Biology 102 Spring, 2000

Study Guide #3 - McShaffrey

  1. What are the basic needs of a plant?
  2. Why do plants need roots?
  3. What role does water play in the reproduction of primitive plants?
  4. How have advanced plants eliminated the need for water in reproduction?
  5. What 3 problems did plants have to face when moving onto land?
  6. How did plants solve these 3 problems?
  7. What are the 3 main parts of a plant?
  8. What are the 3 main tissues of a plant?
  9. What is a meristem?
  10. What are the 2 types of meristems?  What do they do?  Where are they located?
  11. What is differentiation?
  12. What 4 cell types did we discuss in class?  What does each do?
  13. What is xylem composed of?  What is unique about xylem tissue?
  14. What des phloem do?  What is unique about the sieve tube members?
  15. What is the difference between a primary and secondary root?
  16. What are the 3 parts of a root that we discussed?
  17. What is the cortex of a root?  The epidermis?  The endodermis?
  18. Where is the casparian strip and what does it do?
  19. What 3 forces together move water up a plant?  What role does each play?
  20. What 3 forces make transpiration work to move water up a tree?
  21. Where does the energy come from to move water up a tree?
  22. What is sap?  How, where and when does it flow?
  23. How do plant roots take up water?
  24. What is a halophyte?
  25. What are the two layers of meristem tissue in a tree stem?  What do they produce?  
  26. Why do trees form annual rings in the xylem?
  27. What are the 3 parts of a seed?
  28. What are the differences between a monocot and a dicot?  Be able to give examples of plants belonging to each group.
  29. What is dormancy?
  30. What role does the seed coat play in dormancy?
  31. What 5 materials are needed for photosynthesis?
  32. How is each of these taken up? What does each do in the plant?
  33. Do you know and understand Table 32.2?
  34. What does the NPK on fertilizers stand for?
  35. How is mineral availability affected by soil?
  36. What are epiphytes?
  37. Be able to discuss modern agricultural practices.
  1. What is the difference between lentic and lotic?
  2. What are the various marine habitats?
  3. What is a wetland?
  4. List the various examples (types) of wetlands and describe each.
  5. How much of the Earth's surface is covered by wetlands?
  6. Why are wetlands so productive?
  7. Why are wetlands destroyed?
  8. What is eutrophication?  What is cultural eutrophication?  
  9. How does cultural eutrophication occur?
  10. What problems are caused by eutrophication?
  11. How do plants handle gas exchange?
  12. What gases do plants take in?  Get rid of?
  13. What gases do animals take in? Get rid of?
  14. What 3 factors determine an animals oxygen requirements?
  15. What physical dimension controls the amount of oxygen that can be absorbed?
  16. How do small organisms and large organisms differ in terms of gas exchange?
  17. What is the difference between gills and lungs?
  18. How does ram ventilation work?
  19. Why doesn't ventilation  like humans do work in water?
  20. How does countercurrent flow work?
  21. What role does hemoglobin play in gas exchange?
  22. How is hemoglobin affected by pH and temperature?
  23. What is the basis for all gas exchange?
  24. How do insects breathe?
  25. Why is gas exchange so difficult for aquatic organisms?  How do they solve these problems?

 

Other study hints:

Re-write your notes! - Ask questions in class! - Study with a friend. - Quiz each other. - Get a good night's sleep before the test.

Study Hints

Try concept mapping: Get some blank paper (try a recycling bin, use the back). Write down a key term (biomagnification). Now, draw lines from the term to blank areas on the page. Begin to add new information – 4 things that are necessary for biomagnification, 4 things that biomagnify, etc. Make links to the new topics. Continue until the paper is full. Start over with a new term.

Get in the Mood: Study early and often. If you can’t find a quiet place, tune out the background with lively, non-vocal music. A fast beat keeps you motivated; vocal would distract from processing language information (reading). Try Jazz or New-Age music, the same sort of thing you would listen to for jogging. David Sanborn, David Benoit, Peter White, Spyro Gyra, Mannheim Steamroller, even John Tesh (really) are all good bets.