dictates their form, function,
and behavior.
E) All living things have a common ancestor and are adapted to a particular
way of life.
Answer: B
46. Some members of a species have a genetic change that causes them to be
better suited to their environment. These members survive to reproduce and
pass these genetic changes to their offspring. This is
A) adaptation
B) natural selection
C) the driving force for evolution
D) All of the choices are correct.
E) None of the choices are correct.
Answer: D
47. All individuals of a given species living in a defined area at a defined time are
a (an)
A) population
B) community
C) ecosystem
D) biosphere
E) abiotic component of the system
Answer: A
Answer: E
49. A group of college students order a pizza with mushrooms, ham, and
pineapple. The mushrooms belong to the kingdom
A) Protista
B) Plantae
C) Fungi
D) Animalia
E) Bacteria
Answer: C
50. The correct order of classification from most general to most specific is which
of the following?
A) Domain-Kingdom-Phylum-Class-Order-Family-Genus-Species
B) Kingdom-Domain-Class-Phylum-Order-Family-Genus-Species
C) Kingdom-Domain-Class-Phylum-Order-Genus-Species-Family
D) Kingdom-Class-Phylum-Domain-Genus-Order-Family-Species
E) Genus-Species-Kingdom-Phylum-Class-Order-Family-Domain
Answer: A
Answer: D
Answer: E
53. Concerning the nature of "life" (the property that makes living things differ
from nonliving), which of the following statements would most biologists
support?
A) Development of an organism, even a single cell, is too complex to be
explained by chemical and physical laws.
B) The critical "vitalist" force that makes organisms live is of a different
nature from nonliving chemistry and is yet to be discovered.
C) Life consists of a property called "soul" and this leaves the body when an
organism dies.
D) Development of living forms from simple to complex forms contradicts
physical laws.
E) None of these statements would be a mainline biology perspective.
Answer: E
Answer: D
55. Which of the following is NOT a valid conclusion one can make from this
experiment?
A) Adding nitrogen improves growth over control conditions in all three
years.
B) Rotating cultivation of pigeon peas with wheat creates the greatest
growth in the third year
C) By the third year, the higher nitrogen treatment is no more effective than
the lower amount.
D) The higher nitrogen treatment causes the greatest growth in the first year.
E) If utilizing the pigeon pea rotation in an actual wheat field you won't see
effective results until the third year.
Answer: E
Answer: E
Essay Questions
57. It is generally accepted among biologists that all life forms existing today
must have evolved from a single ancestral organism. What processes must
this first life form have carried out and what structures, elements or
Answer:
Organization: would need an enclosing structure/compartments (membrane)
Homeostasis: enclosure must be permeable to life-sustaining
elements/compounds
Energy utilization: would need necessary metabolic compounds
Adaptation/evolution: need an encoding molecule (DNA and/or RNA)
Reproduction: encoding molecule must be capable of replication for new cell
58. A student read in a botany book that some plants flower in response to the
length of the day. In particular, long-day plants flower when days reach a
critical length. The student noticed that the azaleas in his yard flower in early
spring when the days are getting longer and decides to test to see if they are
long-day plants. Design an experiment the student might use to test the
hypothesis that azaleas are long day plants. State a formal hypothesis,
describe a design for the experiment, and discuss the variables that will be
manipulated. Also include a description of the control or controls that will be
set up.
Answer:
Hypothesis-needs to be a statement that describes an observable expected
outcome of the experiment
Design should include:
Scientific methods:
1. A hypothesis:
a. is the first step in a scientific investigation.
b. is based on what a scientist believes.
c. is a possible question to a scientific answer.
d. can be proved incorrect.
2. A scientific theory
a. is based on lots of evidence.
b. is a guess about how or why something happens.
c. can never be altered or changed.
d. none of the above
3. Which is the correct order in a scientific investigation?
(A) Micro-Biology
(B) Molecular Biology
(C) Biotechnology
(D) Social Biology
9: Amoebae are single-celled protozoa which reproduce bybinary fission, resulting in two
offspring with identical genes. This is process of
(A) Natural cloning
(B) Cell Transfer cloning
(C) Artificial cloning
(D) Both A and B
10: A community along with its non living environment is called as
(A) Habitat
(B) Ecosystem
(C) Ecological niche
(D) All Choices are correct
11: The term Biology is of
(A) Greek origin
(B) Latin origin
(C) English origin
(D) German origin
12: The branch of Biology dealing with social behavior and communal life of human beings is
(A) Human Biology
(B) Social Biology
(C) Micro-Biology
(D) Biotechnology
13: All the living and non-living matter are formed of
(A) Atoms and sub-atomic particles
(B) A.M.P, A.T.P, A.D.P
(C) Cells and cell products
(D) Organs and organelle
14: Deductive reasoning is always from
(A) Specific to general
(B) Qualitative to Quantitative
(C) General to specific
(D) Molecule
27: It can be defined as the use of natural enemies to reduce the damage caused by a pest population.
