Support & Movement – Ch29 | Test Bank – 18th Ed - MCQ Test Bank | Integrated Principles of Zoology - 18e by Cleveland Hickman by Cleveland Hickman. DOCX document preview.
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MULTIPLE CHOICE - Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.
1) The epidermis of the vertebrate integument contains a tough, fibrous protein called
A) sclerotin.
B) keratin.
C) calcitin.
D) dermatin.
E) chitin.
2) The epidermis is derived from __________, while the dermis is derived from __________.
A) ectoderm, endoderm
B) endoderm, ectoderm
C) ectoderm, ectoderm as well
D) ectoderm, mesoderm
E) endoderm, mesoderm
3) Which is NOT a correct association of epidermal and dermal structures and origins?
A) fish scales—modified collagen
B) claws—combination of epidermal and dermal components
C) armor of crocodilians—dermal bones
D) stratum corneum—callused epidermis
E) cornified cells—dead keratinized skin cells
4) Dust on bookshelves and elsewhere in a house is composed primarily of
A) dry mucous.
B) white blood cells.
C) dried sweat and uric acid crystals.
D) dead skin cells.
E) pulverized minerals and "dirt."
5) The reflective properties of surface tissue may form
A) organic pigments.
B) structural colors such as iridescence.
C) chromatophores.
D) the melanin effect.
E) None of the choices is correct.
6) Which is NOT a correct association of animal pigments?
A) Melanins—black or brown pigments
B) Carotenoids—yellow and red pigments
C) Iridophores—blue and green pigments
D) All of the choices are correct
7) When you get a suntan, why does it soon fade away if you do not consistently spend time in the sun?
A) The melanin breaks down if not kept warm.
B) The melanin is absorbed at a constant rate and you have to build it up faster than it is absorbed.
C) "Tanned" cells are eventually sloughed off (although melanin is produced in living stem cells that continue to divide, half the melanin is lost into each daughter cell that dies and is pushed to the surface).
D) Sunlight suppresses the lighter skin pigments and they can again return to mask the melanin.
E) Ultraviolet radiation destroys melanin.
8) An example of a hydrostatic skeleton is
A) an elephant's trunk.
B) the earthworm's body.
C) the human tongue.
D) a squid tentacle.
E) All of the choices are hydrostatic skeletons.
9) How does an elephant extend a trunk that has no bone structure in it?
A) muscles forcibly expand
B) the trunk is an empty chamber and water is forced into it
C) the elephant trunk is an example of a muscular hydrostat
D) this is a hydraulic system similar to what was found in echinoderms
E) antagonistic muscles operate in pairs across flexible cartilage
10) Hyaline cartilage contains
A) collagenous fibers surrounding numerous blood vessels.
B) osteocytes surrounded by a calcium gel and a meshwork of collagenous fibers.
C) chondrocytes surrounded by a protein gel complex and a meshwork of collagenous fibers.
D) lacunae containing osteocytes and a meshwork of collagenous fibers.
E) a highly variable mixture of protein gel and carbohydrate crystals.
11) Which is NOT a correct association of bone features?
A) replacement bone—bone repair after a break
B) cancellous bone—first stage of all bone growth
C) compact bone—most dense form to withstand stress in long bones
D) intramembranous bone—from sheets of embryonic cells; mostly facial bones
E) endochondral bone—replaces cartilage
12) Compact bone is composed of a matrix arranged in concentric rings. The rings contain cavities interconnected by small passages called
A) lacunae.
B) osteocytes.
C) canaliculi.
D) osteons.
E) haversian system.
13) Bone tissue should be characterized as
A) merely nonliving secretions of calcium.
B) a dead cell product similar to the keratin of hair.
C) active tissue with a rich blood supply.
D) a barely active, low metabolism, tissue.
E) the equivalent of a calcium carbonate clam shell.
14) Bone growth involves its destruction internally by bone resorbing cells called
A) chondrocytes.
B) osteons.
C) osteoblasts.
D) osteoclasts.
E) canaliculi.
15) Bone growth depends on a supply of calcium in the blood and bone also serves as a reservoir for stored calcium. What is responsible for maintaining a constant level of calcium in the blood?
