Rachel V Salyer's Blog
Unit 4 Practice Test Populations
Multiple Choice
Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
____ 1. Which of the following does not apply to sea otters?
|a. |They have blubber to keep them warm. |
|b. |They can eat 25 % of their weight per day in sea urchins and other benthic organisms. |
|c. |They use tools. |
|d. |They have the thickest fur of any mammal. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 2. The changes in population size, density, dispersion, and age structure are known as
|a. |succession. |
|b. |demography. |
|c. |population dynamics. |
|d. |biotic potential. |
|e. |carrying capacity. |
____ 3. The most common pattern of population dispersion found in nature is
|a. |random. |
|b. |uniform. |
|c. |clumped. |
|d. |dispersed. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 4. You observe uniform dispersion in a species you are studying intensely. You predict that as you extend your work, you will find
|a. |intraspecific competition and evenly spread, scarce resources. |
|b. |interspecific predation and evenly spread, scarce resources. |
|c. |intraspecific competition and evenly spread, abundant resources. |
|d. |commensalism and clumped resources. |
|e. |interspecific competition and evenly spread, abundant resources. |
____ 5. Which of the following is not one of the age structure categories?
|a. |prereproductive |
|b. |reproductive |
|c. |postreproductive |
|d. |elderly |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 6. Emigration
|a. |is one-way movement of individuals into the area of an established population. |
|b. |is one-way movement of individuals into an uninhabited area. |
|c. |is one-way movement of individuals out of a particular population to another area. |
|d. |is the repeated departure and return of individuals to and from a population area. |
|e. |All of these answers. |
____ 7. The intrinsic rate of increase (r)
|a. |is the rate at which a population would grow if it had unlimited resources |
|b. |is the speed at which a population grows until it reaches carrying capacity |
|c. |is determined by doubling time |
|d. |is never influenced by environmental resistance |
|e. |is greatest in populations whose organisms reproduce late in life and have only a few offspring each time they reproduce|
____ 8. Environmental resistance is enhanced by
|a. |the ability to compete for resources. |
|b. |the ability to resist disease and parasites. |
|c. |a specialized niche. |
|d. |a high reproductive rate. |
|e. |All of these answers. |
____ 9. A population will increase if
|a. |natality decreases. |
|b. |mortality increases. |
|c. |the biotic potential increases. |
|d. |the environmental resistance increases. |
|e. |All of these answers. |
____ 10. An exponential growth curve depicting an ever-growing population is shaped like the letter ____.
|a. |J |
|b. |L |
|c. |M |
|d. |S |
|e. |N |
____ 11. A population crash occurs when
|a. |a population approaches its carrying capacity. |
|b. |environmental resistance comes into play gradually. |
|c. |resources are essentially unlimited. |
|d. |a population overshoots carrying capacity and environmental pressures cause effects. |
|e. |the population growth rate slows. |
____ 12. A population grows, overshoots its carrying capacity, and crashes, most likely from
|a. |a positive feedback loop. |
|b. |a negative feedback loop. |
|c. |a time delay between a positive feedback loop and a negative feedback loop. |
|d. |an accumulation. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 13. Humans have extended earth's carrying capacity for the human species by
|a. |controlling many diseases. |
|b. |using energy resources at a rapid rate. |
|c. |using material resources at a rapid rate. |
|d. |increasing life span. |
|e. |All of these answers. |
____ 14. Density-dependent population controls include all of the following except
|a. |disease. |
|b. |human destruction of habitat. |
|c. |parasitism. |
|d. |competition for resources. |
|e. |predation. |
____ 15. Density-independent population controls include all of the following except
|a. |drought. |
|b. |fire. |
|c. |resource competition. |
|d. |unfavorable chemical changes in the environment. |
|e. |habitat destruction. |
____ 16. Which of the following statements is not true?
|a. |high population densities can help sexually reproducing individuals to find mates |
|b. |high density populations can shield individuals from predators |
|c. |high density populations can make large groups vulnerable to human predators |
|d. |close contact between members of a high density population can increase infectious disease |
|e. |when a population is genetically diverse, it makes that population more vulnerable to environmental resistance |
____ 17. Which of the following terms best describes the type of population change you would expect to find for a muskrat population in a state that has just outlawed trapping?