(A) Chemical control
(B) Biological control
(C) Chemotherapy
(D) None of these
28: The practice of growing several different crops on the same land in successive years or seasons to
avoid pests and diseases is termed as
(A) Crop fixation
(B) Crop rotation
(C) Both a and b
(D) None of these
29: The treatment of cancer using specific chemical agents or drugs that are selectively destructive to
malignant cells and tissues.
(A) Chemotherapy
(B) Biological control
(C) Radiotherapy
(D) None of these
30: First living organisms originated
(A) 2000 M years ago
(B) 5000 M years ago
(C) 3000 M years ago
(D) 8000 M years ago
31. It is unbroken series of species arranged in ancestor to descendent sequence with rest of the
groups evolved from the one that immediately preceded it.
(A) Hierarchy
(B) Systematics
(C) Phyletic lineage
(D) Nomenclature
32: The technique of producing a genetically identical copy of an organism by replacing the nucleus
of an unfertilized ovum with the nucleus of a body cell from the organism is
(A) Syngamy
(B) Cloning
(C) Both A and B
(D) Allogamy
34: Antigens in the form of modified or inactivated or killed pathogens that raise immunity against
actual pathogens.
(A) Antibiotics
(B) Antibodies
(C) Vaccines
(D) None of these
35: Dolly sheep was cloned in
(A) 1993
(B) 1998
(C) 1996
(D) 1999
36: Biological applications provide
(A) Better health
(B) Better food
(C) Better environment
(D) All Choices are correct
37: If bacteriophages specifically target and destroy cells of Escherichia coli in petri dishes, then they
will do the same in laboratory mice that have been infected by that strain. This statement is referred
to as
(A) Observation
(B) Hypothesis
(C) Modeling
(D) Conclusion
38: The process of immunization by vaccination was first introduced by
(A) Buchner (1897)
(B) Euler (1932)
(C) Edward Jenner (1795)
(D) Fisher (1898)
39: All acellular, Eukaryotic organisms which are no longer classified as animals, plants or fungi are
placed in Kingdom
(A) Monera
(B) Protista
(C) Fungi
(D) Plantae
40: What is true for Natural Cloning?
(A) Asexual reproduction in plants and animal
(B) Regeneration and wound healing.
(C) Growth of tumor cells or cancers
(D) All, A, B and C
Cell:
1. The cell theory states that:
a. all living things are made up of cells.
b. living cells may come from other living cells.
c. all living things remain single-celled.
d. all of the above
2. Levels of organization of an individual organism includes
a. the tissue.
b. the population.
c. the community.
d. all of the above
3. Which is the best definition of "biology"?
a. The science of living organisms.
b. The study of humans and animals.
c. The study of plants, humans, and animals.
d. The science of life.
4. Homeostasis is:
a. the ability to give rise to offspring.
b. maintaining a stable internal environment.
c. the ability to detect and respond to changes in their environment.
d. the ability to grow and develop.
5. Cells
19. Which structure determines what molecules can enter and leave the cell?
a. the plasma membrane
b. the cell wall
c. the nucleus
d. all of the above
20. Which organelle may have allowed early eukaryotes to make food and produce oxygen?
a. the Golgi apparatus
b. the central vacuole
c. the plastids
d. the cell wall
21. Controlling what enters and leaves the cell in an important function of the
a. nucleus.
b. vesicle.
c. plasma membrane.
d. Golgi apparatus.
22: Which one of following is true about chloroplast
(A) It is underground part
(B) It helps in pollination
(C) Self replicating organelle
(D) Involve in Lipid synthesis
23: One of the following is not double membranous structure
(A) Mitochondrion
(B) Vacuole
(C) Chloroplast
(D) Nucleus
24: Ribosomes are chemically composed of
(A) Protein
(B) Only DNA
(C) RNA
(D) Both A + C
25. Which type of cell would probably be most appropriate to study chloroplasts
(A) Conducting cell
(B) Photosynthetic cell
(C) Pericycle cell
(D) All options are correct
Biochemistry:
1. a. Water (H2O) is a(n)
a. element.
b. atom.
c. compound.
d. carbohydrate.
