AP Notes, Outlines, Study Guides, Vocabulary, Practice Exams and more!

AP US History 60 Hot Topics Flashcards

The top 60 most often asked topics on APUSH national exam.
Information taken from:
Barron's AP US History
5 Steps to a 5: US History
Sparknotes Guide to AP US History
Out of Many, AP Edition (5th)

Terms : Hide Images
1463704768Puritan motive- Build a "city on a hill" - provide a model for idealistic society - religious freedoms from England0
1463704769Motive of settling Virginia- paid for by Virginia Company - wanted profit - mercantilism in England1
1463704770First Great Awakening- led by charismatic ministers in 1730 - made religion more emotional, less cerebral - "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" sermon by Puritan minister Jonathan Edwards2
1463704771Deism- 1700 religious revolution which moved away from religious doctrines - God is a distant entity - No Godly intervention in daily affairs3
1463704772Albany Congress- led by Benjamin Franklin - first meeting of all colonies to debate unification - Franklin's union plan, Albany Plan, rejected4
1463704773Legal rights of women-no suffrage under practically every circumstance -couldn't own land in most cases -were subordinate to men as caretakers, mothers, and housekeepers5
1463704774Stamp Act- tax on paper used for various documents - included recreation like playing cards - sparked most uproar and opposition of any British tax6
1463704775Slavery in pre-independence times- unregulated slave trade (no limits) - molasses, rum, slaves / Triangular Slave Trade - slaves were responsible for majority of labor in southern economy7
1463704776Indentured servants- extraordinarily popular prior to massive influx of slaves - workers receive free ride to America and housing once there - in exchange for house/ride, they work unpaid for 5-10 years8
1463704777Proclamation of 1763- created a line through Appalachian mountains - colonists could not settle any further west - land from Appalachia to Mississippi was "Indian Reserve"9
1463704778Articles of Confederation- first written form of government for newly freed colonies - created a "firm league of friendship" between states - heavily favored state government, making federal government useless (no taxing, or federal laws without nullification)10
1463704779Bill of Rights- 1st 10 amendments to the Constitution - protected individual liberties not specified in Constitution - gave states powers not specifically assigned to federal government - was wanted by the Antifederalists11
1463704780Hamilton's economic plans- national bank, 20% publicly 80% privately held - federal government repays all war debts in full - high tariffs to encourage American industry and discourage British/French/Spanish imports12
1463704781Shays' Rebellion- farmers revolt - many lost farms because couldn't pay debts in gold/silver - freed debtors prisons, burnt down city halls and courts - showed that the Articles of Confed. weren't working, leading to its end13
1463704782XYZ affair- France was upset by alliances with Britain and seized US ships - US tried to negotiate with France, French agents bribed US agents - French agents X, Y and Z wanted $250,000 and a $12M loan14
1463704783Marbury v. Madison- Marbury, an Adams midnight judge, wanted his position/paycheck - said his appointment was unconstitutional - Chief Justice Marshall established Supreme Court power of judicial review15
1463704784Louisiana Purchase- Louisiana territory purchased by Jefferson from France - not constitutional, but Jefferson wanted land and France needed $ - Jefferson only intended on buying New Orleans for a western port16
1463704785Hartford Convention- group of Federalists meeting in opposition to War of 1812 - merchants saw large amount of trade with Britain stop - passed a resolution requiring a 2/3 vote in Congress for declaration of war in the future17
1463704786Eli Whitney- invented cotton gin in 1793 - helps satisfy the massive demand for cotton/make slaves efficient - also invented interchangeable parts for rifle18
1463704787Henry Clay's "American System"- high tariffs on imports (20%-25%) - provide federal funding for internal improvements - support and maintain Bank of the United States19
1463704788Monroe Doctrine- done to limit European influence on Western Hemisphere - said European countries must be "hands off" of America - became cornerstone of US isolationist foreign policy20
1463704789Andrew Jackson- Indian removal, supported westward expansion - loses VP Calhoun in Nullification Crisis with South Carolina - vetoed Congress more times than any other president, tried to eliminate United States Bank21
1463704790Trail of Tears- removal of Native Americans from Georgia into the west - showed President Jackson's support for state's rights - led to the death of thousands of innocent Native Americans (too grueling of a journey on foot)22
1463704791Nullification/Calhoun/Tariff of Abominations- South Carolina tried to nullify federal laws, Jackson wouldn't allow it - Jackson passes Tariff of Abominations harshly limiting trade - South Carolina, with Jackson's VP, Calhoun, tries to secede from US, Jackson sends military to stop them23
1463704792Transcendentalists- an intellectual movement criticizing new US materialistic lifestyle - focus on nature, and finding meaning and self reliance - primarily led by authors Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson24
1463704793Ralph Waldo Emerson- transcendentalist leader who encouraged self reliance - published essays "Nature" (1836) "On Self Reliance" (1841) - Speech "The American Scholar" considered the Intellectual Declaration of Independence25
1463704794William Lloyd Garrison- published "The Liberator" and abolitionist publication - leader of the movement for immediate, uncompensated abolition - said that blacks were equal, and entitled to freedom and equal rights26
1463704795Harriet Tubman- escaped slave - started the Underground railroad, a system for escaping slaves - called the "Conductor", helped hundreds of slaves escape27
1463704796Dred Scott v. Sanford- Supreme Court case: slaves are not citizens - slaves are property, Missouri Compromise is dead - said since Scott was property, case shouldn't have even been brought to court28
1463704797Popular Sovereignty- measure proposed by Sen. Lewis Cass on slavery in new territories - allowed residents of a territory to vote on yes/no for slavery - Congress didn't approve, but it became a bigger idea in 1850s29
1463704798Kansas-Nebraska Act- legislation by Sen. Stephen Douglas on organizing territories - took Louisiana Purchase land and split into Kansas and Nebraska - unpopular with North, as it allowed possibility of slavery, therefore completely repealing Missouri Compromise30
1463704799Douglas's Freeport Doctrine- statement by Stephen Douglas at 2nd Lincoln-Douglas debate - used by Lincoln to prove Douglas was a hypocrite - when asked whether he believed in popular sovereignty or Dred Scott decision, he compromised, favoring popular sovereignty31
1463704800Causes of Civil War- maintain the Union, under Lincoln - stop expansion of slavery - eventually, with Emancipation Proclamation, to end slavery - war lasted from 1861-6532
1463704801Emancipation Proclamation- decree by Lincoln that all slaves in Confederacy were free - not effective, simply symbolic - made North the moral side of the war33
1463704802Radical Reconstruction- Johnson, Lincoln's VP, now president, proposes plan - Johnson almost thrown out of office for obstructing reconstruction - Eventually radical republicans used 2/3 majority to pass legislation and override vetoes for an effective reconstruction plan34
1463704803Compromise of 1877- 1876 Pres. election Samuel Tilden (D) vs. Rutherford Hayes (R) - Tilden wins popular vote, Rutherford supposedly wins electoral vote - no winner clear, compromise makes Hayes the President, but Republicans will end Reconstruction35
1463704804Knights of Labor- first major labor union to survive through economic turmoil - included all workers to join: skilled, unskilled, blacks, women - ended after wrongfully associated with Haymarket Square Bombing in Chicago, 188636
1463704805Dawes Act- 1887 legislation to assimilate stranded Native Americans - not wanted by the Native Americans, killed their tribal identity - eliminated by Indian Reorganization Act (1934) as it was discriminatory and hurtful for Native Americans37
1463704806Social Gospel- Protestant Christian movement around 1900 - applied Protestant Christian logic to social issues in US - tried to aid poverty, alcoholism, equality, and poor working conditions38
1463704807Populists- political party and movement led by disadvantaged farmers - William Jennings Bryan and "Cross of Gold" speech - fought for elimination of gold standard, unlimited silver coinage, graduated income tax, government regulation of major industry39
1463704808Yellow Press- started by William Randolph Heart's New York Journal stories - often highly exaggerated, encouraging impulsive American action - led US into Spanish American war with "Remember the Maine", firing up citizens40
1463704809"New Immigration"- immigration jumped in Gilded Age, post Civil War - mainly immigrants from South, East and Southeast Europe - result of poor European economic conditions41
1463704810Open Door Policy- European countries began claiming ports in China - US did not have a port, and China had huge economic opportunity - says China is open to trade with the United States42
1463704811DuBois & Booker T. Washington- W.E.B. DuBois wanted equality and full integration - Booker T. Washington pushed for blacks to find economic purpose - differed in that DuBois saw all as a equal, and Washington knew blacks were lesser at the time, and wanted them to fit it43
1463704812Muckrakers- term coined by T. Roosevelt for investigative journalism on business - showed political and social injustices in big business and politics - led by Sinclair Lewis, Mother Jones, Jacob Riis, and more44
1463704813Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare- U-boat campaign by Germany in relentlessly attacking Britain - led to the US involvement in WWI, along with Zimmerman Telegraph - sunk approximately 178 boats, and killed about 5000 in opposition Navy45
1463704814Wilson's 14 Points- 1918 plan by Wilson as a plan for restructuring post-WWI world - ideas rejected by European powers except for the League of Nations - plan included freedom of seas, removal of trade barriers, self-determination for Europeans, and international organization46
1463704815Bonus Army- 1932 organization of WWI veterans in Washington DC - result of Hoover's inaction during economic turmoil in US - WWI veterans demanded their bonuses be paid immediately, even though they were due in 194547
1463704816100 Day Congress, New Deal- passed recovery legislation, more than ever in history - restricted more rights, and gave government more power than ever - GSA, NIRA, AAA, TVA, FERA, CCC, SEC all legislation passed in first 100 days of FDR presidency48
1463704817Civilian Conservation Corps- FDR agency created in first 100 days - provided/created outdoor work for 2.75M 18-24 year old men - projects included soil conservation, flood control, trail/road building, and forest projects49
1463704818Cuban Missile Crisis- 1962 event when US U2 spy planes saw Cuba was getting missiles - Missiles were from USSR, US ordered them to stop sending them - ended in 13 days after USSR stopped missiles in Cuba, and US stopped missiles in Turkey, and stopped Cuba interference50
1463704819Brown v. Board of Education- ordered immediate desegregation of schools and other public places - overturned "separate but equal" in Plessy v. Ferguson - major turning point in civil rights movement51
1463704820Sputnik- 1957 launching of Soviet sattelite into space - led to space race and education movement in US - government called for more and better technological and science education, from high school to graduate school52
1463704821Sit-Ins- form of civil disobedience by African Americans for civil rights - African Americans sat at white-only counters and areas - refused service or moving, when one group left, another would sit down, hurting business and making a point53
1463704822Civil Rights Act of 1964- most meaningful legislation to end Jim Crow in the South - passed by LBJ to end discrimination by race or sex - guaranteed equal opportunity with employment, public education, public services and voting54
1463704823Malcolm "X"- leader of Nation of Islam, member from 1952-1964 - fought for black separatism, and supremacy for blacks and islam - assassinated by Nation of Islam after changing opinion on black separatism55
1463704824Gulf of Tonkin incident- said that American destroyers were attacked in Gulf of Tonkin - Congress passed Gulf of Tonkin resolution, escalating confict - unofficially started Vietnam War, allowed LBJ to have a "blank check" in doing whatever he wanted in Vietnam56
1463704825Watergate- scandal regarding spying on Democrats led by Richard Nixon - 5 men were caught breaking in to Democratic HQ at DCCC - Nixon used executive privilege to not turn over evidence, supreme court made him, he deleted some, then resigned57
1463704826Tet Offensive- Vietcong and N. Vietnamese offensive against US - began on Tet, lunar calendar new year, everyone was celebrating - 1600 dead US, 40000 dead Vietcong, and while US stopped the attack, it showed that Vietcong could organize large attacks58
1463704827Camp David Accords- meeting of Middle East leaders organized by Carter - Egypt, Israel and US met at presidential retreat Camp David - after 13 days of meetings, the three had arranged a peace treaty, which worked, but tensions were still high59

Campbell's Biology, 9e (Reece et al.) Chapter 51 Animal Behavior Flashcards

Chapter 51 has been restructured into four sections, each of which addresses one of Niko Tinbergen's four fundamental questions on the how and why of animal behavior. Many of the new questions test a high order of thinking as they ask about specific behaviors of organisms according to some of the recent research in the field of animal behavior.