|a. |explosive |
|b. |stable |
|c. |cyclic |
|d. |irruptive |
|e. |irregular |
____ 18. Which of the following patterns would you expect to find for rabbits and coyotes in an undisturbed habitat?
|a. |explosive |
|b. |stable |
|c. |cyclic |
|d. |irruptive |
|e. |irregular |
____ 19. Wolves controlling deer populations are an example of
|a. |bottom-up population control. |
|b. |top-down population control. |
|c. |producer-level control. |
|d. |predator control. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 20. A disadvantage of sexual reproduction would be
|a. |females must produce twice as many offspring as asexually reproducing individuals in order to maintain the same number |
| |of young in the next generation. |
|b. |there is an increased chance of genetic errors and defects during gamete formation. |
|c. |offspring are exact genetic replicas of the parents. |
|d. |a and b only. |
|e. |All of the above. |
____ 21. A K-strategist generally
|a. |has populations that follow an S-shaped growth curve. |
|b. |exhibits "boom-and-bust" cycles. |
|c. |has populations that rise quickly then crash. |
|d. |generally lives in a rapidly changing environment. |
|e. |have short generation times. |
____ 22. Which of the following best describes the survivorship curve you would expect to find for a mountain gorilla?
|a. |late loss |
|b. |constant loss |
|c. |early loss |
|d. |no loss |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 23. Which of the following best describes the survivorship curve you would expect to find for a fish?
|a. |late loss |
|b. |constant loss |
|c. |early loss |
|d. |no loss |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 24. Which of the following connections among population cycle, survival strategies, and survivorship curves would you most expect to see?
|a. |boom-and-bust; K-strategist; early-loss |
|b. |boom-and-bust; r-strategist; early-loss |
|c. |stable; r-strategist; early-loss |
|d. |stable; K-strategist; early-loss |
|e. |stable; r-selected species; late loss |
____ 25. A common argument against population control could be that
|a. |it violates religious or moral beliefs |
|b. |it violates the right to privacy |
|c. |it keeps minorities or citizens of developing countries from gaining power |
|d. |a and b only |
|e. |a, b and c |
____ 26. Which of the following is not a major factor for rapid population increase over the last 200 years?
|a. |humans developed the ability to expand into diverse new habitats and different climate zones |
|b. |technology allowed people to spend less time on menial labor and more time raising families |
|c. |the emergence of early and modern agriculture allowed more people to be fed per unit of land area. |
|d. |the development of sanitation systems, antibiotics and vaccines helped to control infectious disease. |
|e. |All of the above are correct |
____ 27. The optimum sustainable population is
|a. |the level that would allow most people to live in reasonable comfort and freedom without impairing the ability of the |
| |planet to sustain future generations. |
|b. |the level that could be sustained by creating technology that would solve any environmental problem humans might face. |
|c. |the maximum number of people that could live comfortably but not induce any environmental degradation on the planet. |