2. A process that changes some chemical substances into others is a
a. chemical bond.
b. chemical reaction.
c. chemical equation.
d. chemical formula.
2.
a.
3.
a.
4.
a.
b.
5.
a.
b.
c.
d.
c.
d.
c.
d.
The number of covalent bonds a carbon atom can form with other atoms is
1. b. 2. c. 4. d. 8.
A covalent bond formed when two atoms share two pairs of electrons is called a
single bond. b. double bond. c. triple bond. d. quadruple bond.
The breakdown of a polymer involves
hydrolysis.
a condensation reaction.
ATP releases energy when
it undergoes a condensation reaction.
a hydroxyl group is added to it.
a phosphate group is added to it.
a phosphate group is removed from it.
the breaking of hydrogen bonds.
the breaking of ionic bonds.
only carbon.
only carbon and hydrogen
(A) Polymer
(B) Monomer
(C) Compound
(D) All choices are incorrect
Q:6: A _______________ occurs as bonds are formed or broken between atoms, ions
or molecules.
(A) Chemical reaction
(B) Physical reaction
(C) Thermal reaction
(D) None of the above
Q:7: Electrolytes that release hydrogen ions in water are called
(A) Acids
(B) Bases
(C) Amphoteric
(D) All options are correct
Q:8: It is the most abundant compound in living organisms and makes up two-thirds of
the weight of adults.
(A) Protein
(B) Water
(C) Carbohydrate
(D) Nucleic acid
Q:9: ATP releases energy when
(A) It undergoes a condensation reaction
(B) A hydroxyl group is added to it
(C) A phosphate group is added to it
(D) A phosphate group is removed from it
Q:10: A fatty acid is a compound made of a chain of carbon atoms plus
(A) An acid group at one end
(B) Acid group at both ends
(C) An amino group
(D) Amino group at both ends
Q:11: A bond that forms between a positively charged hydrogen atom of one molecule
and a negative charged region of another molecule is a(n)
(A) Ionic bond
(B) Hydrogen bond
(C) Covalent bond
(D) Basic bond
Q:12: Dehydration and hydrolysis reactions involve removing or adding
___________to macromolecule subunits.
(A) CH and NH2
(B) C and H
(C) -COOH and H
(D) OH and H
Q:13: A chemical "buffer"
Q:15: If three molecules of a fatty acid, each having the formula C16H22COOH, were
joined to a molecule of glycerol (C3H8O3), the resulting molecule would have the
formula
(A) C48H68O6
(B) C48H74O6
(C) C54H71O6
(D) C54H68O9
Q:16: This aminoacid is called
(A) Glycine
(B) Alanine
(C) Leucine
(D) Valine
Q:17: Monosaccharides contain carbon atoms
(A) 3-7
(B) 3-6
(C) 3-9
(D) 3-10
Q:18: Stearin is
(A) Fatty acid
(B) Saturated acylglycerol
(C) Unsaturated acylglycerol
(D) None of these
Q:19: Energy absorbed to change water from liquid to gas is called
(A) Latent heat of fusion
(B) High surface tension
(C) Heat of vaporization
(D) High heat capacity
Q:20: The sources of carbohydrates are green plants. These are primary product of
(A) Respiration
(B) Catabolism
(C) Photosynthesis
(D) All A, B and C
Q:21: It is most abundant carbohydrate in the nature
(A) Glycogen
(B) Chitin
(C) Lignin
(D) Cellulose
Q:22: It is the most abundant organic component in living cells.
(A) Lipid
(B) Carbohydrate
(C) Water
(D) Protein
Q:23: Each of the 20 naturally occurring amino acids has a different
Q:24: The sum of all the chemical reaction that occurs in the body is known as
(A) Anabolism
(B) Metabolism
(C) Catabolism
(D) Differentiation
Q:25: Which is an organic molecule
(A) H2O
(B) H2SO4
(C) NO2
(D) C6H12O6
Q:26: Which class of molecule is the major component of cell membrane
(A) Phospholipid
(B) Cellulose
(C) Wax
(D) Triglyceride
Q:27: Peptide bonds are found in
(A) Protein
(B) Carbohydrate
(C) Lipids
(D) Inorganic compounds
(A) Disaccharides
(B) DNA
(C) Triglycerides
(D) ATP
Q:29: When a protein undergoes a hydrolysis reaction the end-products are
(A) Amino acids
(B) Monosaccharides
(C) Fatty acids
(D) Nucleotides
Q:30: Which of the following is considered to be neutral
(A) Urine
(B) Pure water
(C) Cytoplasm
(D) HCL
Q:31: The functional group COOH is
(A) Acidic
(B) Basic
(C) Never ionized
(D) All options are correct
Q:32: Which of these is an example of hydrolysis
(A) Amino acid + amino acid Dipeptide + H2O
(B) Dipeptide + H2Oamino acid + amino acid
(C) Both A and B
(D) Neither of these is correct
Q:33: A fatty acid is unsaturated if it
(A) Contains hydrogen
(B) Contains double bonds
(C) Contains an acidic group
(A) Nucleus
(B) Cytoplasm
(C) Both A and B
(D) Nucleoplam
Q:50: The monomer that makes up polysaccharides is
(A) Amino acids
(B) Glucose
(C) Fatty acids
(D) Glycerol
Q:51: Which of these is NOT a function of lipids?