Terms : Hide Images
1293611877A female cat in heat urinates more often and in many places. Male cats are attracted to the urine deposits. Which of the following is a proximate cause of this increased urination? A) It announces to the males that she is in heat. B) Female cats that did this in the past attracted more males. C) It is a result of hormonal changes associated with her reproductive cycle. D) The female cat learned the behavior from observing other cats. E) All of the options are ultimate causes of behavior.C1
1293611878A female cat in heat urinates more often and in many places. Male cats congregate near the urine deposits and fight with each other. Which of the following would be an ultimate cause of the male cats' response to the female's urinating behavior? A) The males have learned to recognize the specific odor of the urine of a female in heat. B) When the males smelled the odor, various neurons in their brains were stimulated. C) Responding to the odor means locating reproductively receptive females. D) Male cats' hormones are triggered by the odor released by the female. E) The odor serves as a releaser for the instinctive behavior of the males.C2
1293611879Which of the following examples describes a behavioral pattern that results from a proximate cause? A) A cat kills a mouse to obtain nutrition. B) A male sheep fights with another male because it helps to improve its social position. C) A female bird lays its eggs because the amount of daylight is decreasing slightly each day. D) A goose squats and freezes motionless to escape a predator. E) A cockroach runs into a crack in the wall and avoids being stepped on.C3
1293611880The proximate causes of behavior are interactions with the environment, but behavior is ultimately shaped by A) hormones. B) evolution. C) sexuality. D) pheromones. E) the nervous system.B4
1293611881Animal communication involves what type of sensory information? A) visual B) auditory C) olfactory D) tactile E) visual, auditory, olfactory, and tactileE5
1293611882What type of signal is long-lasting and works at night? A) olfactory B) visual C) auditory D) tactile E) electricalA6
1293611883What type of signal is brief and can work among obstructions at night? A) olfactory B) visual C) auditory D) tactile E) magneticC7
1293611884What type of signal is fast and requires daylight with no obstructions? A) olfactory B) visual C) auditory D) tactile E) electricalB8
1293611885A chemical produced by an animal that serves as a communication to another animal of the same species is called A) a sign stimulus. B) an inducer. C) a pheromone. D) an imprinter. E) an agonistic promoter.C9
1293611886Research has shown that nocturnal animals navigate using A) olfactory cues. B) the North Star. C) the moon. D) landmarks. E) gravity.B10
1293611887Circannual rhythms in birds are influenced by A) periods of food availability. B) reproductive readiness. C) periods of daylight and darkness. D) magnetic fields. E) lunar cycles.C11
1293611888Upon returning to its hive, a European honeybee communicates to other worker bees the location of a nearby food source it has discovered by A) vibrating its wings at varying frequencies. B) performing a round dance. C) performing a waggle dance. D) visual cues. E) All options are correct.B12
1293611889Karl von Frisch demonstrated that European honeybees communicate the location of a distant food source by A) performing a short, straight run during a waggle dance. B) performing a long, straight run during a waggle dance. C) performing a round dance with fast rotations. D) emanating minute amounts of stimulus pheromone. E) varying wing vibration frequency.B13
1293611890Animals use pheromones to communicate A) reproductive readiness. B) species recognition. C) gender recognition. D) danger. E) All options are correct.E14
1293611891Displays of nocturnal mammals are usually A) visual and auditory. B) tactile and visual. C) olfactory and auditory. D) visual and olfactory. E) tactile and auditory.C15
1293611892Listed below are several examples of types of animal behavior. Match the letter of the correct term (A-E) to each example in the following questions. A. operant conditioning B. agonistic behavior C innate behavior D. imprinting E. altruistic behavior 16) Through trial and error, a rat learns to run a maze without mistakes to receive a food reward. A) A B) B C) C D) D E) EA16
1293611893A human baby performs a sucking behavior perfectly when it is put in the presence of the nipple of its mother's breast. A) A B) B C) C D) D E) EC17
1293611894A mother goat can recognize its own kid by smell. A) A B) B C) C D) D E) ED18
1293611895Upon observing a golden eagle flying overhead, a sentry prairie dog gives a warning call to other foraging members of the prairie dog community. A) A B) B C) C D) D E) EE19
1293611896A cage containing male mosquitoes has a small earphone placed on top, through which the sound of a female mosquito is played. All the males immediately fly to the earphone and go through all of the steps of copulation. What is the best explanation for this behavior? A) The males learn to associate the sound with females. B) Copulation is a fixed action pattern, and the female flight sound is a sign stimulus that initiates it. C) The sound from the earphone irritates the male mosquitoes, causing them to attempt to sting it. D) The reproductive drive is so strong that when males are deprived of females, they will attempt to mate with anything that has even the slightest female characteristic. E) Through classical conditioning, the male mosquitoes have associated the inappropriate stimulus from the earphone with the normal response of copulation.B20
1293611897If mayflies lay eggs on roads instead of in water, it would indicate which of the following? A) a defective gene B) trial-and-error learning C) a misdirected response to a sign stimulus D) a natural behavioral variation in the mayfly population E) aberrant behavior due to insecticide poisoningC21
1293611898Which of the following is true about imprinting? A) It may be triggered by visual or chemical stimuli. B) It happens to many adult animals, but not to their young. C) It is a type of learning that does not involve innate behavior. D) It occurs only in birds. E) It causes behaviors that last for only a short time (the sensitive period).A22
1293611899A type of learning that can occur only during a brief period of early life and results in a behavior that is difficult to modify through later experiences is called A) insight. B) imprinting. C) habituation. D) operant conditioning. E) trial-and-error learning.B23
1293611900Learning in which an associated stimulus may be used to elicit the same behavioral response as the original sign stimulus is called A) concept formation. B) trial and error. C) classical conditioning. D) operant conditioning. E) cognition.C24
1293611901Every morning at the same time, John went into the den to feed his new tropical fish. After a few weeks, he noticed that the fish swam to the top of the tank when he entered the room. This is an example of A) cognition. B) imprinting. C) classical conditioning. D) operant conditioning. E) maturation.C25
1293611902A type of bird similar to a chickadee learns to peck through the cardboard tops of milk bottles left on doorsteps to obtain the desired cream from the top. What term best applies to this behavior? A) sign stimulus B) cognition C) imprinting D) classical conditioning E) operant conditioningE26
1293611903A salmon returns to its home stream to spawn. What term best applies to this behavior? A) sign stimulus B) cognition C) imprinting D) classical conditioning E) operant conditioningC27
1293611904A stickleback fish will attack a fish model as long as the model has red coloring. What animal behavior idea is manifested by this observation? A) sign stimulus B) cognition C) imprinting D) classical conditioning E) operant conditioningA28
1293611905Parental protective behavior in turkeys is triggered by the cheeping sound of young chicks. What term best applies to this behavior? A) sign stimulus B) cognition C) imprinting D) classical conditioning E) operant conditioningA29
1293611906A guinea pig loves the lettuce kept in the refrigerator and squeals each time the refrigerator door opens. What term best applies to this behavior? A) sign stimulus B) cognition C) imprinting D) classical conditioning E) operant conditioningD30
1293611907Classical conditioning and operant conditioning differ in that A) classical conditioning takes longer. B) operant conditioning usually involves more intelligence. C) operant conditioning involves consequences for the animal's behavior. D) classical conditioning is restricted to mammals and birds. E) classical conditioning is much more useful for training domestic animalsC31
1293611908Some dogs love attention, and Frodo the beagle learns that if he barks, he gets attention. Which of the following might you use to describe this behavior? A) The dog is displaying an instinctive fixed action pattern. B) The dog is performing a social behavior. C) The dog is trying to protect its territory. D) The dog has been classically conditioned. E) The dog's behavior is a result of operant conditioning.E32
1293611909Among songbirds, a "crystallized" song is one that A) is beyond the range of human hearing. B) is perfected by juveniles. C) extremely young chicks sing. D) is a perfected species-specific song. E) warns of predators.D33
1293611910What is the normal imprinting stimulus to a hatchling graylag goose? A) an image of a model of an adult graylag goose B) a nearby object that is moving away C) recognition of its biological mother D) any other adult of its own species E) any humanB34
1293611911Scientists have tried raising endangered whooping cranes in captivity by using sandhill cranes as foster parents. This strategy is no longer used because A) fostered whooping crane chicks did not develop the necessary cues for migration. B) the fostered whooping cranes' critical period was variable such that different chicks imprinted on different "mothers." C) sandhill crane parents rejected their fostered whooping crane chicks soon after incubation. D) none of the fostered whooping cranes formed a mating pair-bond with another whooping crane. E) sandhill crane parents did not properly incubate whooping crane eggs.D35
1293611912Which of the following shows the adaptive significance of cognitive mapping to animals that employ this type of learning? A) It increases the ability to visually recognize landmarks. B) Cognitive maps reduce the amount of detail required to remember the location of an object in the animal's environment. C) Animals can locate essential locations in their environment, such as nests, hazards, and feeding areas. D) Animals can outmaneuver predators by planning and memorizing getaway routes. E) Animals can determine their position relative to landmarks by a triangulation process.B36
1293611913White-crowned sparrows can only learn the "crystallized" song for their species by A) listening to adult sparrow songs during a sensitive period as a fledgling, followed by a practice period until the juvenile matches its melody to its memorized fledgling song. B) listening to the song of its own species during a critical period so that it will imprint to its own species song and not the songs of other songbird species. C) practicing as a fledgling until the innate species-specific song becomes perfected. D) performing the crystallized song as adults when they become sexually mature, as the song is programmed into the innate behavior for the species. E) observing and practicing after receiving social confirmation from other adults at a critical period during their first episode of courtship behavior.A37
1293611914Imagine that you are designing an experiment aimed at determining whether the initiation of migratory behavior is largely under genetic control. Of the following options, the best way to proceed is to A) observe genetically distinct populations in the field and see if they have different migratory habits. B) perform within-population matings with birds from different populations that have different migratory habits. Do this in the laboratory and see if offspring display parental migratory behavior. C) bring animals into the laboratory and determine the conditions under which they become restless and attempt to migrate. D) perform within-population matings with birds from different populations that have different migratory habits. Rear the offspring in the absence of their parents and observe the migratory behavior of offspring. E) All of the options are equally productive ways to approach the question.D38
1293611915What probably explains why coastal and inland garter snakes react differently to banana slug prey? A) Ancestors of coastal snakes that could eat the abundant banana slugs had increased fitness. No such selection occurred inland, where banana slugs were absent. B) Banana slugs are camouflaged, and inland snakes, which have poorer vision than coastal snakes, are less able to see them. C) Garter snakes learn about prey from other garter snakes. Inland garter snakes have fewer types of prey because they are less social. D) Inland banana slugs are distasteful, so inland snakes learn to avoid them. Coastal banana slugs are palatable to garter snakes. E) Garter snakes learn to eat what their mother eats. Coastal snake mothers happened to prefer slugs.A39
1293611916Which of the following statements about evolution of behavior is correct? A) Natural selection will favor behavior that enhances survival and reproduction. B) An animal may show behavior that minimizes reproductive fitness. C) If a behavior is less than optimal, it will eventually become optimal through natural selection. D) Innate behaviors can never be altered by natural selection. E) All of the statements are correct.A40
