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BIOD 101/ BIOD101 Module 2 Exam (Latest 2026/2027 Update) | Complete Review Guide with Questions and Verified Answers | 7 Characteristics of Life, Biological Organization, 3 Domains, Extremophiles | A+ Grade | Portage Learning

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INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD - This is the comprehensive Module 2 Exam Review Guide for BIOD 101/BIOD101 Essential Biology I with Lab at Portage Learning (Latest 2026/2027 Update), featuring actual exam questions from the module with verified answers and detailed rationales . Covers the 7 widely accepted characteristics of living organisms (order, evolutionary adaptation, regulation, energy transformations, growth and development, responsiveness, and reproduction) . Includes the levels of biological organization from the broadest to most specific: biosphere, ecosystem, communities, populations, and organisms, as well as the intra-organismal levels including organ systems, organs, tissues, cells, atoms, and molecules . Covers the Linnaean Classification System developed by Carolus Linnaeus, the taxonomic hierarchy (domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species), the 3 domains of life (Archaea, Eubacteria, Eukarya), extremophiles (thermophiles, halophiles, psychrophiles), eubacteria types (pathogenic, non-pathogenic, commensal), exotoxins vs endotoxins (exotoxins secreted by living bacteria such as cholera, endotoxins released upon bacterial death such as Salmonella), the 4 eukaryotic kingdoms (Fungi, Protista, Plantae, Animalia), binary fission as a form of asexual reproduction, body symmetry types (spherical found in sponges, radial found in jellyfish and starfish, bilateral found in worms and vertebrates), autotrophs as primary producers, heterotrophs as primary consumers, the law of conservation of mass, and symbiotic relationships (mutualism e.g., E. coli, commensalism e.g., skin bacteria, parasitism e.g., Strep A) . Includes a comprehensive review of regulatory processes such as shivering to generate body heat in humans, examples of physical adaptations (crab's hard shell) vs behavioral adaptations (squirrel hibernation), rooted and unrooted phylogenetic trees, the unique characteristics of archaea (pseudopeptidoglycan cell wall, unique rRNA), bacterial subdivisions (mycoplasmas lack cell wall, gram-positive thick cell wall, gram-negative thin peptidoglycan with outer membrane, cyanobacteria), and model system research guidelines including ease of maintenance, convenient physical size, inexpensiveness, short life cycles, genetic manipulability, and ability to deliver economically significant results . INSTANT DIGITAL DOWNLOAD (PDF) immediately upon purchase. Fully text-searchable, printable, and accessible anytime. Trusted by Portage Learning nursing and pre-med students for exam success. 100% satisfaction guarantee. BIOD 101 Module 2 Exam Portage Learning BIOD101 Essential Biology I Module 2 Test 7 Characteristics Living Organisms Order Evolutionary Adaptation Regulation Energy Transformations Growth Development Responsiveness Reproduction Levels Biological Organization Biosphere Ecosystem Community Population Organism Linnaean Classification Taxa Hierarchy Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species 3 Domains Archaea Eubacteria Eukarya Archaea Pseudopeptidoglycan Unique rRNA Extremophiles Thermophiles Halophiles Psychrophiles Eubacteria Pathogenic Nonpathogenic Commensal Exotoxins Secreted Vibrio Cholera Endotoxins LPS Salmonella Gram Negative 4 Eukaryotic Kingdoms Fungi Protista Plantae Animalia Binary Fission Asexual Reproduction Parent Splits Two Daughter Cells Body Symmetry Spherical Sponges Radial Jellyfish Starfish Bilateral Worms Clams Vertebrates Autotrophs Primary Producers Heterotrophs Primary Consumers Law Conservation Mass Matter Recycled Not Created Destroyed Symbiotic Relationships Mutualism E Coli Commensalism Skin Bacteria Parasitism Strep A Regulatory Processes Shivering Generate Body Heat Physical Adaptation Crabs Hard Shell Behavioral Adaptation Squirrel Hibernation Phylogenetic Tree Rooted Unrooted Carolus Linnaeus Binomial Nomenclature Genus Species Portage Learning Nursing Prerequisites BIOD 101 Module 2 Verified Answers A+ Grade BIOD 101 Study Guide

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BIOD 101 · Exam 2
B I O LO G Y: C H A R A C T E R I ST I CS O F L I F E , C L A SS I F I C AT I O N & E CO LO G Y