|d. |All of the above. |
|e. |None of the above. |
____ 28. The population change in a particular year can be calculated by
|a. |(deaths + emigration) − (births + immigration) |
|b. |(births + immigration) − (deaths + emigration) |
|c. |(deaths + immigration) − (births + emigration) |
|d. |(births + emigration) − (deaths + immigration) |
|e. |(births + deaths) − (immigration + emigration) |
____ 29. The crude birth rate is the number of live births per ____ persons in a given year.
|a. |50 |
|b. |100 |
|c. |500 |
|d. |1,000 |
|e. |10,000 |
____ 30. The highest crude birth rate and crude death rate are in
|a. |Africa. |
|b. |Latin America. |
|c. |Asia. |
|d. |Europe. |
|e. |Oceania. |
____ 31. Total fertility rate is
|a. |the number of children born to a woman during her lifetime |
|b. |the number of children a couple must bear to replace themselves |
|c. |the average number of children a woman typically has during her reproductive years |
|d. |the number of live births per 1000 people |
|e. |the births and immigration into a population minus the deaths and emigration |
____ 32. Between 1900 and 2006, the population of the United States increased
|a. |more than 50 million. |
|b. |more than 100 million. |
|c. |more than 200 million. |
|d. |more than 300 million. |
|e. |more than 400 million. |
____ 33. Which of the following countries would produce the greatest rise in population size from experiencing a growth rate of 1.2%?
|a. |country A, with a population of 100,000 |
|b. |country B, with a population of 1 million |
|c. |country C, with a population of 10 million |
|d. |country D, with a population of 1 billion |
|e. |country E, with a population of 100 million |
____ 34. The actual average replacement-level fertility for the whole world is slightly higher than
|a. |1 child per couple. |
|b. |2 children per couple. |
|c. |3 children per couple. |
|d. |4 children per couple. |
|e. |5 children per couple. |
____ 35. The most useful measure of fertility for projecting future population change is the
|a. |replacement-level fertility. |
|b. |one-year future fertility level. |
|c. |total fertility rate. |
|d. |birth rate. |
|e. |abortion rate. |
____ 36. Social factors affecting birth and fertility rates include
|a. |attitudes toward large families and birth control. |
|b. |average levels of education and affluence. |
|c. |urbanization. |
|d. |All of these answers. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 37. Which of the following is not an economic factor decreasing the likelihood of a couple having a child?
|a. |religious beliefs |
|b. |cost of education |
|c. |lack of a pension system |
|d. |employment opportunities for women |
|e. |need for child to be part of family labor pool |
____ 38. Which of the following statements is false?
|a. |The rise in the size of the human population is due primarily to a higher birth rate. |
|b. |Increased food supplies and medical care have increased life expectancy. |
|c. |Only a few countries annually accept a large number of immigrants or refugees. |
|d. |Migration within countries plays an important role in the population dynamics of cities, towns, and rural areas. |
|e. |Women with access to education and jobs usually have fewer children. |
____ 39. Two useful indicators of overall health in a country or region are
|a. |birth rate and death rate. |
|b. |replacement-level fertility rate and total fertility rate. |
|c. |life expectancy and infant mortality rate. |
|d. |life expectancy and death rate. |
|e. |population growth rate. |
____ 40. A high infant mortality rate is most often associated with
|a. |a high standard of living. |
|b. |undernutrition. |
|c. |balanced diets. |
|d. |a low incidence of infectious disease. |
|e. |affluence. |
____ 41. Death rates have declined because of
|a. |increased food supplies |
|b. |access to birth control |
|c. |improved sanitation and hygiene |
|d. |a and c only |
|e. |a, b and c |
____ 42. Infant mortality rate refers to the number of children out of 1,000 that die
|a. |before birth. |
|b. |in their first month. |
|c. |in the first half-year of life. |
|d. |by their first birthday. |
|e. |by their 5th birthday. |
____ 43. Which of the following statements about U.S. teenage pregnancy is false?
|a. |The United States has the highest teenage pregnancy rate of any industrialized country. |
|b. |The birth rate for U.S. teens age 15-19 dropped to its lowest since 1940. |
|c. |More than 800,000 U.S. teens become pregnant annually. |
|d. |Babies born to teenagers are more likely to be high-weight babies than those born to other women. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 44. Which of the following is an argument for reducing legal immigration?