1293611917Feeding behavior with a high energy intake-to-expenditure ratio is called A) herbivory. B) autotrophy. C) heterotrophy. D) search scavenging. E) optimal foraging.E41
1293611918In the evolution of whelk-eating behavior in crows, which of the following was optimized through natural selection? A) the average number of drops required to break the shell B) the average height a bird flew to drop a shell C) the average total energy used to break shells D) the average size of the shells dropped by the birds E) the average thickness of the shells dropped by the birdsC42
1293611919Which of the following might affect the foraging behavior of an animal in the context of optimal foraging? A) risk of predation B) prey size C) prey defenses D) prey density E) All of the options are correct.E43
1293611920You discover a rare new bird species, but you are unable to observe its mating behavior. You see that the male is large and ornamental compared with the female. On this basis, you can probably conclude that the species is A) polygamous. B) monogamous. C) polyandrous. D) promiscuous. E) agonistic.A44
1293611921The evolution of mating systems is most likely affected by A) population density. B) territoriality. C) certainty of paternity. D) sexual dimorphism. E) None of the options is correct.D45
1293611922The mating system in which females are more ornamented than males is A) monogamy. B) promiscuity. C) polygamy. D) polygyny. E) polyandry.E46
1293611923What is the fitness benefit of polygamy in birds that rear precocious young? A) Females will copulate with many males to ensure that all of their eggs are fertilized. B) Females don't have to decide on one mate, and can copulate with as many males as she deems worthy to share her genes with in reproduction. C) Fit males don't have to help feed and rear young and can spend this time seeking and mating with many females. D) Females don't have to spend time rearing young and can mate and rear additional broods during a breeding season. E) Both males and females spend little time with courtship and brood-rearing, and don't tax their own physiology so they can breed again in subsequent breeding seasons.C47
1293611924Which of the following statements is true about certainty of paternity? A) Young or eggs laid by a female are likely to contain the same genes as another female's eggs in a population of birds. B) Certainty of paternity is high in most species with internal fertilization because the acts of mating and birth are separated by time. C) Males that guard females they have mated with are certain of their paternity. D) Certainty of paternity is low when egg laying and mating occur together, as in external fertilization. E) Paternal behavior exists because it has been reinforced over generations by natural selection.E48
1293611925Which of the following best describes "game theory" as it applies to animal behavior? A) The fitness of a particular behavior is influenced by other behavioral phenotypes in a population. B) The total of all of the behavioral displays, both male and female, is related to courtship. C) An individual in a population changes a behavioral phenotype to gain a competitive advantage. D) The play behavior performed by juveniles allows them to perfect adult behaviors that are needed for survival, such as hunting, courtship, and so on. E) The evolutionary "game" is played between predator and prey, wherein the prey develops a behavior through natural selection that enables it to be less vulnerable to predation, and the predator counters with a new reciprocal predatory behavior.A49
1293611926The color of throats of males in a population of side-blotched lizards is determined by A) the frequency of homozygous recessive genotype. B) ambient temperatureblue = cold; orange = normal; yellow = hot. C) stage of development/maturity. D) their receptiveness to mate. E) the success of the mating behavior of each of the throat color phenotypes.E50
1293611927The fru gene in fruit flies A) controls sex-specific development in the fruit fly. B) is a master regulatory gene that directs expression of many other genes. C) can be genetically manipulated in females so that they will perform male sex behaviors. D) programs males for appropriate courtship behaviors. E) All of the options are correct.E51
1293611928Pair-bonding in a population of prairie voles can be prevented by A) the ensuing confusion caused by introducing meadow voles. B) administering a drug that inhibits the brain receptor for vasopressin in the CNS of males. C) administering a drug that turns on ADH receptor sites in male voles. D) dying the coat color from brown to blond in either male or female prairie voles. E) allowing the population size to reach critically low levels.B52
1293611929How do altruistic behaviors arise through natural selection? A) By his/her actions, the altruist increases the likelihood that some of its genes will be passed on to the next generation. B) The altruist is appreciated by other members of the population because their survivability has been enhanced by virtue of his/her risky behavior. C) Animals that perform altruistic acts are allowed by their population to breed more, thereby passing on their behavior genes to future generations. D) Altruistic behaviors lower stress in populations, which increases the survivability of all the members of the population. E) All of the options are correct.A53
1293611930Which of the following does not have a coefficient of relatedness of 0.5? A) a father to his daughter B) a mother to her son C) an uncle to his nephew D) a brother to his brother E) a sister to her brotherC54
1293611931Animals that help other animals of the same species A) have excess energy reserves. B) are bigger and stronger than the other animals. C) are usually related to the other animals. D) are always male. E) have defective genes controlling their behavior.C55
1293611932The presence of altruistic behavior is most likely due to kin selection, a theory maintaining that A) aggression between sexes promotes the survival of the fittest individuals. B) genes enhance survival of copies of themselves by directing organisms to assist others who share those genes. C) companionship is advantageous to animals because in the future they can help each other. D) critical thinking abilities are normal traits for animals and they have arisen, like other traits, through natural selection. E) natural selection has generally favored the evolution of exaggerated aggressive and submissive behaviors to resolve conflict without grave harm to participants.B56
1293611933In Belding's ground squirrels, it is mostly the females that behave altruistically by sounding alarm calls. What is the likely reason for this distinction? A) Males have smaller vocal cords and are less likely to make sounds. B) Females invest more in foraging and food stores, so they are more defensive. C) Females settle in the area in which they were born, so the alarm is warning kin. D) The sex ratio is biased. E) Males forage in areas separate from females; therefore, alarm calls are useless.C57
1293611934The central concept of sociobiology is that A) human behavior is rigidly predetermined. B) the behavior of an individual cannot be modified. C) human behavior consists mainly of fixed action patterns. D) most aspects of our social behavior have an evolutionary basis. E) the social behavior of humans is homologous to the social behavior of other social animals.D58
1293611935In the territorial behavior of the stickleback fish, the red belly of one male that elicits attack from another male is functioning as A) a pheromone. B) a sign stimulus. C) a fixed action pattern. D) a search image. E) an imprint stimulus.B59
1293611936The behavior of most animals is influenced by the periods of daylight and darkness in the environment. Fiddler crabs' courtship behaviors are instead synchronized by the 29 1/2-day cycle of the moon. What is the adaptive significance of using lunar cues? A) The fiddler crab courtship ritual is highly visual so individuals need the light of the full moon to be able to observe courtship displays. B) Egg maturation in fiddler crab females takes 29 1/2 days. C) By courting at full and new moon, fiddler crabs link their reproduction to times of highest tides that disperse larvae to safer, deeper waters. D) The algae that larval fiddler crabs consume for energy and metabolism blooms on a monthly cycle, so recently hatched larvae have plenty to eat during a crucial time of their life. E) It takes about 29 days for a fiddler crab to reach sexual maturity.C60
1293611937During a field trip, an instructor touched a moth resting on a tree trunk. The moth raised its forewings to reveal large eyespots on its hind wings. The instructor asked why the moth lifted its wings. One student answered that sensory receptors had fired and triggered a neuronal reflex culminating in the contraction of certain muscles. A second student responded that the behavior might frighten predators. Which statement best describes these explanations? A) The first explanation is correct, but the second is incorrect. B) The first explanation refers to proximate causation, whereas the second refers to ultimate causation. C) The first explanation is biological, whereas the second is philosophical. D) The first explanation is testable as a scientific hypothesis, whereas the second is not. E) Both explanations are reasonable and simply represent a difference of opinion.B61
1293611938One way to understand how early environment influences differing behaviors in similar species is through the "cross-fostering" experimental technique. Suppose that the curly-whiskered mud rat differs from the bald mud rat in several ways, including being much more aggressive. How would you set up a cross-fostering experiment to determine if environment plays a role in the curly-whiskered mud rat's aggression? A) You would cross curly-whiskered mud rats and bald mud rats and hand-rear the offspring to see if any grew up to be aggressive. B) You would place newborn curly-whiskered mud rats with bald mud rat parents, place newborn bald mud rats with curly-whiskered mud rat parents, and let some mud rats of both species be raised by their own species. Then you would compare the outcomes. C) You would remove the offspring of curly-whiskered mud rats and bald mud rats from their parents, raise them in the same environment, and then compare the outcomes. D) You would see if curly-whiskered mud rats bred true for aggression. E) You would replace normal newborn mud rats with deformed newborn mud rats to see if it triggered an altruistic response.B62
1293611939Fred and Joe, two unrelated, mature male gorillas, encounter one another. Fred is courting a female. Fred grunts as Joe comes near. As Joe continues to advance, Fred begins drumming (pounding his chest) and bares his teeth. Joe then rolls on the ground on his back, gets up, and quickly leaves. This behavioral pattern is repeated several times during the mating season. Choose the most specific behavior described by this example. A) agonistic behavior B) territorial behavior C) learned behavior D) social behavior E) fixed action patternA63
1293611940Which of the following is true of innate behaviors? A) Their expression is only weakly influenced by genes. B) They occur with or without environmental stimuli. C) They are limited to invertebrate animals. D) They are expressed in most individuals in a population. E) They occur in invertebrates and some vertebrates but not mammals.D64
1293611941According to Hamilton's rule, A) natural selection does not favor altruistic behavior that causes the death of the altruist. B) natural selection favors altruistic acts when the resulting benefit to the beneficiary, corrected for relatedness, exceeds the cost to the altruist. C) natural selection is more likely to favor altruistic behavior that benefits an offspring than altruistic behavior that benefits a sibling. D) the effects of kin selection are larger than the effects of direct natural selection on individuals. E) altruism is always reciprocal.B65
1293611942Female spotted sandpipers aggressively court males and, after mating, leave the clutch of young for the male to incubate. This sequence may be repeated several times with different males until no available males remain, forcing the female to incubate her last clutch. Which of the following terms best describes this behavior? A) monogamy B) polygyny C) polyandry D) promiscuity E) certainty of paternityC66
1293611943A region of the canary forebrain shrinks during the nonbreeding season and enlarges when breeding season begins. This change is probably associated with the annual A) addition of new syllables to a canary's song repertoire. B) crystallization of subsong into adult songs. C) sensitive period in which canary parents imprint on new offspring. D) renewal of mating and nest-building behaviors. E) elimination of the memorized template for songs sung the previous year.A67
1293611944Although many chimpanzees live in environments containing oil palm nuts, members of only a few populations use stones to crack open the nuts. The likely explanation is that A) the behavioral difference is caused by genetic differences between populations. B) members of different populations have different nutritional requirements. C) the cultural tradition of using stones to crack nuts has arisen in only some populations. D) members of different populations differ in learning ability. E) members of different populations differ in manual dexterity.C68
1293611945Which of the following is not required for a behavioral trait to evolve by natural selection? A) In each individual, the form of the behavior is determined entirely by genes. B) The behavior varies among individuals. C) An individual's reproductive success depends in part on how the behavior is performed. D) Some component of the behavior is genetically inherited. E) An individual's genotype influences its behavioral phenotype.A69