A) a derivative of vitamin D
B) parathyroid hormone
C) calcitonin
D) All of the choices are involved in regulating blood calcium levels.
16) Cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral, and caudal refer to
A) categories of body muscle.
B) ways of walking.
C) regions of the brain.
D) regions of the vertebral column.
E) types of bone tissues.
17) Which statement about ribs is correct?
A) ribs prevent collapse of the lungs and help make negative pressure breathing possible
B) fishes have a pair of ribs for every vertebra
C) leopard frogs lack ribs altogether
D) most humans have twelve pairs of ribs but about one-in-twenty has a thirteenth pair
E) All of the choices are correct.
18) The ________ is part of the appendicular skeleton of a vertebrate.
A) neurocranium
B) atlas
C) humerus
D) sacrum
E) mandible
19) The most important protein contractile system is the
A) contractile vacuole.
B) actomyosin system.
C) ectoplasm-endoplasm system.
D) flagellar system.
E) microtubular system.
20) "Dynein arms link to adjacent microtubules, then swivel and release in repeated cycles, causing microtubules on the concave side to slide outward past microtubules on the convex side" describes the action moving a
A) muscle fiber.
B) cilium or flagellum.
C) contractile vacuole.
D) pseudopodium.
E) cell organelle.
21) The difference between a cilium and flagellum is
A) their internal structure and rate of beat.
B) their internal and external structure.
C) their external structure only.
D) their size, number, and beating pattern.
E) their primary source of energy.
22) The organization of a muscle, from largest unit to smallest, is
A) discrete muscle-fiber-fascicle-myofibrils-myofilaments.
B) discrete muscle-myofibrils-myofilaments-fiber-fascicle.
C) discrete muscle-fiber-fascicle-myofilaments-myofibrils.
D) discrete muscle-fascicle-fiber-myofibrils-myofilaments.
E) discrete muscle-fascicle-myofibrils-fiber-myofilaments.
23) Each striated muscle cell is
A) composed of keratin and collagen.
B) a multinucleate cell.
C) a fully-formed muscle.
D) a myofilament.
E) a fascicle.
24) The protein complex located at intervals along the actin strand of skeletal muscle is a calcium-dependent switch called ___________ that acts as the control point in the contraction process.
A) myosin
B) tropomyosin
C) sarconin
D) troponin
E) myoglobin
25) In each myofibril of striated muscle, the sarcomere is the entire area between two
A) Z lines.
B) A bands.
C) I bands.
D) myofilaments.
E) troponin molecules.
26) What begins muscle contraction?
A) high levels of oxygen and sugar.
B) release of acetylcholine at a synapse that directly causes actin and myosin to slide.
C) release of surplus ATP by a nerve motor unit.
D) a nerve releases acetylcholine, which triggers flow of calcium, which unblocks troponin.
E) a nerve releases troponin which triggers flow of calcium which unblocks acetylcholine.
27) A motor unit is
A) the functional unit of smooth muscle.
B) the whole muscle that is supplied by a motor nerve.
C) only the muscle fibers it innervates.
D) a motor neuron and all the muscle cells that it innervates.
E) the part of a muscle cell that acts independently during muscle contraction.
28) Which best describes muscle action?
A) A nerve stimulus causes the muscle to jerk as a reflex response.
B) A nerve stimulus releases ATP to provide energy for muscle contraction.
C) The release of acetylcholine from the nerve junction flows across the muscle cell and the calcium released causes the actin and myosin molecules to spread apart.
D) Myosin and actin molecules will use ATP and catch-pull-release as long as nerve stimuli prevent troponin from blocking the action.
E) None of the choices is correct.
29) Which of the following chemicals provides the "energy reserve" for muscle contraction?
A) actin
B) myosin
C) creatine phosphate
D) troponin
E) calcium
FILL IN THE BLANK. Write the word or phrase that best completes each statement or answers the question.
30) In crustaceans, the cuticle is stiffened by the deposition of _____________ carbonate.
31) Cells become cornified when the fibrous protein ___________________ accumulates within the cells.
32) In ectothermic vertebrates and crustaceans, pigments that provide color to animals are contained within large, branching cells called __________.
