AP Bio Multiple-Choice Practice:
Plants Part I
(Ch. 29,30,35)
These are worth one point each!
1. Companion cells
- Are always there when you need them
- Are parenchyma that have developed closely together, knowing each other since kindergarten
- Keep lonely cells company
- Collenchyma that share all their secrets with each other
- Cells connected to sieve-tube cells connected by many plasmodesmata and whose nucleus and ribosomes may serve sieve-tube members
- Which of the following is dead at functional maturity (when it is actually functioning)?
- Companion cells
- Guard cells
- Palisade mesophyll
- Sieve-tube members
- Vessel elements (member)
- Most growth takes place in terminal roots and shoots in
- The zone of cell division
- The zone of elongation
- The zone of maturation
- Meristematic cells
- Vascular cambium
- A plant with a fibrous root system, leaves with parallel venation, and a seed with a single cotyledon is probably a
- Corn plant
- Fern
- Fir tree
- Pine tree
- Pea plant
- All of the following are true about the vascular cambium EXCEPT:
- It increases the girth (width) of plants.
- It produces secondary xylem.
- It produces bark in woody plants.
- It produces secondary phloem.
- It occurs in the stem and in the root.
- All of the following are found in both roots and stems EXCEPT:
- Casparian strip
- Primary phloem
- Primary xylem
- Secondary xylem
- Vascular cambium
- Which of the following was an evolutionary adaptation vital to the survival of the bryophytes?
- The switch from the gametophyte to the sporophyte as the dominant generation of the life cycle.
- The development of branched sporophytes.
- The birth of pollination
- The packaging of gametes into gametangia
- Evolution of the seed
- Which of the following is NOT associated with flowers?
- Carpel
- Stigma
- Style
- Hypha
- Anther
- The portion of the root that is responsible for what we see as growth is:
- Zone of cell division
- Vascular cylinder
- Zone of elongation
- Endodermis
- Zone of maturation
- In plants, male gametes are produced by the
- Ovary
- Pistil
- Antheridium
- Archegonium
- Sporophyte
For the next three questions please use the following answers.
A. Sieve-tube elements (members)
B. Vessel elements (members)
C. Tracheids
D. Guard cells
E. Collenchyma cells
- These cells are responsible for controlling the opening and closing of the stomata.
- These cells are the more efficient of the two types of xylem cells.
- These cells are live cells that function as structural support for a plant.
- The function of the endosperm in angiosperms is to provide
- Nourishment for the pollen
- Nourishment for the developing embryo
- Material for fruit development
- Material for fruit development
- A reward for animal pollinators
- Angiosperms differ from all other plants because
- They produce a pollen tube
- They produce wind-dispersed pollen
- The sporophyte generation is dominant
- They use animals to disperse their seeds
- They produce fruits.
- Which of the following is TRUE about secondary growth in plants?
- Flowers may have secondary growth
- A rapid change from a vegetative state to a reproductive state
- Secondary growth is produced by both the vascular cambium and the cork cambium.
- Primary growth and secondary growth alternate in the life cycle of a plant.
- Plants with secondary growth are typically the smallest
- Which kinds of adaptations contributed to plants’ ability to colonize land?
- Structural
- Chemical
- Reproductive
- All of the above
- None of the above
- Which of the following is NOT a fundamental difference between monocot and dicot morphology and anatomy? Monocots have ______, while dicots have ______.
- One cotyledon; two cotyledons
- Parallel veins, netted veins
- Fibrous roots; taproots
- Vascular bundles in a ring; vascular bundles scattered throughout the stem
- Flower parts in 4’s and 5’s; flower parts in multiples of 3.
- Phloem transport of sucrose can be described a going from “source to sink.” Which of the following would NOT normally function as a sink?
- Growing leaf
- Growing root
- Storage organ in summer
- Mature leaf
- Shoot tip
- All of the following characteristics helped nonseed plants evolve to be adapted to land EXCEPT:
- a dominant gametophyte
- vascular tissue
- a waxy cuticle
- stomata
- In the life cycles of all plants, there is an alternation of generations. This means that
- Haploid sporophytes make
Haploid spores
- gametophytes produce spores that develop into gametes
- sporophytes and gametophytes are typically similar in appearance
- meiosis in sporophytes produces haploid spores
- in plants, either the gametophyte or the sporophyte is unicellular
- A youngster such as yourself drives a nail into a tree that is 3 meters tall. The nail is 1.5 meters from the ground. Fifteen years later, she returns and discovers the tree has grown to a height of 30 meters. The nail is now ______meters from the ground.
- 0.5
- 1.5
- 3.0
- 15.0
- cannot be predicted