Animal Behavior: Midterm 1 Flashcards

An Evolutionary Approach to Animal Behavior,Understanding the Proximate & Ultimate Causes of Bird Song; The Development of Behavior; The Control of Behavior Neural Mechanisms

Terms : Hide Images
139412696monogamous prairie voleIn this species, males in at least some populations form long-term relationships with females, pairing off as couples that live together and coordinate their parental care activities.1
139412697avpr1aa gene that affects male pairing behavior in the prairie vole. Larry Young and his team discovered/concluded that the avpr1a gene contributes to the monogamous behavior of male prairie voles in nature.2
139412698biological adaptaiona trait shaped by natural selection; traits that give some animals an advantage key process discovered by Darwin/Wallace that shapes evolutionary change3
139412699natural selection-Species variation exists. -These different traits are inherited. -Reproductive potential of animal is staggering but populations are stable.4
139412700Charles Darwin (1809-1882)(1831-1836) Observations of diversity of life on his voyage on the H.M.S. Beagle. Observation on the Galapagos: -Observed unique adaptations in closely related species -Adaptations appeared to have survival value.5
139412701Proximate CausesGenetic-development mechanisms +Effects of heredity on behavior +Development of sensory-motor systems via gene-environment interactions6
139412702Proximate CausesSensory-motor mechanisms +Nervous systems for the detection of environmental stimuli +Hormone systems for adjusting responsiveness to environmental stimuli +Skeletal-muscular systems for carrying out responses7
139412703Ultimate CausesHistorical pathways leading to a current behavioral trait +Events occurring over evolution from the origin of the trait to the present8
139412704Ultimate CausesSelective processes shaping the history of a behavioral trait +Past and current usefulness of the behavior in promoting a lifetime of reproductive success9
139464943Niko TinbergenFounder of modern ethology. Wrote "On the Aims and Methods of Ethology" Pioneered the experimental approach by doing field experiments testing whether egg shell removal is an adaptation.10
139464944Ethological Approach-Study naturally occurring behaviors -Begin with descriptive studies of a full range of activities -Study a wide range of species and behaviors -Behavior can be used for biological classification just like morphology. -Comparative morphology = comparative behaviorists11
139464945Animal/Comparative Psychology ApproachBoth approaches are against explanations based on Vitalism. A doctrine that the functions of a living organism are due to a vital principle distinct from physiochemical forces.12
139464946Animal/ Comparative Psychology ApproachBoth approaches are against anthropomorphic explanations. Anthropomorphism is the attribution of uniquely human characteristics and qualities to nonhuman beings, inanimate objects, or natural or supernatural phenomena.13
139464947Sociobiology/Behavioral Ecology "Revolution"-Ecologists and populations biologists had an interest in behavior. -It started with an interest in what factors regulate population density. -They began to view variation in behavior as a biological adaptation to a particular ecological niche like other aspects of the phenotype. -They said that "ethologists ask the wrong questions!"14
139464948The four questions of Tinbergen1. How behavior develops? 2. How does how physiological mechanisms work to make the behavior possible? 3. How the behavior promotes the animal's reproductive success? 4. How the behavior originated and has been changed over evolutionary time?15
139464949Darwinian theory1. Variation: members of a species differ in some of their characteristics 2. Heredity: parents able to pass on some of their distinctive characteristics to their offspring 3. Differences in reproductive success: some individuals have more surviving offspring than others in their population, thanks to their distinctive characteristics16
139464950Wynne-Edwardsian group selection theoryworking hypotheses that focus on how a given behavior helps groups survive; if the behavior in question has been shaped over time by group selection, then it must be superior to all others in terms of helping entire groups avoid extinction.17
139492859Ernst Mayr"What is a species?" championed the biological species concept18
139492860Species isolating mechanism: Pre-zygoticMechanisms that prevent interspecific crosses (premating mechanisms) (a) Potential mates do not mate (seasonal and habitat isolation) (b) Potential mates meet but do not mate (ethological isolation) (c) Copulation attempted but no transfer of sperm takes place (mechanical isolation)19
139492861Species isolation mechanism: Post-ZygoticMechanism that reduce full success of interspecific crosses (postmating mechancisms) (a) Sperm transfer takes place but egg is not fertilized (gametic mortality) (b) Egg is fertilized but zygote dies (zygote mortality) (c) Zygote produces an F₁ hybrid of reduced viability (hybrid inviability) (d) F₁ hybrid zygote is fully viable but partially or completely sterile, or produces deficient F₂ (hybrid sterility)20
139492862Intra-specific variationIndividual organisms within a species vary morphologically (size, shape, color), physiologically, behaviorally, and demographically. Intra-specific variation can be extreme. Sex differences in morphology can be qualitative in nature. Ex: sex differences in Peafowls, Jacanas, Chameleons, etc21
139492863Subspecies/Sibling speciesthese could be individuals of the same or different species22
139492864A.B.C.D.E.F.Animal Behavior: Causation (proximate mechanism) Development Evolution (ultimate mechanism) Function23
139492865Gene variationoccurs within a species when a given gene exists in two or more forms, or alleles, within the species' gene pool24
139502079Pre-Zygotic Isolating MechanismsEthological Isolation Ex:Female fireflies respond only to the light pattern emitted by their won species. Sympatric species of fireflies emit different light patterns. Geographical Isolation Ex: Two closely-related species of antelope squirrels live on opposite sides of the grand canyon. Birds, and other species that can cross the canyon, have not diverged into different species on opposite sides like the antelope squirrels25
139502080Post-Zygotic Isolating MechanismsHybrid sterility - Mules, hybrid of a horse and donkey, do not have normal sperm. Low Hybrid Fitness - Mating between dogs and wolves does occur. But they are not often accepted by people or relatives in the wild.26
139598968Peter MarlerCame to believe that song birds lived in geographically discrete populations, each endowed with its own special version of their species' basic song, its own dialect so to speak.27
139598969Birds song differencesDifferent species of birds sing different songs, and even within a single species, individuals may vary in how they sing their species' special vocalization (dialects).28
139598970Birdsong Learning & DialectsSome birds learn their species' song, which may lead to geographic differences in the songs sung by members of the same species. The underlying development processes so song learning and dialect formation are dependent on both genetic information and environmental inputs, which include the bird's acoustical and social experiences as well as the proteins and other chemical constituents of its brain and other body parts.29
139598971Proximate analyses of bird song learningBirds that learn their songs possess an elaborate song control system whose component parts contribute to early memorization of a song or songs, which are then copied when the learners begin to practice singing30
139598972Ultimate causes of bird song learningLearned songs may enable individual males of some species to target signals to conspecific rival males as well as to potential mates, which may acquire information on the developmental history of the singer by listening to how well he sings.31
139598973What we know about songbirds...+Songbirds sing complicated "learned" songs +Non-songbirds make simpler "innate" vocalizations +Males do all or most of the singing in most species +Different species sound different +Songs show geographical differences within species +Songbirds are altricial (born helpless)32
139598974Song system of a typical songbird-Robust nucleus of the arcopallium (RA) Plays a critical role in song production. -Higher vocal center (HVC). We study this the most. -Lateral portion of the magnocellular nucleus of the anterior nidopallium (IMAN) Involved in song production -Caudomedial neostriatum (NCM) -area X (X)33
139598975Songbird vocal control system-all systems project to syrinx (vocal box) in order to produce the song -variation in the morphology of the some system within a species relates to intra-specific behavioral variations.34
139598976HVC & RAThe HVC and RA can communicate with the nXIIts, which connects to the syrinx, suggests that these brain elements exert control over singeing behavior. The production of a large HVC is required for learning The RA should be larger in male brains than in female brains.35
139598977Phases of Song Development-Critical/Sensitive Period: (10-50 days after hatching) Neural template is open -Subsong: putting together incomplete versions of the more complex song that it will eventually sing. Matching phase (150-200 days) -Plastic song: practices on "right" song to crystallize a full song of its own -Full song: song is complete and can be used for rest of life.36
139598978Zebra finches+Zebra finches are closed-in learners. +ZENK and FoxP2 genes contains information known to contribute to song learning and production.37
139598979Social Experience and Song LearningSocial experience influences song development. In nature, young starlings and white-crowned sparrows are evidently strongly stimulated by interactions with vocalizing companions of their own species, and these experiences then influence song development. Social effect is stronger when birds are 8 mo. old, and more likely to learn a particular song type from a tutor when he overhears the adult interacting with another bird rather than when he is directly interacting with a singing adult himself.38
139598980Songbird sex differences-song system nuclei are sexually dimorphic in species where song behavior is dimorphic (i.e. male songbirds sing whereas their female counterparts usually doesn't) -Male and female songbird brains are sexually dimorphic -Female canary has RA almost similar to male because female canary has the ability to sing -The more a bird sings, the larger the HVC is going to be in both sexes (why in most songbirds the male has the larger HVC) -HVC would be same between sexes in duetting songbirds. In some songbird species males and females sing duets (e.g. canaries)39
139598981Role of hormones in differentiationVariation in behavior correlates with variation in the brain Hormones play a role in relationship to sex differences in the brain (esp HVC area) After hatching, the # of neurons in HVC of male zebra finches continue to grow while the # number in female zebra finches HVC dwindles. Gonads and estrogen are important for development of a male song control system40
139598982The phylogeny of song learning in birdsEvolution of song learning +Common ancestor; song learning lost in other groups +Song learning arose 3x in separate lineages41
139598983Reproductive benefits of Song LearningFemales discriminate and prefer conspecific songs -By broadcasting a clear message that a particular site or female is defended by a physiologically fit singer, a male can drive its competition away in order to avoid engaging in time-consuming conflicts. -Singing increases when female becomes fertile: a signal to the female or warning to other males42
139598984Song FunctionsTerritorial Defense -Song sparrow males can control the level of conflict with a neighbor by their selection of songs. -When a focal male sings a shared song at a rival, the neighbor has three options: (1) escalate the contest, (2) keeps it at the same level, or (3) switches to a different song that de-escalates the interaction Song features match habitat acoustics.43
139598985Understanding the evolution of learned song behaviorAdaptionist -enhanced species recognition -kin recognition -male-male interactions -enhanced mating (sexual selection) Non-adaptationist -by-product of other selected features -geographical separation--divergence44
139643359Proximate in nature: birdsongMale white-throated sparrows sing in the spring because that is when they have higher testosterone levels.45
139643360Group selection theory: birdsongMale white-throated sparrows sing in the spring time because this is the best way to keep the species' population from getting too large and this enables females to pick the best males, thereby improving the genetic quality of white-throated sparrows46
139643361Darwinian natural selectionIn order for Darwinian natural selection to cause evolutionary change, a population must contain individuals that differ hereditary in some characteristics because unless there is variation of this sort, parents cannot pass on their advantageous attributes to their offspring.47
139643362Heritability- Phenotypic variance - It is a function of variance due to the genotype, the environment and interactions between the two - Vp = Vg + Ve +Vge - This can tells us about DIFFERENCES in phenotype NOT ontogeny.48
139643363Principles of Heredity: Basic GeneticsDNA assembled into chromosomes Multiple chromosomes Multiple "genes" on each chromosome Each gene is DNA sequence for a protein Each chromosome is paired --Corresponding "loci" on each chromosome Variation in DNA sequence at each locus --Alleles49
139643364Heredity: More Basic GeneticsDominant and recessive alleles e.g. functional vs. non-functional protein --DNA sequence difference: A vs. a Homozygous: AA, aa Heterozygous: Aa, aA Each parent contributes half their genes50
139643365How to calculate heritabilityHeritability = Gain/ selection differentiation51
139643366What studies of heredity are good for...They give us insight into the reasons for differences between populations. They do not tell us how a trait develops52
139643367Genesimportant even when there are differences between groups due to the environment53
139643368Heredity used to understand differences in behaviorExamples: Warbler migratory direction Heritability estimates Twin concordance studies (IQ, etc...) Fruit fly larva exploration (roving) Mouse maternal behavior Social recognition in male mice ~Interpretation of gene knockout studies ~Interpretation of gene-behavior correlations54
139643369Selectionan extremely powerful force! artificial selection can rapidly change behavior55
139643370Activity Profiles of Honeybees of Different AgesCleaning cells Feeding larvae Feeding nestmates Packing pollen Foraging56
139643371PheromoneWhen the queen bee produces queen mandibular pheromone (chemicals used by animals to communicate with one another), this volatile compound causes changes in the expression of may genes in the brain cells of workers Likewise, workers themselves produce certain pheromone signals that can change gene expression in the brains of other workers when these individuals are exposed to these special chemicals. (how they make the transition from cleaning cells to foraging)57
139643372mRNA in honeybeescomparing the levels of mRNA produced when the "for" gene is expressed in the brains of nurses and foragers shows that the gene "for" is systematically higher in forgers. Regulates PKG enzyme58
139643373Honeybee work transitionTransition to foraging behavior is cued by social environment. In experimental colonies composed exclusively of young workers (residents), the young bees do not forage if older forager bees are added to their hive. But if young bees are added instead, the young residents develop into foragers very rapidly.59
139643374Blackcaps & MigrationBlackcap warblers winter in different sites in central Europe and migrate to different sites. Differences in migratory behavior are hereditary and therefore subject to selection The value of genetic information lies in the ability of genes to respond to signals from the environment by altering their activity , leading to changes in the gene products available to the developing organism.60
139643375Redstarts & MigrationDifferences in these redstarts are based on genetic differences based on studies in which th environment is held constant61
139643376Banana Slugs & Garter SnakesField study of Intra-specific variation in behavior --Garter snakes on the coast of Northwest America accept Banana slugs while inland populations do not --In an experiment where snakes of both inland and coastal areas were hatched in captivity, because all the young snakes had been reared in the same environment, the differences in their willingness to eat slugs and to tongue-flick in reaction to slug odor appear to have been caused by GENETIC differences among them.62
139643377Behavioral Differences in Fruit Flies (Drosophila)Genetic differences cause behavioral differences in drosophila. Female flies of sitter strain that mate with males of rover strain produces first generation100% rovers. 2nd generation interbreeds and produces 75% rovers and 25% sitters63
139643378Developmental SwitchPolyphenisms and Adaptive Values Developmental switches are activated in response to environmental cues (a) food-induced polyphenism (b) socially induced polyphenism (c) predator-induced polyphenism64
139643379Other examples of social cues impacting the brainInfluence of social status on Physiology, Anatomy, and Behavior Ex: subordinate males of the fish Astatotilapia burtoni react very quickly to the absence of a dominant rival. The gene egr-1 ramps us its activity during transition from subordinate to dominate status but then falls back once the male has become truly dominant. Gene expression for a neuropeptide involved in reproduction changes in association with a change in dominance status. After males switch from nonterritorial to territorial status, the GnRH gene becomes increasingly active over time in certain brain cells.65
139643380Experimental Studies of Genes and Behavior-Targeted disruption of individual genes "knock-outs" provides one way to study causal connections between genes and behavior. -Selective breeding experiments provides another method to establish such connections.66
139643381Single Gene Knockout (Oxt)A knockout male mouse that lacks a functional Oxt gene retains no memory of the same female every time she is reintroduced into his cage, whereas a male with the typical genotype shows less and less interest in a female that he has inspected previously. Single gene knockout (Oxt) blocks training effect in social recognition67