INSTITUTION Portage Learning / Geneva College COURSE CODE BIOD 101
PROGRAM Pre-Nursing / Health Sciences ACADEMIC YEAR
EXAM TITLE Exam 2 — Life, Taxonomy & TOTAL QUESTIONS 22 Questions
Microorganisms
COURSE TITLE Biology 101 — Foundations of Life FORMAT Multiple Choice / True/False / Short
Answer


EXAMINATION INSTRUCTIONS
▸ Select the single best answer for each multiple-choice question.
▸ True/False questions require marking the correct option.
▸ Content covers characteristics of life, taxonomy, microorganisms, and ecology.


LIFE, CLASSIFICATION, MICROORGANISMS & SYMBIOSIS Questions 1 – 22

1. List the 7 most widely accepted characteristics of living organisms.
A. Movement, consciousness, speech, thought, memory, emotion, personality.
B. Order, evolutionary adaptation, regulation, energy processing, growth and development, response to the
environment, reproduction.
C. Photosynthesis, respiration, fermentation, digestion, absorption, excretion, circulation.
D. Cell wall, nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, ER, Golgi, lysosomes.
CORRECT ANSWER B — Order, evolutionary adaptation, regulation, energy processing, growth and development,
response to the environment, reproduction.
RATIONALE These seven properties are the consensus criteria defining life: (1) order — complex organization; (2)
evolutionary adaptation — heritable traits improving survival; (3) regulation — homeostasis; (4) energy
processing — metabolism; (5) growth and development — inherited instructions; (6) response to environment
— stimuli; (7) reproduction.


2. Describe evolutionary adaptation and give an example.
A. Large-scale changes over millions of years; example: dinosaurs to birds.
B. Smaller, genetic changes that allow for better survival of an organism; example: camouflage.
C. An individual changing during its lifetime; example: building muscle.
D. Random mutations with no survival benefit; example: eye color.
CORRECT ANSWER B — Smaller, genetic changes that allow for better survival; example: camouflage.

RATIONALE Evolutionary adaptation refers to genetic modifications over generations that enhance fitness. Camouflage is
a classic example — organisms that blend with their environment are less likely to be preyed upon, live
longer, and reproduce more, passing the adaptive trait to offspring.

, 3. What is an adaptation? Which characteristic of life would an adaptation fall into?
A. A temporary change; growth and development.
B. A change that allows an organism to become better suited to its environment; evolutionary adaptation.
C. A learned behavior; response to environment.
D. A disease process; regulation.
CORRECT ANSWER B — A change that allows an organism to become better suited to its environment; evolutionary
adaptation.
RATIONALE An adaptation is any heritable characteristic — behavioral or physical — that improves an organism's ability to
survive and reproduce in its environment. This falls under "evolutionary adaptation," one of the seven
characteristics of life.


4. Sexual reproduction involves:
A. A single organism dividing into two identical offspring.
B. Fusion of two gametes, one from each parent, uniting to grow into a new offspring.
C. Budding of a new organism from the parent body.
D. Fragmentation and regeneration.
CORRECT ANSWER B — Fusion of two gametes, one from each parent, uniting to grow into a new offspring.

RATIONALE Sexual reproduction requires the union of haploid gametes (sperm and egg) to form a genetically unique
diploid zygote. This increases genetic variation within the population. Asexual reproduction (A, C, D) produces
genetically identical offspring from a single parent.


5. Asexual reproduction:
A. Gives rise to a new offspring from a single organism.
B. Requires two parents.
C. Produces genetically diverse offspring.
D. Occurs only in plants.
CORRECT ANSWER A — Gives rise to a new offspring from a single organism.

RATIONALE Asexual reproduction produces offspring that are genetically identical to the parent (clones) without gamete
fusion. Methods include binary fission (bacteria), budding (yeast), and fragmentation. It is efficient but limits
genetic diversity.


6. A group of one particular species living within defined boundaries of a community best describes what?
A. Ecosystem.
B. Population.
C. Biome.
D. Biosphere.
CORRECT ANSWER B — Population.

RATIONALE A population is all individuals of a single species living in a defined area at a given time. A community includes
all populations of different species in an area. An ecosystem encompasses the community plus abiotic factors.
A biome is a large-scale ecological region.

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