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Odd-toed, hoofed mammals; useful to mankind; Horses and Zebras
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Even-toed, hoofed mammals; raised or hunted for food; Cows and Deer
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Diverse group of flesh-eating mammals; Canines and Bears
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Insect-eating, nocturnal mammals; Shrew and Hedgehog
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Flying mammals with true, sustained flight; Microbat and Megabat
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Large, marine-dwelling mammals; Dolphin and Whale
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Social, grasping mammals; large brains; Gorilla and Chimpanzee
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Gnawing mammals with ever-growing incisor teeth; Mice and Rats
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Mammals with four upper incisor teeth; Rabbits and Hares
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Mammals with trunks; largest living mammals; African and Asian elephants
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Aquatic “sea cows” that are fully aquatic; Dugong and Manatee
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Unique, egg-laying mammals; endangered; Platypus and Echidna
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Mammals with extra joints; slow and simple; Sloth and Armadillo
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Pouched mammals; most are Australian; Opossum and Kangaroo
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A. Cetacea
B. Sirenia
C. Proboscidea
D. Chiroptera
E. Insectivora
F. Lagomorpha
G. Monotremata
H. Carnivora
I. Rodentia
J. Artiodactyla
K. Perissodactyla
L. Marsupilia
M. Primates
N. Xenarthra
k, j, h, e, d, a, m, i, f, c, b, g, n, l
Birds with three toes forward and one toe backwards; these live in trees; examples include the robin and bluebird
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Birds that are fierce hunters; examples include vultures and eagles
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Birds that live near streams, lakes, or oceans; examples include the stork and heron
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Birds that are routinely hunted for food; these cannot fly very far; examples include the pheasant and quail
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Birds that live in the rainforest; these often have unique traits, colors, and beaks; examples include the parakeet and toucan
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Birds that, despite having wings, cannot fly; many of these birds are extinct; examples include the ostrich and kiwi
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A. Water birds
B. Game birds
C. Perching birds
D. Birds of prey
E. Flightless birds
F. Tropical birds
c, d, a, b, f, e
Crickets, grasshoppers, katydids, locusts, mantises, and cockroaches are members of this “straight winged” order
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Dragonflies and damselflies are members of this “toothed" order.
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Bedbugs, chinch bug, squash bug, and stinkbug are members of this "half winged" order of true bugs
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Cicada, aphids, mealybugs, and leafhoppers are members of this "same winged" order
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Butterflies and moths are members of this "scale winged" order
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Flies and mosquitoes are members of this "two winged" insect order
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Burying beetle, potato beetle, and the ladybug are members of this "sheathed winged" order
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Ants, bees, and wasps are members of this "membrane winged" insect order
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Silverfish are members of this "no winged" insect
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A. Homoptera
B. Lepidoptera
C. Odonata
D. Orthoptera
E. Thysanura
F. Diptera
G. Hymenoptera
H. Hemiptera
I. Coleoptera
d, c, h, a, b, f, i, g, e
An echinoderm that looks like a starfish but has really long, thin arms
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An echinoderm that is also known as the starfish, found in a variety of colors and arms
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An echinoderm also known as crinoids, look like plants, found as fossils, feathery arms
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An echinoderm that lives in shallow tropical waters, scavengers, gather food from the ocean flood
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An echinoderm that is a marine porcupine, scrape algae off rocks
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A cnidarian that is flower-like, sessile, and builds a stone-like covering for protection
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A cnidarian that is sessile and lacks a hard coating for protection, has the ability to sting predators
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A cnidarian whose name means medusa-like animal, pulsate their bell for locomotion, use tentacles to sting and capture food
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A cnidarian that is very small, forms large colonies, includes the Portuguese man o' war
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A cnidarian whose name means mucous-animal, parasites, poorly understood, smallest animas known to man
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A. Sea urchins
B. Hydra
C. Brittle stars
D. Coral
E. Sea lillies
F. Myxozoa
G. Sea cucumbers
H. Jellyfish
I. Sea stars
J. Sea anenomes
c, i, e, g, a, d, j, h, b, f
Sponges - Germ layers (__), body symmetry (__)
Cnidarians - Germ layers (__), body symmetry (__)
Mollusks - Germ layers (__), body symmetry (__)
Echinoderms - Germ layers (__), body symmetry (__)
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0, 1, 2, 3 / No, bilateral, radial
0, no, 2, radial, 3, bilateral, 3, radial
spherical bacteria
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rod-shaped bacteria
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spiral-shaped bacteria
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clumped bacteria
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paired bacteria
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chain bacteria
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A. Spirilla
B. Diplo
C. Strepto
D. Cocci
E. Staph
F. Bacilli
d, f, a, e, b, c
Virus that causes cold sores.