|a. |it would allow the United States to stabilize its population sooner |
|b. |it would help to reduce the environmental impact of increasing the population |
|c. |it would decrease the number of workers willing to take menial and low-paying jobs |
|d. |a and b only |
|e. |b and c only |
____ 45. Population age structure diagrams can be divided into all of the following categories except
|a. |infant. |
|b. |prereproductive. |
|c. |reproductive. |
|d. |postreproductive. |
|e. |a and b. |
____ 46. Countries that have achieved ZPG have an age structure that
|a. |forms an inverted pyramid. |
|b. |has a broad-based pyramid. |
|c. |shows little variation in population by age. |
|d. |has a large prereproductive population. |
|e. |has a large reproductive population. |
____ 47. Rapidly growing countries have an age structure that
|a. |forms an inverted pyramid. |
|b. |has a broad-based pyramid. |
|c. |shows little variation in population by age. |
|d. |has a large prereproductive population. |
|e. |has a large postreproductive population. |
____ 48. Which of the following implies the greatest built-in momentum for population growth?
|a. |a large population size |
|b. |a large number of people age 29 to 44 |
|c. |a large number of people under age 34 |
|d. |a large number of people under age 15 |
|e. |a large number of people over age 60 |
____ 49. A baby boomer is least likely to
|a. |strongly influence demands for goods and services. |
|b. |influence politics. |
|c. |take voluntary early retirement. |
|d. |place strains on Medicare as middle age approaches. |
|e. |place strains on social security as they retire. |
____ 50. Countries undergoing rapid population decline may experience a rise in the proportion of the population
|a. |on social security. |
|b. |consuming a large fraction of medical services. |
|c. |who are older people. |
|d. |can face labor shortages. |
|e. |who fit all of these answers. |
____ 51. Which of the following statements about Japan's population is false?
|a. |Between 1949 and 1956, Japan's population growth rate was cut in half. |
|b. |Japan offers access to family planning. |
|c. |Japan has one of the world's lowest infant death rates. |
|d. |The aging of Japan's population has encouraged investment in automation and encouraged women to stay at home. |
|e. |All of these statements are true. |
____ 52. Which of the following is not a symptom of a decrease in the population of young adults lost to AIDs?
|a. |loss of a country's most productive workers |
|b. |loss of adults able to care for the country's elderly population |
|c. |increase in life expectancy within the population |
|d. |loss of trained professionals such as engineers and teachers |
|e. |All of the above are correct |
____ 53. All of the following countries accept large numbers of immigrants except
|a. |the United States. |
|b. |Mexico. |
|c. |Canada. |
|d. |Australia. |
|e. |Germany. |
____ 54. In 2002, legal and illegal immigration accounted for ____ of U.S. population growth.
|a. |10% |
|b. |20% |
|c. |30% |
|d. |40% |
|e. |50% |
____ 55. Which of the following statements least characterizes consequences of U.S. immigration?
|a. |Federal and state governments are coordinating their responses to immigration. |
|b. |In the long run, legal immigrants pay more in taxes than they use in public services. |
|c. |Immigrants are often willing to take low-paying jobs that many native-born Americans refuse to do. |
|d. |In times of high unemployment, immigrants willing to work for low wages may take jobs from or lower wages of native-born|
| |workers. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 56. Which of the following least characterizes U.S. immigration policy?
|a. |The law prohibits hiring of illegal immigrants. |
|b. |Some environmentalists want to limit immigration to a small percentage of U.S. population growth. |
|c. |Some citizens feel that limiting immigration diminishes the U.S. role in providing a place of opportunity for poor and |
| |oppressed people. |
|d. |Over the past decade, efforts to deport illegal immigrants have weakened. |
|e. |Some citizens are opposed to limiting immigration because immigrants pay taxes and take many menial, low-paying jobs. |
____ 57. People who oppose population regulation are least likely to say that
|a. |lack of a free and productive economic system in developing countries is the primary cause of poverty and despair. |
|b. |people are the world's most valuable resource for finding solutions to our problems. |
|c. |population regulation is a violation of religious beliefs and an intrusion into personal privacy and freedom. |
|d. |increasing human population threatens the earth's life-support systems. |
|e. |many immigrants open businesses and create jobs. |
____ 58. People who support population regulation say that
|a. |billions more people on the earth will intensify many environmental and social problems. |
|b. |it is unethical for us to control birth rates. |
|c. |the gap between the rich and poor has been narrowing since 1960. |
|d. |we have the freedom to produce as many children as we want. |
|e. |All of these answers. |
____ 59. Which of the following statements best summarizes the Limits to Growth projection for consequences of continuing our societies at current world population growth and industrial output rates?