139826234Discussion Question (a)The nature-nurture controversy involves those who believe that our nature (essentially our genes) dominates our behavioral development and those who argue just as forcefully that our nurture (especially our upbringing as children) is what shapes our personalities. Some have dismissed the controversy by saying that the two sides might as well be fighting about whether a rectangle's area is primarily a matter of its height or mostly a function of its width. What's the point of the rectangle analogy? Does the analogy have any weaknesses?68
139826235Discussion Answer (a)Because a rectangle's area can only be a product of both its height and width, it would be silly to say that one of the two dimensions was more important than the other. Likewise, since phenotypes can only be produced through an interaction of both genes and environment, it would be silly to say that a trait was the product of nature (or nurture) alone. The analogy does have a weakness in that height and width can be measured in identical units (say, centimeters) whereas the contributions that genes and the environment make to development are extremely different. Moreover, if the nature-nurture argument is about which factor is more important in causing children to differ with respect to a given trait, then one can make a strong case that the "argument" is legitimate, and not to be dismissed as silly or simple-minded.69
139826236Discussion Question (b)A few blackcaps live year-round in southern France, although 75 percent of the breeding population migrates from this area in winter. Perhaps the difference between the two behavioral phenotypes is environmentally induced and not hereditary. Make a prediction about the outcome of an artificial selection experiment in which the experimenter tries to select for both nonmigratory and migratory behavior in this species. Describe the procedure and present your predicted results graphically. Check your predictions against the actual results (see Berthold113).70
139826237Discussion Answer (b)If an artificial selection experiment was done, perhaps focusing on migratory restlessness in cages in the early winter, then the offspring of relatively restless individuals should be no more likely to be restless themselves than the offspring of relatively sedentary birds (if the environmental differences hypothesis is correct and if the birds were held under identical conditions). No high or low lines would result.71
139826238InstinctAccording to Konrad Lorenz instinct is... --Stereotyped --Possessed by all members of at least one sex of the same species --Innate in the sense of genetical inheritance --Innate in the sense of being unlearned72
139826239Learninga change in an animal's behavior linked to a particular experience it has had Examples Specialized learning - Konrad Lorenz. Filial imprinting; a group of greylag goslings imprinted on Lorenz rather than a mother goose and formed a learning attachment to him. Sexual imprinting; in the case of the male greylags when they reached adulthood, a preference for human mates. Operant Learning - B.F. Skinner; Skinner box73
139826240Imprintinga classic example of the circumscribed nature of learning in which a young animal's early social interactions, usually with its parents, lead to its learning such things as what constitutes an appropriate sexual partner. The special effects of imprinting could not have occurred without a "prepared" brain, one whose genetically influenced development enabled it to respond to the special kinds of information available from its social environment. The ability to learn changes with time.74
139826241Instinct & Innate behavior: Brood ParasitesCode breaking has been mastered by the offspring of parasitic birds, such as the European cuckoo and North American cowbird, whose adult females deposit their eggs in the nests of other bird species. After the parasite's egg hatches, the baby cuckoo or cowbird exploits its host by supplying it with the acoustical and visual signals that the adult birds usually use to decide which of their own nestlings to feed. Cuckoo and cowbird nestlings grow rapidly and become larger than their hosts' own offspring and therefore can generate the releasers of parental feeding (head moving with mouth gapping reaching up high) better than their smaller nestmates.75
139826242Zebra Finch ImprintingNestling zebra finches imprint on the beak color of their mother. Male finches reared with a mother with an orange or red beak preferred to court a MALE with its mother's beak color over a female without.76
139826243Natural LearningGeneralized learning. A toad will learn to not eat a Bombadier beetle (which releases a foul stick substance all over its body as means of protection against predators) after few unsuccessful tries.77
139826244Natural LearningAposematic Coloration, Mimicry and Generalized learning. Some frogs have the ability to camouflage themselves as a poison dart from in order to ward of predators.78
139826245Instrumental (Operant) ConditioningOperant conditioning exhibited by a rat in a Skinner box. The rat approaches the bar and then presses it. The animal awaits the arrival of a pellet of rat chow, which it consumes, so the bar-pressing behavior is reinforced. Consequences modify the occurrence and form of behavior.79
139826246Cross-fostering has different imprinting effects in two related songbirdsMales of the great tit (GT) that have been reared by blue tit (BT) foster parents try to pair with blue tit females, but only a fraction succeed. In contrast, cross-fostered BT always find mates, generally their own species. When BT females pair with GT males, they also copulate with male BT.80
139826247Spatial LearningInvolves in response to ecological pressures. Black-capped chickadee is really good at spatial learning. This bird's spatial memory enables it to relocate large numbers of seeds or small insects that it has hidden in bark crevices or patches of moss scattered throughout its environment. Chickadees remember where they stored food even when the food wasn't there. Clark's nutcrackers may have an even more impressive memory, scattering as many as 33,000 seeds in up to 5000 caches as many as 25 kilometers from the harvest site.81
139826248Adaptive Value of LearningSpatial learning evolves in response to ecological pressures. Lack food storing mechanism: Scrub Jay & Mexican Jay Large food storing mechanism: Pinyon Jay & Clark's nutcracker82
139826249Developmentally Determined Behavior Harlow's MonkeysHarlow separated a young rhesus from its mother shortly after birth. the baby was placed in a cage with an artificial surrogate mother (a wire cylinder or terry cloth figure with a nursing bottle). The baby rhesus gained weight normally and developed physically in the same way that non-isolated infants do. But, it soon began to spend its days crouched in corner, rocking back and forth, biting itself. If confronted with a strange object or another monkey, the isolated baby withdrew in apparent terror. The isolation experiment demonstrated that a young rhesus needs social experience to develop normal social behavior83
139826250Developmental HomeostasisThe ability of many animals to develop more or less normally, despite defective genes and deficient environments. Probably contributes to the development of symmetrical bodies, an adaptive outcome in species in which symmetrical individuals are more likely to acquire mates than their less symmetrical competitors84
139826251Spatial learning & HippocampusHippocampus: involved in memory and spatial abilities. The larger the hippocampus, the better at spatial learning a bird will be. Female brown-headed cowbirds have a larger hippocampus than males, as would be expected if this brain structure promotes spatial learning and if selection for spatial learning ability is greater on female than on male cowbirds. Sex difference may be related to spatial memory demands of nest parasitism.85
139826252Taste AversionWhite rats can easily learn that certain taste cues will be followed by sensations of nausea and that certain sounds will be followed by skin pain caused by shock, but they have great difficulty forming learned associations between taste and consequent skin pain or between sound and subsequent nausea. Vampired bats cannot form learned taste aversions. Instead they continue to consume a flavored fluid even it, immediately after accepting this novel substances, they were injected with a toxin that caused gastrointestinal distress.86
139826253Two phases of song learning1. Sensory Learning Phase: auditory memory formation 2. Sensorimotor Phase: subsong, plastic song, crystallized song87
139826254Sex differences in spatial learningSex differences in spatial ability differ between species depending on behavioral ecology. In polygynous species (meadow vole) the male does a little bit better than the female, but in monogamous species (prairie vole) the sexes are about equal. Typically for birds, males seem to have better spatial memory and make fewer errors than females when harvesting from sites because females are incubators of eggs and youngsters while males provide the female and offspring with seeds relocated in caches made previously.88
139826255SubspeciesTwo animal populations that differ in morphology and behavior but can mate with each other and reproduce fertile offspring.89
139826256Genetically based behaviorsPeter Berthold's studies of black-capped warbler behavior support the idea that behaviors can be genetically based by showing that the interspecific hybrids: show migratory behavior patterns that are intermediate to those of each parent.90
139826257Genital Differentiationthe genital tubercle becomes a penis in the presence of testosterone91
139826258Intrauterine Hormonal Influences on Aggressive Behavior--Less aggression in males that developed between females --Estradiol is higher in males that have no males around them in utero92
139826259Intrauterine Hormonal Influence on Territorial BehaviorHome range size in females is larger when the develop between 2 males93
139826260Different Bias for a Non-Spatial TaskPinyon Jay is best at color memory94
139855387Neuronsthe building blocks of the nervous system contains: dendrites, cell body, and axon Axon terminals synapse with dendrites on target cell95
139855388The Nervous SystemCentral Nervous System (CNS) --comprised of the brain and spinal cord --encased within the skull and spinal column Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) --comprised of nerve tissue located outside the spinal cord96
139855389NeuroethologyThe neural basis of naturally occurring behaviors Specializations of the Nervous System involved in the Control of Behavior97
139855390Major Divisions of the Nervous SystemNervous system - CNS - brain & spinal cord Nervous system - PNS - Somatic nervous system -> Afferent & Efferent nerves Nervous system - PNS - Autonomic nervous system - Afferent & Efferent nerves (-> Parasympathetic nervous system "rest and digest" & Sympathetic nervous system "fight or flight")98
139855391Grey vs. white matterGrey matter - contains neural cell bodies, one major component of CNS White matter - consists mostly of myelinated axons, other major component of CNS99
139855392Localized Functions in the BrainFrontal lobe - planning & movement Parietal - touch Occipital - vision Temporal - memory & hearing100
139855393Stains for cell types in the nervous systemGolgi stain: a nervous tissue staining technique Nissil stain: staining of the cell body101
139855394Cells of Nervous SystemSensory Neuron: --A neuron that detects changes in the external or internal environment and sends information about these changes to the central nervous system. (ex: rods and cones, touch receptors) Motor Neuron: --A neuron located within the central nervous system that controls the contraction of a muscle or the secretion of a gland (extends an axon out of the CNS to contact a muscle) Interneuron: --A neuron located entirely within the central nervous system102
139855395Neuron Basic StructureSoma or "cell body": --The cell body of a neuron, which contains the nucleus. Dendrite: --A branched treelike structure attached to the soma of a neuron; receives information from the terminal button of other neurons Axon: --The long, thin cylindrical structure that conveys information from the soma of a neuron to its terminal button103
139855396Classifications of NeuronsUnipolar neuron: --A neuron with one axon attached to its soma; the axon divides, with one branch receiving sensory information and the other sending the information into the central nervous system. Bipolar neuron: --A neuron with one axon and one dendrite attached to its soma. Multipolar neuron: --A neuron with one axon and many dendrite104
139855397SynapsesA junction between the terminal button of an axon and the membrane of another neuron.105
139855398Terminal button (or bouton)The bud at the end of a branch of an axon; forms synapses with another neuron; sends information to that neuron106
139855399NeurotransmitterA chemical that is released by a terminal button; has an excitatory or inhibitory effect on another neuron.107
139855400A Withdrawal ReflexAxon of sensory neuron (pain) Muscle causes withdrawal from source of pain Interneuron excites motor neuron, causing muscular contraction Cross section of spinal cord108
139855401GliaGlial cell: --The supporting cells of the central nervous system. Astrocyte: --A glial cell that provides support for neurons of the central nervous system, provides nutrients and other substances, and regulates the chemical composition of the extracellular fluid.109
139855402Cells of the Nervous SystemOligodendrocyte: --A type of glial cell in the central nervous system that forms myelin sheaths. Microglia: --The smallest glial cells; act as phagocytes (cleaning up debris) and protect the brain from invading microorganisms. Schwann cell: --A cell in the peripheral nervous system that is wrapped around a myelinated axon, providing one segment of its myelin sheath.110
139855403Cells of the Nervous SystemMyelin sheath: --A sheath that surrounds axons and insulates them, preventing messages from spreading between adjacent axons. Node of Ranvier: --A naked portion of a myelinated axon, between adjacent oligodendroglia or Schwann cells.111
139855404Features of the Blood-Brain BarrierRegulates the chemicals that can enter the CNS from the blood. Helps the CNS maintain the proper composition of fluids inside and outside the neurons.112
139855405Blood-brain barrierA semipermeable barrier between the blood and the brain produced by cells in the walls of the brain's capillaries.113
139855406Flow of informationDendrites -Input: receives information from other neurons Soma -Contains nucleus: genes Produces proteins essential for cell -Integrates ("adds") information from dendrites Axon -Transmits information from soma to terminal Synaptic terminal -Transmits information to dendrites of other neurons (or to muscle)114
139855407Graded potentialsSmall graded changes in voltage (analog) --Vary in size; duration Due to opening of ion channels --When channel opens, ions move in accordance to the forces acting upon them Can be positive or negative: Positive (depolarize): Na+ channels open Negative (hyperpolarize): Cl- enters; or K+ leaves115
139855408Measuring Electrical Potentials of AxonsDepolarization: Reduction (toward zero) of the membrane potential of a cell from its normal resting potential. Hyperpolarization: An increase in the membrane potential of a cell, relative to the normal resting potential Action potential: The brief electrical impulse that provides the basis for conduction of information along an axon. Threshold of excitation: The value of the membrane potential that must be reached to produce an action potential.116
139855409Postsynaptic potentialsGraded potentials caused by neurotransmitter binding to receptors Two basic types: 1. EPSP: Excitatory postsynaptic potential Causes a depolarization towards threshold. 2. IPSP: Inhibitory postsynaptic potential Causes a hyperpolarization away from threshold. Type of potential depends upon what kind of ion channel is opened by the neurotransmitter receptor117
139855410Summation of graded potentialsGraded potentials are "added" and "subtracted" in the soma To summate, must occur prior to decay Decay places a temporal limit on when events can add, subtract118
139855411Significance of graded potentials: Summation or "Integration"Summation: "adding" graded potentials --Depolarizing graded potentials "add" --Hyperpolarizing graded potentials "subtract" Summation occurs in soma --Graded potentials travel in from dendrites Decay of graded potentials places limits on summation --To summate, potentials must occur close together in time or space Outcome: add enough positive charge, reach threshold to create action potential119
139855412Action PotentialLarge, rapid (1-2 msec) change in voltage Occurs when cell voltage reaches threshold -Threshold is at a more positive value than resting pot. -Add depolarizing graded potentials120
139855413What is "information"?Transfer of information between neurons is chemical in nature -At synapse, there is a physical gap that is traversed by release of chemical message from presynaptic cell onto postsynaptic cell -Chemical is called a neurotransmitter Processing of information within a neuron is electrical in nature -Postsynaptic neuron converts chemical message into an electrical one (at dendrites) -Electrical signals from dendrites are integrated in soma121
139855414Moths and Bats; A1 and A2 cellsBats use echolocation to hunt moths. A1 cells fire at high rates to low intensity pulsed sounds The Noctuid Moth's auditory has evolved to detect bats. At cells fire at higher rates as the intensity increases (as bat gets closer). Sound fluctuates in synchrony with the bat's wing beats. A2 cells necessary for anti-interception behavior. A2 cells do not fire to low intensity sounds. The A1 cell fires more to the terminal buzz of the bat's ultrasonic vocalization. A2 cells do not necessarily do this alone.122
139855415Crickets have different responses to sounds at different frequenciesLow frequency sound detection is for other crickets. High frequency sound detection is for bats.123
139855416Auditory ProcessingCentral pathways for auditory processing in humans: Brainstem and Midbrain -Primary auditory cortex -Medial geniculate nucleus -Nucleus of lateral lemniscus -Cochlear nucleus -Superior olivary nucleus -Inferior colliculus124
139855417Auditory Transduction pathways-Scala vestibuli -Scala media -Basilar membrane -Scala tympani -Cochlear nerve (VIII) -Spiral ganglion125
139855418Bat & EcholocationGhost-faced bats exhibit adaptations for echolocation. The Fruit bat does NOT exhibit such adaptations. Mustached Bat, an echolocating bat, has been studied in detail. The mustached bat produces a constant frequency and frequency modulated pulse.126

