TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 10895


Members of a guild

#Unit 10. Ecological Principles
  1. Will compete with one another until all but one of the species go extinct
  2. Have a commensalistic relationship
  3. Are able to coexist by partitioning resources
  4. May experience competitive release
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TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4968

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior

Which of these observations fails to support the endosymbiotic theory for the origin of eukaryotic cells?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4969

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior

The snowball Earth hypothesis provides a possible explanation for the

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4970

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior

If two continental land masses converge and are united, then the collision should cause

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4971

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior

On the basis of their morphologies, how might Linnaeus have classified the Hawaiian silverswords?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4972

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior

Fossils of Lystrosaurus, a dicynodont therapsid, are most common in parts of modern-day South America, South Africa, Madagascar, India, South Australia, and Antarctica. It apparently lived in arid regions, and was mostly herbivorous. It originated during the mid-Permian period, survived the Permian extinction, and dwindled by the late Triassic, though there is evidence of a relict population in Australia during the Cretaceous. The dicynodonts had two large tusks, extending down from their upper jaws; the tusks were not used for food gathering, and in some species were limited to males. Food was gathered using an otherwise toothless beak. Judging from the fossil record, these pig-sized organisms were the most common mammal-like reptiles of the Permian. Anatomically, what was true of Lystrosaurus?

TLS Online TPP Program

#Question id: 4973

#Unit 11. Evolution and Behavior

Fossils of Lystrosaurus, a dicynodont therapsid, are most common in parts of modern-day South America, South Africa, Madagascar, India, South Australia, and Antarctica. It apparently lived in arid regions, and was mostly herbivorous. It originated during the mid-Permian period, survived the Permian extinction, and dwindled by the late Triassic, though there is evidence of a relict population in Australia during the Cretaceous. The dicynodonts had two large tusks, extending down from their upper jaws; the tusks were not used for food gathering, and in some species were limited to males. Food was gathered using an otherwise toothless beak. Judging from the fossil record, these pig-sized organisms were the most common mammal-like reptiles of the Permian.Which of Lystrosaurusʹ features help explain why these organisms fossilized so abundantly?

I. the presence of hard parts, such as tusks

II. its herbivorous diet

III. its persistence across at least two geological eras

IV. its widespread geographic distribution

V. its mixture of reptilian and mammalian features