<p>thingschange, yeah it asked for the net primary production of the first biome (alfalfa forest I guess). I don’t remember the options, but the answer was probably 9,200 like some people on here are saying.</p>
<p>For the vine one with the graph, intially the experimental group was hiugher but it was soon overtaken by the control</p>
<p>It would be very helpful if we can all work together and compile all the questions of this SAT and figure out all the answers. I got three wrong (hopefully no more) and It is scary.</p>
<p>The answer to the muscles question was the lysis of ATP into ADP + Pi causes the myosin head to change shape, or something along those lines.</p>
<p>Someone compiled the answers to the general questions and M awhile back, but we’re still trying to figure out the E ones. Shoulda done this sooner when the info was still fresh ><; no one can remember the questions anymore.</p>
<p>LOL I know. I rmemeber there was one about which of the following has jointed appendages and it was insects.</p>
<p>o-o jointed appendages? Whaaaaat. Do you remember any of the other answers?</p>
<p>There was also one with the different types of mice with different colors and I said eventually nature will favor the two colors and not the intermediate one.</p>
<p>It specifically said three pairs of legs and the answers inclued arachnid, crustacean, and some other stuff.</p>
<p>Ohh I remember the appendage one now. I put insects too. I guess I’ll add that to compiled list for E. </p>
<p>Was that the one that said the mice were in an environment w/ very dark or very white areas? If so, yeah it would be disruptive. I think there was general one that was stabilizing. It was about bird beaks and nuts. Was that E or general?</p>
<p>I THINK that was Genral but Im not sure. Can u please make a compiled list of General and E sections?</p>
<p>General:
Questions 1 and 2: mitochondria
Question 3: chloroplast
Question 4: cell membrane
Eye questions in order: retina, iris, lens
Neuronal signaling to muscle: chemical signals
Rat lab:-80% -same diet
Abnormal chromosome seperation: <_>
Fossils evolutionary order: seastar, shark, dinosaur, bird, whale
most closely related to primates: whale
Convergent evolution: shark and whale
Uric acid: bird and dinosaur
Global Warming question: accumulation of greenhouse gases
Population growth: human-exponential, insects still in debate between bell curve and negative slope
Estrogen question: all 3
Not part of arthropods: leeches
Lichens: mutualism
Tundra: cannot grow roots into soil
Most Diverse biome: coral reef
Clumped population: due to mating
Implantation of embryo: lining of uterus
Cats and Dogs: same phylum
Vine lab: -does not confirm hypothesis, vines are dependent on trees
- graph with control slightly steeper
Plant diagram: paliside cells, guard cells(stomata), vascular bundle
Bicarbonate: acts as buffer
least possible offspring: O blood type
negative feedback as an answer
Both protein and RNA: ribosome
yeast: asexual reproduction
Mule: hybrid
Birds’ beaks = stabilizing (not sure if general or E; someone from M remember taking this too?)</p>
<p>E:
- sends blood throughout body = aorta
- pumps blood to lungs = right ventricle
- Diff b/n energy produced by producers and energy taken up by producers + consumers = net community production
- most net primary production (it asked what had the most energy after accounting for respiration) = alfalfa field (the biome in the first column)
- Alfalfa field’s net primary production = 9200
- Two areas w/ no net community production = the ones w/ 0 on the bottom row, or the two columns that were on the right. (Tropical rain forest and chapparal or something?)
- Difference between one row and another row (net primary prod - heterotroph respiration?) EITHER THIS OR some question that also had net community resp as the answer
- When specialization of tissue occurs during development = gastrulation
- spleen does what? = filters out ethryocytes in blood
- Jointed appendages - what has 3 pairs of legs? = insects
- Mice in an environment w/ very dark or very white areas = disruptive selection</p>
<p>YES there was another one that dealt with net COMMUNITY productivity. Thanks aquawater u made my day :)</p>
<p>For the vine one, the question was like BASED on the guy’s hypothesis which is JUST on support,
a) it dpended on sunlight
b) it depended on water
c) It grew at the smae rate as the regular tree
d)Something else and I dont remember e
Was it that it grew at the same rate because BASED ont he hypothesis, support is all that matters.</p>
<p>Umm I don’t know anymore… I vaguely remember something about the vine proven to need the real tree for both support and nutrients. That’s it D:</p>
<p>The hypothesis is that they would both grow at the same rate.
The hypothesis was wrong, the vine needed the tree for both support and nutrients.
The graph was the artificial tree started off a little bit above the real tree, but the real tree quickly grew faster.</p>
<p>“Birds’ beaks = stabilizing (not sure if general or E; someone from M remember taking this too?)”</p>
<p>I took M and I don’t remember this question so I’m pretty sure its on E.</p>
<p>Is there a compiled answer list for M?</p>
<p>Ok, net whatever production was the answer to two questions. I can agree to that. I still don’t remember seeing it.
<a href=“net community production[/url] - Google Search”>net community production - Google Search;
and Google doesn’t know it well either. :P</p>
<p>There was a question in the general part that mentioned a checken and a hen having offsring with white something and it was purebreed mix. Not sure if that’s on the list.</p>
<p>The vine questions were two: the first one asked about the hypothesis and that was E: they will grow at the same rate. The second one basically said the scientist was wrong</p>
<p>Does anyone remember the question in E that asked which area produced the most energy before respiration? Or something like that?</p>