33) Cartilage cells are called ______________________.
34) Bone that develops from cartilage is called _________ bone, a word meaning "within cartilage."
35) Bone that develops directly from sheets of embryonic cells and is mostly restricted to bones of the face and cranium, is called _______________ bone.
36) The first two cervical vertebrae are the ___________ and the axis.
37) The functional unit of a myofibril is the __________.
38) The thick filament of striated muscle is composed of the protein _____________.
39) The backbone of the thin filament of striated muscle is a double strand of the protein _____________.
40) In a myofibril of striated muscle, the sarcomere is the entire area between two __________.
41) At intervals along the actin strand of skeletal muscle is a complex of protein called ___________ that acts as a calcium-dependent switch.
42) All the skeletal muscle fibers under the control of a single motor neuron form a __________.
43) There is more than one type of skeletal muscle fiber in vertebrates. The red muscle fibers that are capable of slow, sustained contractions are the __________ fibers.
44) The type of muscle cell that sllows some insects to achieve far faster wing beats than could be sustained with one-impulse-per-beat is __________ muscle.
45) The immediate source of energy in muscle is __________.
ESSAY. Write your answer in the space provided or on a separate sheet of paper.
46) A grasshopper can jump a height of 50 times the length of its body. Yet, muscles of small and large animals exert the same force per cross-sectional area. Explain how the grasshopper can still jump a relatively greater distance than can a human.
47) Imagine that we could successfully replace all the bone in the human body with a metal framework that was equivalent or better at withstanding stress and anchoring muscles. What functions of bone would not be accomplished with such a replacement, and how would this affect our normal life?
48) Is there a limit to the size of animal that can evolve? Why are certain mechanical advantages not available to animals larger than a horse?
49) Compare the integument of an arthropod with that of a vertebrate. How are they different? How are they similar?
50) Outline the various layers of human skin. What function(s) does each layer perform? What layers does intensive sunburn affect?
51) Differentiate between calcification and sclerotization. In which groups of animals are these processes found?
52) Define the following terms: keratin, keratinization, cornification, stratum corneum, dermis, epidermis.
53) Discern between colors produced by organic pigments and those created by structural features. How do these two forms of color differ? Which type of color would be responsible for the beautiful iridescent blue of the tropical Morpho butterfly?
54) How does a hydrostatic skeleton differ from a rigid skeleton? Explain which skeleton may perform better under given conditions of the environment.
55) Why is the endoskeleton of vertebrates superior to the exoskeleton of insects when it comes to size? Discuss the physical limitations of each.
56) How does endochrondral bone differs from intramembranous (e.g., dermal) bone? List the general derivatives of each type of bone.
57) Outline the microscopic structure of compact bone. Be sure to include a discussion of the functions of the various parts.
58) Compare the skeletal features that comprise the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton? Why are these skeletal features separated into two distinct categories? Is there any difference in the way they are formed?
59) The number of cervical vertebrae is nearly constant in all mammals, whether the neck is short or long. Explain this evolutionary phenomenon.
60) Discuss the modification of the basic pentadactyl limb for life in different environments.
61) What is the effect of body size on bone stress? Does it appear reasonable, as recent research claims, that Tyrannosaurus rex could not run because of this size and stress limitation? Explain your line of reasoning.
62) Outline the basic sequence of chemical and physiological events involved in the contraction of a muscle fiber.
63) How do cilia and flagella differ morphologically? Explain why this difference may be strictly a superficial distinction.
64) Compare and contrast the structure and function of the following muscle types: smooth, cardiac, and skeletal.
65) Discuss the function of the fibrillar muscles of insects. How do they differ from vertebrate skeletal muscles?
66) Outline the function of the two actin-binding proteins tropomyosin and troponin.
67) Describe in detail the morphology and function of the myoneural or neuromuscular junction.
68) Discuss how the energy for muscle contraction involves both ATP and creatine phosphate.
69) Compare the operation of fast and slow fibers. What are the functions of each type of muscle?
70) Describe the importance of tendons in energy storage during movement.
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MCQ Test Bank | Integrated Principles of Zoology - 18e by Cleveland Hickman
By Cleveland Hickman