Government Exam- Unit 1 Foundation of Government Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
1528762059Declaration of Independencethe document recording the proclamation of the second Continental Congress (4 July 1776) asserting the independence of the colonies from Great Britain1
1528762060Limited GovernmentBasic principle of American government which states that government is restricted in what it may do, and each individual has rights that government cannot take away2
1528762061Unlimited GovernmentA government in which no limits are imposed on the ruler's authority. The leaders don't have to follow the same laws as everyone else.3
1528762062Divine Rights of KingsA theory that assumed that God appointed all monarchs to rule on his behalf. Therefore, any policy, decree, plan, or approach adopted by royalty could not be questioned or disobeyed.4
1528762063Representative DemocracyA system of government in which citizens elect representatives, or leaders, to make decisions about the laws for all the people.5
1528762064AutocracyA government in which the ruler has unlimited power and uses it in an arbitrary manner.6
1528762065OligarchyA government ruled by a few powerful people7
1528762066SocialismA system in which society, usually in the form of the government, owns and controls the means of production.8
1528762067CommunismA political system in which the government owns all property and dominates all aspects of life in a country.9
1528762068John Locke(1632-1704) Political theorist who defended the Glorious Revolution with the argument that all people are born with certain natural rights to life, liberty, and property.10
1528762069Adam Smith(1723-90) Economist and philosopher, born in Kirkcaldy, Fife, E Scotland, UK. He studied at Glasgow and Oxford, lectured in Edinburgh, and became professor of logic at Glasgow (1751), but took up the chair of moral philosophy the following year. In 1776 he moved to London, where he published An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776), the first major work of political economy. This examined in detail the consequences of economic freedom, such as division of labour, the function of markets, and the international implications of a laissez-faire economy. His appointment as commissioner of customs in 1778 took him back to Edinburgh.11

