1 Test 2 Review Sheet – Organismal Biology Test # 2 on 4 March 2005 This is your study guide for Test # 2 which is on Chapters 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33. Make sure you take the practice quizzes at the end of each chapter. Chapter 28: Protista Characteristics of a protist For Euglena, Paramecium: know main structures (and their function) and how they perform functions to stay alive (like respiration, water/waste control, how they get their food, how they move, reproduction, etc) Apicomplexa – characteristics and examples sporozoite life cycle of Plasmodium (organism that causes malaria) – Fig. 28.13, page 557 flagellum vs cilia algae – basically what it is, but you don’t have to know all the different kinds plankton chloroplast purpose of conjugation (don’t have to know all the details on Fig. 28.15) Ciliophora Diatom Pseudopodia Amoebas – know basic structures/functions, how they move, how they get food Foraminifera – know basic structures Chapter 29: Plant Diversity I: How Plants Colonized Land Know differences between Bryophyte, Vascular plant, seed plants, angiosperm, gymnosperm – also check out Table 29.1 and Fig. 29.1 Apical meristem Placental transfer cells Embryophytes Alternation of generations Sporophyte vs gametophye Spore vs seed Sporangia Archegonia vs antheridia Adaptations to conserve water – cuticle, type of stomata Xylem vs phloem – what they do, what kind of plants have them Importance of secondary compounds to terrestrial adaptations – page 582 2 Land plants evolved from charophycean algae Know life cycle of moss (page 586) and fern (page 592) including names of the main parts and the process involved Rhizoids Sporophyte – seta, foot, sporangium (capsule) Peat – what it is, how formed, ecological importance Pteridophytes = seedless vascular plants ( ferns, horsetails, club “moss) – know basic characteristics “coal forests) – page 594 Chapter 30: Plant Diversity II: The Evolution of Seed Plants Page 598 – Fig. 30.1 – know how to compare gametophyte/sporophyte relationships between bryophytes, ferns, and seed plants) Fig. 30.2 – from ovule to seed – know the basic pattern of what happens Seed parts – integuments, ovule, embryo (new sporophyte), seed coat, food supply Understand how pollination occurs and what structures are involved Gymnosperms – know what groups go here – ginko, cycads, gnetophytes, conifers Life cycle of pine – page 605 Phylum Anthophyta – angiosperms: monocots, dicots (characteristics) Xylem/tracheid Page 608 – parts of flower and their functions Pericarp Simple fruit, aggregate fruit, multiple fruit – characteristics of each and an example Seed dispersal Cotyledon Endosperm Cross-pollination Life cycle of an angiosperm – page 611 Plant and animal coevolution – and its significance Clear cutting, “slash and burn” – why harmful to ecosytem Page 613- drugs from plants Chapter 31: Fungi 3 Hypha, mycelium – what they are, what they do, how they make up the fungi Septate hypha vs coenocytic hypha Parasitic hypha and haustoria Page 619 – know the 4 main kinds of fungi and basic characteristics of each You DO NOT have to know life cycles on pages 621, 623, 625 Know parts and ecological importance of lichens – page 627-628 Ecological impacts of fungi – pages 629-631 Chapter 32: Introduction to Animal Evolution What is an animal – page 633-634 – know 5 characteristics KNOW WELL Fig. 32.1, page 634 – early embryonic development – all the stages and all the parts Know major GRADES – Fig 32.4, page 636 – and what each one means Kinds of symmetry Germ layers – endoderm, ectoderm, mesoderm Diploblastic vs triloblastic Archenterons Aceolomate, pseudocoelomate, coelomate, body cavity – know Fig. 32.6 Cephalization Parazoans vs eumetazoa Know and understand process and parts comparing protostomes vs deuterostomes – Fig. 32.7, page 639 – KNOW THIS WELL – go over the text in detail Trochophore larva – which animals have this and what it looks like Chapter 33: Invertebrates Parazoa, Porifora, sponges Know sponge parts and how they are used – Fig. 33.3, page 648 (how they eat, how they get oxygen, etc) Phylum Cnidaria – characteristics; know differences between polyp and medusa – Fig. 33.4, page 649 Cnidocytes – how they work – Fig. 33.5, page 649 Life cycle of Obelia – page 651 Know Phylum Platyhelminthes characteristics 4 Know basic characteristics and how they perform body functions: planarians, flukes, tapeworms Parthenogenesis Complete vs incomplete digestive tracts – who has what Phylum Mollusca – characteristics Basic body plan – page 656 – know parts and functions of each Radula – what it is and what it is used for Torsion Know basic differences between major classes in Table 33.3, page 656; also examples of each class Know basic anatomy of the clam – Fig. 33.21 – how it feeds, gets oxygen, reproduces Know basic anatomy of earthworm – Fig. 33.23 – how it feeds, gets oxygen, reproduces, gets rid of nitrogenous wastes Know differences between earthworms (Oligochaeta), Polychaeta (many setae) and leeches Roundworms – Phylum Nematoda – know phylum characteristics Segmentation = metamerism Phylum Arthropoda – phylum characteristics Molting (ecdysis) Know parts of crayfish and what they are for – page 663 Trilobites Class Arachnida – know spider parts and what they are used for Fig. 33.3, page 665 Book lungs (as opposed to book gills in horseshoe crab) Grasshopper anatomy – inside and out – main features we cover in lecture – page 667 Incomplete/complete metamorphosis Phylum Echinodermata – spiny skin – know phylum characteristics Water vascular system in seastar – know how it works and the parts involved Know different echinoderms listed on page 674 and an example of each Table 33.7, page 673, is great – it sums up all the phyla we have had so far – use it to help you study – be able to compare characteristics between phyla – how some are similar and how others are different