(A) Long term energy storage
(B) Structures in cells
(C) Sex hormones
(D) Enzymes
Q:52: All living things use the same ___ amino acids.
(A) 4
(B) 20
(C) 100
(D) 64
(D) Isomaltose
Q:60: Nucleic acids are related with
(A) Respiration
(B) Photosynthesis
(C) Heredity
(D) None of these
Q:61: Waxes from protective coating on
(A) Leaves
(B) Fruits
(C) Animals skin
(D) All of these
Q:62: The four nitrogenous bases which form the code words for DNA language are
(A) ACTU
(B) UTAC
(C) AGTU
(D) AGCT
Q:63: DNA and RNA differ in
(A) Sugar only
(B) Sugar and purines
(C) Sugar and pyrimindines
(D) Sugar & phosphate
Q:64: A bond formed between carboxylic acid and alcohol is
(A) Ester bond
(B) Amide bond
(C) Phosphate bond
(D) Ionic bond
Q:65: When amino acids in a polypeptide chain are arranged in spiral manner, it is
called
(A) Primary structure
(B) Secondary structure
(C) Tertiary structure
(D) Quaternary structure
Q:66: The step of protein synthesis in which the information contained specific
segment of DNA is copied into RNA is called
(A) Transduction
(B) Translation
(C) Transformation
(D) Transcription
Q:67: Choose the pair of terms that completes this sentence
Nucleotides are to __________as ____________ are proteins.
(A) Aminoacids______Polypeptides
(B) Genes _______ Enzymes
(C) Nucleic acids _____ Amino acids
(D) Polymers _____ Peptides
Q:68: Which of these terms includes all others in the list
(A) Nucleic acid
(B) Purine
(C) Nucleotide
(D) Nitrogenous base
Q:69 The compounds made up of simple repeating isoprenoid units are called
(A) Neutral lipids
(B) Terpenoids
(C) Waxes
(D) All of these
(A) Polysaccharides
(B) Oligosaccharides
(C) Monosaccharides
(D) Heterosaccharides
Q:76: It is estimated that a person of average size contains 16 Kg of fat which is
equivalent to
(A) 244000 K.Cal of energy
(B) 164000 K.Cal of energy
(C) 144000 K.Cal of energy
(D) 188000 K.Cal of energy
Q:77: The four interconnected rings of steroid molecule have total
(A) 12 carbon
(B) 15 carbon
(C) 16 carbon
(D) 17 carbon
Q:78: ATP is an example of
(A) Mononucleotide
(B) Dinucleotide
(C) Polynucleotide
(D) None of these
Q:79: The process of making a polypeptide sequence from thegenetic code of mRNA
molecule associated with a ribosomes termed as
(A) Transduction
(B) Translation
(C) Transformation
(D) Transcription
Q:80: NAD is an example of
(A) Mononucleotide
(B) Dinucleotide
(C) Coenzyme
(D) Both B and C
Biology:
10. Biology is the study of
a. animals. b. plants and animals c. all living things. d. energy transfer.
11. A tree of life explains
a. how organisms are related to each other.
b. how organisms differ from each other.
c. the lineages of various organisms.
d. All of the above
12. Which of the following is NOT an important unifying theme in biology?
a. the diversity and unity of life
b. the relationship between organisms and society
c. the interdependence of living organisms
d. the evolution of life
13. An example of a domain is
a. Animalia. b. Protista. c. Fungi. d. Eukarya.
4. A trait that improves an individuals ability to survive and reproduce is a(n)
a. mutation. b. natural selection c. adaptation. d. domain.
14. Which of the following statements is true?
a. Destruction of rain forests has no effect on living things.
b. Destruction of rain forests increases the rate of evolution of rainforest organisms.
c. Humans have had no impact on the worlds environment.
d. Humans have had a large impact on the worlds environment.