AP Biology 9th Edition [34] Flashcards

Chapter 34 terms ONLY

Terms : Hide Images
158644325VertebratesA series of bones called vertebrae that make up the vertebral column, or backbone1
158644326DisparityBody mass2
158644327NotochordA longitudina, flexible rod located beteween teh digestive tube and the nerve cord3
158644328Pharyngeal CleftsGroves along the sides of the pharynx4
158644329Pharyngeal slitsPharyngeal clefts that have developed into slits that allow water entering the mouth to exit the body without passing through the entire digestive tract5
158644330LanceletsChordates characterized by their bladelike shape6
158644331TunicatesUrochordata; A clade in the chordates7
158644332Neural CrestA collection of cells that appears near the dorsal margins of the closing neural tube in an embryo8
158644333CraniatesThe head of a chordate9
158644334Dlx FamilyA group of transcription factor genes that are used by vertebrates10
158644335ConodontsSlender, soft-bodied vertebrates with prominent eyes controlled by numerous muscles11
158644336MineralizedThe formation of a mineral from ions12
158644337GnathostomesJawed vertrates13
158644338Lateral Line SystemOrgans that form a row along each side of the body and are sensitive to vibrations in the surrounding water14
158644339PlacodermsArmored vertebrates15
158644340AcanthodiansA group of jawed vertebrates that went exticnt 289 million years ago16
158644341ChondrichthyansFishes that have a skeleton composed predominantly of cartilage though often impregnated with calcium17
158644342OviparousAnimals that lay eggs outside the mother's body18
158644343OvoviviparousSpecies that retain their fertilized eggs in the oviduct19
158644344ViviparousSpecies that have their young develop within the uterus and obtain nourishment prior to birth by receiving nuterients from the mother's blood trough placenta20
158644345CloacaA common chamber that has a single opening to the outside that is used by sharks as as the anus and the end of the reproductive tract21
158644346OsteichthyansA nested clade under vertebrates in which organims have an ossified (bony) endoskeleton22
158644347OperculumA protective bony flap that protects the gills23
158644348Swim BladderAn air sac that helps fish mantain buoyancy24
158644349Ray-finned FishesFishes with bony rays that support their fins25
158644350Lobe-finsRod-shaped bones surrounded by a thick layer of muscle in their pectoral and pelvic fins26
158644351TetrapodsFour footed animals27
158644352AmphibiansA class in the taxonomic tree includes frogs and caecilians. Refers to the life stages of many frog species that live first in water and then on land28
158644353AmniotesA group of tetrapods whose extant members are the reptiles and mammals29
158644354Amniotic EggAnd egg which contains four specialized membranes: the amnion, the chorion, the yolk sac, and the allantois30
158644355Extraembryonic MembranesMembranes that are part of the egg and not the body of the embryo31
158644356ReptileA clade that includes tuataras, lizards, snakes, turtles, acrocodilians, and birds.32
158644357Ectothermicabsorbance of external heat as the main source of body heat33
158644358EndothermicSelf-Maintainence of Body temperature through metabolic activity34
158644359ParareptilesLarge, stocky, quadrupedal herbivores; died out by about 200 million years ago, at the end of the Triassic period35
158644360DiapsidsAn ancient clade with a distinctive pair of holes on each side of the skull to control jaw movement. Gave rise to Lepidosaurs and Archosaurs.36
158644361LepidosaursIncludes tuataras, lizards, and snakes. This lineage also produced a number of marine reptiles37
158644362ArchosaursThe lineage that produced the crocodilians, pterosaurs and dinosaurs38
158644363PterosaursThe first tetrapods to exhibit flapping flight. The wings consisted of a collagen-strengthened membrane that stretched between the trunk or hind leg and a very long digit on the foreleg39
158644364DinosaursExtinct animals that diversified into a vast range of shapes and sizes from bipeds the size of a pigeon to 45-m-long quadrupeds40
158644365TheropodsBipedal Carnivores. Includes the Tyrannosaurus rex41
158644366ArchaeopteryxThe first feathered theropods that later evolved into birds42
158644367RatitesThe group containing flightless species e.g. the ostrich, rhea, kiwi, cassowary, and emu43
158644368MammalsThe other amniote lineage that are not reptiles44
158644369SynapsidsAn early group of amniotes that lacked hair, had a sprawling gait, and laid eggs. A distinctive characteristic of synapsids is the single temporal fenestra, a hole behind the eye socket45
158644370MonotremesMammals that lay eggs e.g. platypus and four species of echidnas46
158644371MarsupialsMammals with higher metabolic rates and nipples that provide milk. They give birth to live young and teh embryo develops inside the uterus of the female's reproductive tract47
158644372PlacentaA structure in which nutrients diffuse into the embryo from the mother's blood48
158644373EutheriansPlacental Mammals49
158644374Opposable ThumbThe ability to touch the ventral surface 9fingerprint side) of the tip of all four fingers with the ventral surface of the thumb of the same hand50
158644375AnthropoidsClade that includes monkeys and apes. Also includes Lemurs, lorises, and bush babies.51
158644376PaleoanthropologyThe study of human origins52
158644377HomininsThe 20 extinct species that are more closely related to humans than to chimpanzees53

AP Biology: Chapter 29 Flashcards

Vocabulary words from the AP Edition of Campbell Biology, Chapter 29.

Terms : Hide Images
335123807sporopollenina durable polymer covering exposed zygotes of charophyte algae, preventing them from drying out1
335123808alternation of generationslife cycle of a plant including a multicellular diploid sporophyte and a multicellular haploid gametophyte2
335123809gametophytethe haploid component of a plant which is produced by mitosis of haploid gametes3
335123810sporophytethe diploid component of a plant which is produced by mitosis of zygotes4
335123811sporesreproductive haploid cells that can develop into a haploid organism without fusing with another cell5
335123812placental transfer cellsplant cells which enhance the transfer of nutrients from parent to embryo6
335123813embryophytesland plants, a name recognizing their derivation from multicellular, dependent embryos7
335123814sporangiamulticellular organs of the sporophyte8
335123815sporocytesspore mother cells which undergo meiosis to produce spores9
335123816gametangiamulticellular organs of the gametophyte10
335123817archegoniafemale gametangia11
335123818antheridiamale gametangia12
335123819apical meristemslocalized regions of cell division at the tips of shoots and roots13
335123820cuticlethe epidermal covering of plants consisting of polyester and wax polymers14
335123821vascular tissuecells joined into tubes that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant body15
335123822vascular plantsplants with a complex vascular tissue system16
335123823bryophytesnonvascular plants17
335123824lycophytename of the family of seedless vascular plants which includes club mosses18
335123825pterophytename of the family of seedless vascular plants which includes ferns19
335123826seedless vascular plantscollective name for lycophytes and pterophytes20
335123827gradea collection of organisms that share a common level of biological organization or adaptation21
335123828seedan embryo prackaged with a supply of nutrients inside a protective coat22
335123829gymnospermsplant family with seeds unenclosed by chambers23
335123830angiospermsplant family with covered seeds and flowers24
335123831protonemagreen, branched, one-cell-thick filaments produced by germinating moss spores25
335123832gametophoregamete-producing structure on a bud-like growth of an apical meristem of a gametophyte26
335123833rhizoidslong, tubular single cells or filaments of cells which ancor the gametophytes27
335123834footportion of a moss sporophyte that collects nutrients from the parent gametophyte via transfer cells28
335123835setathe elongated stalk of a moss sporophyte29
335123836capsuleanother name for the sporangium, or the location of meiosis and development of haploid spores30
335123837peristomeupper part of the moss capsule specializing for gradual spore discharge31
335123838stomataspores found in all bryophytes and vascular plants, allowing exchange of CO2 and O2 between the outside air and the sporophyte interior32
335123839peatextensive deposits of partially decayed organic material33
335123840xylemvascular tissue conducting most of the water and minerals through the plants34
335123841tracheidscells of the xylem which are tube-shaped35
335123842ligninphenolic polymer that strengthens cell walls in vascular plant cells36
335123843phloemvascular tissue with cells arranged into tubes to distribute food37
335123844rootsorgans that absorb water and nutrients from the soil38
335123845leavesthe main photosynthetic organ in vascular plants39
335123846microphyllssmall, usually spine-shaped leaves supported by a single strand of vascular tissue (unique to lycophytes)40
335123847megaphyllsleaves with a highly branched vascular system, characteristic of most vascular plants41
335123848sporophyllsmodified leaves that bear sporangia42
335123849soriclusters of sporangia produced by fern sporophylls43
335123850strobilicone-like structures formed by groups of sporophylls44
335123851homosporousplants having one type of sporangium that produces one type of spore45
335123852heterosporousplants having two types of sporangia that produces two types of spores46
335123853megasporesa spore from a heterosporous plant that develops into a female gametophyte with archegonia47
335123854microsporesa spore from a heterosporous plant that develops into a male gametophyte with antheridia48

Geometry Vocabulary Flashcards

semester 2 math exam geometry vocabulary

Terms : Hide Images
70277033acute angleless than 90 degrees70277033
70277034right angle90 degrees70277034
70277035straight angle180 degrees70277035
70277036obtuse anglemore than 180 degrees70277036
70277037adjacent angle paircommon vertex common side70277037
70277038vertical angle pairformed by two intersecting lines always congruent70277038
70277039complementary angle pairtwo angles whose sum is 90 degrees70277039
70277040supplementary angle pairtwo angles whose sum is 18070277040
70277041corresponding anglessame place just a different parallel line70277041
70277042vertical anglesdiagonal from each other and on same line70277042
70277043alternate exterior anglesdiagonal from each other, on different parallel lines and both exterior70277043
70277044alternate interior anglesdiagonal from each other, different parallel line, both interior70277044
70277045sum of angles in triangle180 degrees70277045
70277046sum of angles in quadrilateral360 degrees70277046
70277047equilateral triangles3 congruent sides70277047
70277048isosceles triangle2 congruent sides70277048
70277049scalene trianglesno congruent sides70277049
70277050acute triangle3 acute angles70277050
70277051obtuse triangle1 obtuse angle70277051
70277052right triangle1 right angle70277052
70277053triangle perimetersum of sides70277053
70277054triangle areabase x height divided by 270277054
70277055quadrilateral perimetersum of sides70277055
70277056quadrilateral areab x h70277056

Biology Campbell 9th Edition- Chapter 12 Biology Campbell 9th Edition- Chapter 21, The Cell Cycle Flashcards