|a. |Our societies are currently in sustainable dynamic equilibrium. |
|b. |Our societies will continue with minor changes. |
|c. |Our societies will demonstrate overshoot and collapse patterns in the next decade. |
|d. |Our societies will demonstrate overshoot and collapse patterns in the next century. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 60. The change that takes place in a demographic transition occurs when
|a. |one-third of the population is under 15 years of age. |
|b. |the birth rate drops below the death rate. |
|c. |the economic development of a country changes the population growth pattern. |
|d. |either immigration or emigration changes the population growth pattern. |
|e. |a population reaches one million. |
____ 61. The demographic transition model helps to explain why
|a. |death rates rise in industrializing nations. |
|b. |industrialization leads to population growth. |
|c. |development requires large populations. |
|d. |death rates fall before birth rates. |
|e. |birth rates fall before death rates. |
____ 62. During demographic transitions, birth rates of a population are high during the
|a. |preindustrial and industrial stages. |
|b. |postindustrial and transitional stages. |
|c. |industrial and postindustrial stages. |
|d. |preindustrial and transitional stages. |
|e. |preindustrial and postindustrial stages. |
____ 63. In the demographic transition model, birth and death rates are high during
|a. |the preindustrial stage. |
|b. |the industrial stage. |
|c. |the postindustrial stage. |
|d. |the transitional stage. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 64. Some experts fear that the developing countries lack sufficient ____ to allow the demographic transition to occur.
|a. |people |
|b. |capital |
|c. |cooperation |
|d. |commitment |
|e. |desire. |
____ 65. Generally, women who are feeding their infant only with breast milk are ____ protected from pregnancy for six months after giving birth.
|a. |38% |
|b. |58% |
|c. |78% |
|d. |98% |
|e. |48% |
____ 66. Government attempts to reduce population growth have included all of the following except
|a. |paying couples who agree to use contraceptives. |
|b. |paying couples who agree to be sterilized. |
|c. |penalizing couples who have more than a certain number of children (usually one or two). |
|d. |providing needed health care and food allotments to those who have more than a certain number of children. |
|e. |raising taxes for couples that have more than a certain number of children. |
____ 67. Economic rewards and penalties in population control strategies work best if they
|a. |push rather than nudge people to have fewer children. |
|b. |are retroactive. |
|c. |reinforce existing customs and trends. |
|d. |decrease a poor family's income or land. |
|e. |don't increase a poor families economic status. |
____ 68. Women tend to have fewer and healthier children when they
|a. |live in societies in which their individual rights are protected. |
|b. |have access to paying jobs outside the home. |
|c. |have access to education. |
|d. |have access to birth control. |
|e. |All of these answers. |
____ 69. Which of the following statements about women's employment/economic status is false?
|a. |Women do more than half of the work gathering fuelwood. |
|b. |Women do more than half of the work involved in producing food. |
|c. |Women have more than half of the world's assets. |
|d. |Women provide more of the world's health care than all of the world's organized health services put together. |