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Virus that causes chickenpox
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Virus that causes the common cold
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Virus that caused the destruction of the nervous system in the 20th century
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Virus that caused a worldwide shutdown in 2020
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A. Rhinovirus B. Covid-19 C. Poliovius D. Varicella E. Herpes Simplex
e, d, a, c, b
found in anoxic (very low oxygen) conditions, the largest group of archaea
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found in deep sea hydrothermal vents that reach well above water's boiling point
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found in water that is saltier than the ocean, such as salt-cured ham
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found in hot, acidic conditions, the first archaea discovered
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A. halophiles
B. acidophiles
C. methanogens
D. thermophiles
c, d, a, b
Domain: live in harsh conditions, unicellular (forms colonies), ex. thermophiles, acidophiles, halophiles, methanogens
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Domain: break down materials in the soil for plants, cause or prevent disease in organisms, unicellular, ex. E. coli, Salmonella
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Domain: well defined nuclei, membrane bound organelles, complex cellular functions, ex. people, plants, etc.
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Kingdom: have motile gametes, have cell walls of cellulose, unicellular, colonial, or multicellular, usually photosynthetic, ex. kelp, algae, water molds, diatoms
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Kingdom: motile as adults, covered by a pellicle, unicellular or colonial, non-photosynthetic, usually heterotrophic; ex. euglenas, amoebas, plasmodium
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Kingdom: cell walls of chitin, mostly multicellular, may form colonies, heterotrophic; ex. mushrooms, mildew, truffles, yeast
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Kingdom: cell wall of cellulose, multicellular with true tissues, autotrophic; ex. trees, ferns, flowering plants, mosses
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Kingdom: no cell walls, multicellular with true tissues, heterotrophic; ex. sand dollars, sponges, worms, fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds, mammals
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A. Fungi
B. Eukarya
C. Chromista
D. Archaea
E. Animalia
F. Bacteria
G. Protozoa
H. Plantae
d, f, b, c, g, a, h, e
A microscopic, parasitic, fungus-like chromist that live in high-humidity environment
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A photosynthetic chromist that usually grows in water
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A large variety of chromist including rockweed and kelp
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A very abundant chromist including diatoms which exhibit amazing geometrical patterns
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A tropical marine chromist responsible for red tide, killing millions of fish during bloom
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A fossilized chromist buried in rock strata throughout the world, almost always aquatic
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A. Yellow algae
B. Water mold
C. Red algae
D. Brown algae
E. Foraminifera
F. Green algae
b, f, d, a, c, e
The largest phylum of fungi including sac fungi and penicillium
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Family of brutal parasitic fungus, tree/plant/insect hosts, turns insects into zombies
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The second largest phylum of fungi, includes club fungus
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The third largest phylum of fungi, includes black bread mold, uses a combination of sexual and asexual reproduction
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A. Basidiomycota
B. Zygomycota
C. Ascomycota
D. Cordyceps
c, d, a, b
a dry fruit with a pod in the pea family; ex. bean, pea, peanut
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a dry fruit with a circular pod that splits open, releasing seeds; ex. poppy, mustard
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a dry fruit that is a cultivated cereal crop, also known as caryopsis; ex. corn, wheat
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a dry fruit with a hard shell around an edible kernel; ex. acorn, chestnut
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a dry fruit with a small seed that does not open to be released; ex. sunflower, dandelion
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a dry fruit with a winged nut containing one seed, usually inedible; ex. maple, elm
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a fleshy fruit with thin skin and a central stone; ex. olive, peach, coconut
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a fleshy fruit with a tough core containing seeds; ex. apple, pear
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a fleshy fruit that is fleshy throughout; ex. tomato, grape, blueberry
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a fleshy fruit with numerous seeds and a firm rind; ex. squash, cantaloupe
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a fleshy fruit with sectioned pulp inside a separable rind; ex. lemon, orange
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a fleshy fruit from several carpals of the same flower; ex. raspberry, blackberry
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a fleshy fruit from several carpals from several flowers; ex. fig, pineapple
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A. Hesperidium
B. Achene
C. True Berry
D. Legume
E. Samara
F. Aggregate
G. Pepo
H. Capsule
I. Grain
J. Multiple
K. Nut
L. Pome
M. Drupe
d, h, i, k, b, e, m, l, c, g, a, f, j
underground buds, have scales or layers, ex. tulips, red onion
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underground stems, ex. water chestnut, gladiolus
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underground stems that swell to store nutrients, ex. potatoes, dahlias
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specialized stem structures that form new plants that take root some distance from the parent plant, ex. strawberries, bermuda grass
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A. Stolons
B. Tubers
C. Bulbs
D. Corms
c, d, b, a
a plant hormone that promotes cell elongation and lateral root development; suppresses cell division in the shoot
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a plant hormone that promotes cell division and the development of lateral buds; controls the growth and division of cells
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one of a group of plant hormones with a role in regulating many aspects of plant growth, mainly that of stem elongation and cell division in shoots and leaves
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a plant hormone that acts as an inhibitor of other hormones and causes dormancy in buds and seeds
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a plant hormone that regulates the ripening of fruit, opening of flowers, and shedding of leaves; responsible for a plant’s responses to stress
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A. Gibberellin
B. Auxin
C. Abscisic acid
D. Ethylene
E. Cytokinin
b, e, a, c, d

A:
B:
C:
D:
_______
A. Septum
B. Mycelium
C. Gills
D. Hyphae
E. Cap
F. Nuclei
G. Stipe
g, e, c, b

A:
B:
C:
____
A. Anther
B. Carpel
C. Petal
D. Filament
E. Sepal
F. Ovule
G. Pedicel
H. Receptacle
c, g, e