Exam 2

Terms : Hide Images
537684148Cell DivisionReproduction of cells1
537684149Cell cycleLife of a cell from the time it is first formed from a dividing parent cell until its own division into two daughter celll2
537684150GenomeA cells endowment of DNA3
537684151ChromosomesCell structure that carries genetic material. Found in nucleus of eukaryotic cells. Each consists of one very long DNA molecule and associated poteins4
537684152ChromatinThe entire complex of DNA and proteins that is the building material of chromosomes5
537684153Somatic cellsAll body cells except reproductive cells6
537684154GametesSperm and Egg reproductive cells. 1/2 as many chromosomes as somatic cells. 23 chromosomes in humans.7
537684155Sister chromatidsjoined copies of the original chromosome8
537684156CentromereRegion containing specific DNA sequences where the chromatid is attached most closely to its sister chromatid9
537684157MitosisDivision of genetic material in nucleus10
537684158CytokinesisDivision of cytoplasm is well under way by late telophase, so 2 daughter cells appear shortly after end of mitosis. In animal cells, cytokinesis involves the formation of a cleavage furow, which pinches the cell in two11
537684159Chromatid cohesionAttachment along lengths of two sister chromatids12
537684160Mitotic (M) phaseboth mitosis and cytokinesis, shortest part of cell cycle13
537684161Interphase90% of cycle. Cell that is about to divide grows and copies its chromosomes in preparation for cell division. Divided into G1 phase, S phase, and G2 phase14
537684162G1 phaseFirst part of Interphase. First gap. Growth phase15
537684163G2 phaseSecond gap. 2nd Growth phase, Nuclear envelope encloses nucleus. Nucleus contains one or more nucleoli, Two centromeres by duplication.16
537684164S phasesynthesis phase. DNA replicated17
537684165Mitotic spindleStructures consisting of fibers made of microtubules and associated proteins18
537684166Centrosomesubcellular region containing material that functions throughout the cell cycle to orgainze the cell's microtubules19
537684167AsterRadical array of short microtubules20
537684168KinetochoreA structure of proteins associated with specific sections of chromosomal DNA at each centromere21
537684169ProphaseChromatin fibers become more tightly coiled, condensing into discrete chromosomes. Nucleoli disappears. Each duplicated chromosome appears as sister chromatids joined at centromeres. Mitotic spindle forms. Centromeres move away from each other, propelled partly by the lengthening microtubules between them22
537684170PrometaphaseNuclear envelope fragments. Microtubules extending from each centrosome can no invade nuclear area. Chromosomes even more dense. Each of the 2 chromatids of each chromosome has kinetochore Jerking of chromosomes back and forth from kinetochre microtubules Nonkinetochore microtubules interact with those from the opposite pole of spindle23
537684171KinetochoreSpecialized protein structure at the centromere24
537684172MetaphaseCentromeres at opposite poles of cell Chromosomes convene at metaphase plate25
537684173Metaphase plateplane that is equidistant between spindles two poles. Chromosomes' centromeres lie at metaphase plate For each chromosome, the kinetochores of the sister chromatids are attached to kinetochore microtubules coming from opposite poles26
537684174AnaphaseShortest stage of mitosis, lasts only a few minutes. Begins when cohesin proteins are cleaved. Two sister chromatids of each pair part suddenly. Each chromatid becomes a full-fledged chromosome. 2 liberated daughter chromosomes begin moving toward opposite ends of cell as kinetochore microtubules shorten. Cell elongates as the nonkinetochore microtubules lengthen By the end of anaphase, the 2 ends of cell have equal sets of chromosomes27
537684175Telophase2 daughter nuclei form in the cell. Nuclear envelopes arise from fragments of parent cell's nuclear envelope and portions of the endomembrane system. Nucleoli reappear. Chromosomes become less condensed. Remaining spindle microtubules are depolymerized. Mitosis is now complete.28
537684176Cleavage furrowShallow groove of cell surface near old metaphase plateq29
537684177Metaphase platePlane midway between spindle's two poles.30
537684178Binary fissionProcess of asexual reproduction of single-celled eukaryotes31
537684179Bacterial cell division step 1Chromosome replication begins. One copy of the origin moves rapidly toward the other end of the cell32
537684180Bacterial cell division Step 2Replication continues. One copy of the origin is now at each end of the cell. Cell Elongates.33
537684181Bacterial cell division Step 3Replication finishes. Plasma membrane grows inward. New cell wall is deposited34
537684182Bacterial cell division Step 4Two daughter cells result35
537684183Cycle Control SystemCyclically operating set of molecules in the cell that both triggers and coordinates key events in the cell cycle36
537684184CheckpointControl point where stop and go-ahead signals can regulate cycle37

History. Eisenhower,FDR,Johnson Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
64410593Where did republicans claim JFK's election was stolen from?Texas64410593
64410594"The torch being passed to a new generation"JFK64410594
64410595New Frontier Programcalled for more education, federal healthcare, civil rights, most were not passed until LBJ64410595
64410596Economy during JFK's presidencyremained good due to spending on military and space64410596
64410597Peace CorpsRecruited young american volunteers to give technical aid to developing countries64410597
64410598Bay of PigsUnited States trained Cuban insurgents to overthrow Castro. Failed miserably and Castro used as publicity64410598
64410599Berlin Wall1961. Khruschchev wanted US out of berlin. Was torn down in 198964410599
64410600What is a hot line?a means of communication set up between dc and moscow.64410600
64410601Nuclear test ban treaty1963. End of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere64410601
64410602Lee Harvy OswaldAssassin64410602
64410603Jack RubyShot Lee Harvy Oswald64410603
64410604Warren CommissionInvestigated the assassination and stated no one helped Oswald. Earl Warren.64410604
64410605The Great SocietyWhat LBJ wanted to create with his policies64410605
64410606The Economic Opportunity Act of 1964Authorized 1 billion for war on poverty. Created the job corps.64410606
64410607Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965Set aside 1 billion for aid to the poverty-stricken Appalachian Mountain Regions64410607
64410608Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965Provided extensive financial Aid to public and parochial schools64410608
64410609Medicare Act of 1965Provided nursing and hospital care, funded by Social Security, to the elderly. Medicade64410609
64410610Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)Secretary's position held by Robery Weaver, nation's first black cabinet member64410610
64410611Department of TransportationCoordinates national transportation policy64410611
6441061224th Amendment 1964Prohibited the use of a poll tax as a prerequisite for voting64410612
6441061325th Amendment 1967provided for the Vice-President to assume the duties of the president if the chief executive is incapacitated64410613
64410614Civil Rights act of 1964Withheld federal funding to states that did not comply with federal laws regarding voting rights, education and public facilities64410614
64410615Voting Rights Act of 1965Forbade literacy tests under certain circumstances and authorized the president to enforce the 15th amendment64410615
64410616Black Panther LeadersBobby Seale, Huey Newton, and Eldrige Cleaver64410616
64410617Ceaser ChavezOrganized Mexican Farm workers to revolt64410617
6441061838th ParallelKorea was divided here64410618
64410619Policy of ContainmentTruman asked congress to intervene in order to stop communism in korea64410619
64410620General Macarthurgeneral who fought in the korean war.64410620
644106211952when south korea recaptured seoul.64410621
64410622Kim Il SungNorth Korean Dictator64410622
64410623Checker's SpeechSpeech where nixon gained the trust of the nation64410623
64410624Department of health, education and welfareEisenhower created this in 195364410624
64410625Highway act of 1956Authorized construction of 42,000 miles of interstate highway.64410625
64410626John Foster Dullessec of state who thought truman's policies were too soft. he wanted to liberate the "captive nations"64410626
64410627"Brinksmanship"belief that communists would not actually go to war if provoked64410627
64410628Geneva Conferencefrance fave up claims to Indochina. Vietnam was divided at the 17th parallel64410628
64410629Domino TheoryEisenhower said if south vietnam fell to communism so would the rest of the nations. "Containment theory"64410629
64410630SEATOSoutheast Asia Treaty Organization64410630
64410631Eisenhower DoctrineUs replaced GB and France. First appeared in Lebanon when Eisenhower sen 14,000 troops64410631
64410632OPECformed in 1960 between saudi arabia, kuwait, iraq, and venezuela64410632
64410633Hungarian Revolttest to see if the US would respond to Soviet Actions64410633
64410634U-2 IncidentRussia Shot down a US spy plane flying over soviet territory.64410634
64410635Gary PowersPiolet of U-2 spy plane64410635
64410636Very Negativewhat were eisenhower's views about the cold war?64410636
64410637BeatnikJack Kerouac (On The Road). Model for the Hippies.64410637
64410638Communist control acttook away the rights, privileges and immunities of Communist Party and allowed for penalizing of Communists64410638
64410639Oppenheimer CaseOppenheimer suspended by Atomic Energy Commission as suspected security risk. near 6000 people left.64410639
64410640Korean ArmisticeDeath of Stalin and relaxed international situation64410640
64410641Atomic Energy ActPrivate Power companies allowed to own reactors for production of electric power, to own nuclear materials, and to patent own atomic inventions64410641
64410642Alaska and Hawaii become states195964410642
64410643Greensboro Sit-Inthousands of people sat a "whites only" lunch counter64410643

Dogs Flashcards

DOGS, DOGS, DOGS!!!!!!!!

Terms : Hide Images
808972918Border Colliedeveloped in the area between Scotland and England usually having a black coat with white on the head and tip of tail used for herding both sheep and cattle1
808972919Chihuahuaold breed of tiny short-coated dog with protruding eyes from Mexico held to antedate Aztec civilization2
808972920Doberman Pinchergermany (made by a tax collector who wanted a guard dog and companion3
808972921German Sheparda breed of dog known for its protective nature.4
808972922Mexican Hairlessany of an old breed of small nearly hairless dogs of Mexico5
808972923Great DaneA "gentle giant," is nothing short of majestic. Sometimes referred to as the "king of dogs," this extremely large dog breed is known for being strong yet elegant, with a friendly, energetic personality. Striking in the show ring, this breed is also popular as a family pet. Coat colors can be brindle, fawn, blue, black, harlequin and mantle.6
808972924Greyhounda tall slender dog of an ancient breed noted for swiftness and keen sight7
808972925Pomeranianbreed of very small compact long-haired dogs of the spitz type8
808972926Poodlean intelligent dog with a heavy curly solid-colored coat that is usually clipped9
808972927Beaglea small short-legged smooth-coated breed of hound10
808972928Golden Retrieversknown for being friendly, gentle, and often named "buddy"11
808972929Labrador retrieverbreed originally from Labrador having a short black or golden-brown coat12

Pages

Subscribe to CourseNotes RSS

Need Help?

We hope your visit has been a productive one. If you're having any problems, or would like to give some feedback, we'd love to hear from you.

For general help, questions, and suggestions, try our dedicated support forums.

If you need to contact the Course-Notes.Org web experience team, please use our contact form.

Need Notes?

While we strive to provide the most comprehensive notes for as many high school textbooks as possible, there are certainly going to be some that we miss. Drop us a note and let us know which textbooks you need. Be sure to include which edition of the textbook you are using! If we see enough demand, we'll do whatever we can to get those notes up on the site for you!