AP Biology 2007 Free-Response Questions: The College Board: Connecting Students To College Success
AP Biology 2007 Free-Response Questions: The College Board: Connecting Students To College Success
AP Biology 2007 Free-Response Questions: The College Board: Connecting Students To College Success
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BIOLOGY
SECTION II
Time—1 hour and 30 minutes
Answers must be in essay form. Outline form is not acceptable. Labeled diagrams may be used to supplement
discussion, but in no case will a diagram alone suffice. It is important that you read each question completely
before you begin to write. Write all your answers on the pages following the questions in this booklet.
2. Cephalization and the development of a brain were important steps in animal evolution.
(a) Discuss the evolutionary origin and adaptive significance of cephalization in animal phyla.
(b) Describe the development of the nervous system in the vertebrate embryo.
(c) At the sound of shattering glass, people quickly turn their heads. Discuss how the human nervous system
functions to produce this type of response to an external stimulus.
3. Compared with other terrestrial biomes, deserts have extremely low productivity.
(a) Discuss how temperature, soil composition, and annual precipitation limit productivity in deserts.
(b) Describe a four-organism food chain that might characterize a desert community, and identify the trophic
level of each organism.
(c) Describe the results depicted in the graph. Explain one anatomical difference and one physiological
difference between species A and B that account for the CO2 uptake patterns shown. Discuss
the evolutionary significance of each difference.
4. A bacterial plasmid is 100 kb in length. The plasmid DNA was digested to completion with two restriction
enzymes in three separate treatments: EcoRI, HaeIII, and EcoRI + HaeIII (double digest). The fragments were
then separated with electrophoresis, as shown.
(a) Using the circle provided, construct a labeled diagram of the restriction map of the plasmid.
Explain how you developed your map.
(b) Describe how:
• recombinant DNA technology could be used to insert a gene of interest into a bacterium
• recombinant bacteria could be identified
• expression of the gene of interest could be ensured
(c) Discuss how a specific genetically modified organism might provide a benefit for humans and at the same
time pose a threat to a population or ecosystem.
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