|e. |Women do almost all domestic work and child care. |
____ 70. Women receive ____% of the world's income.
|a. |1 |
|b. |10 |
|c. |25 |
|d. |50 |
|e. |70 |
____ 71. Which of the following statements about India is (are) true?
|a. |There is a strong preference for female children. |
|b. |Many cultural norms favor large families. |
|c. |Indian women still have an average of 2.1 children. |
|d. |Government pensions have eliminated the need for large families. |
|e. |Women don't have access to birth control. |
____ 72. China's population policy has included all of the following except
|a. |encouraging later marriages. |
|b. |health, pension, and employment benefits for a one-child pledge. |
|c. |urging couples to have no more than one child. |
|d. |encouraging contraceptive use but banning abortion. |
|e. |free access to birth control |
____ 73. China's population control program does all of the following except
|a. |employ freely available contraceptives. |
|b. |employ compulsory measures. |
|c. |emphasize huge family-planning centers. |
|d. |offer economic incentives. |
|e. |preferential treatment in employment for a couples one child. |
____ 74. Perhaps the most important feature of China's population control program that could be transferred to other countries is
|a. |focusing control efforts on males. |
|b. |localizing the program rather than forcing people to travel to distant centers. |
|c. |requiring one of the parents to be sterilized when a couple has two children. |
|d. |encouraging couples to postpone marriage. |
|e. |None of these answers. |
____ 75. Striving to meet the needs of a growing population, humans have also
|a. |reduced biodiversity. |
|b. |relied mostly on fossil fuels. |
|c. |introduced harmful species into communities. |
|d. |None of these. |
|e. |All of these. |
Matching
[pic]
____ 76. On the exponential growth of reindeer figure, choose the portion of the graph that can also be called a dieback.
____ 77. On the exponential growth of reindeer figure, choose the portion of the graph that represents the number of reindeer that can be sustained indefinitely in a given area.
____ 78. On the exponential growth of reindeer figure, choose the portion of the graph that represents the number of reindeer that exceeded the capacity of their environment.
[pic]
____ 79. On the generalized population age structure figure, choose the diagram with similar numbers of males and females in prereproductive and the reproductive categories.
____ 80. On the generalized population age structure figure, choose the diagram with a strong inclination to increase population size unless death rates rise sharply.
____ 81. On the generalized population age structure figure, choose the diagram that represents a demographically divided world.
____ 82. On the generalized population age structure figure, choose the diagram that shows a declining population.
Unit 4 Practice Test Populations
Answer Section
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M
2. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
3. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
4. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
5. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
6. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
7. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
8. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
9. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
10. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
11. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
12. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
13. ANS: E PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
14. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
15. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
16. ANS: E PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
17. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
18. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
19. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Population Dynamics and Carrying Capacity
20. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Reproductive Patterns
21. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Reproductive Patterns
22. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: E TOP: Reproductive Patterns
23. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E TOP: Reproductive Patterns
24. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Reproductive Patterns
25. ANS: E PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Human Population Growth: A Brief History
26. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
27. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
28. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
29. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
30. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
31. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
32. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
33. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
34. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
35. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
36. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
37. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
38. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
39. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
40. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
41. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
42. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
43. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
44. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Factors Affecting Human Population Size
45. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: E TOP: Population Age Structure
46. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Population Age Structure
47. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Population Age Structure
48. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E TOP: Population Age Structure
49. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Population Age Structure
50. ANS: E PTS: 1 DIF: D TOP: Population Age Structure
51. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: D TOP: Population Age Structure
52. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Population Age Structure
53. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
54. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
55. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
56. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
57. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
58. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
59. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
60. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
61. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
62. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
63. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
64. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
65. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
66. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
67. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
68. ANS: E PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
69. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
70. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: E
TOP: Solutions: Influencing Population Size
71. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Slowing Population Growth in India and China
72. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Slowing Population Growth in India and China
73. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: D
TOP: Slowing Population Growth in India and China
74. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M
TOP: Slowing Population Growth in India and China
75. ANS: E PTS: 1 DIF: M TOP: Human Impacts on Natural Systems
MATCHING
76. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
77. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
78. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
79. ANS: C PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
80. ANS: A PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
81. ANS: B PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
82. ANS: D PTS: 1 DIF: M OBJ: Labeling
................
................
In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.
To fulfill the demand for quickly locating and searching documents.
It is intelligent file search solution for home and business.
Related download
- econ 201 exams 1 twomey um d
- china s international development cooperation in the new era
- covid 19 frequently asked questions
- coronavirus covid 19 information for older australians
- rachel v salyer s blog
- solutions to text problems suny geneseo
- supplement i infection control in healthcare home and
- outbreak sample letter to daycare center parents