Cambridge IGCSE (9-1) : BIOLOGY 0970/42
Cambridge IGCSE (9-1) : BIOLOGY 0970/42
Cambridge IGCSE (9-1) : BIOLOGY 0970/42
* 4 6 3 2 1 6 9 8 6 7 *
BIOLOGY 0970/42
Paper 4 Theory (Extended) October/November 2022
1 hour 15 minutes
INSTRUCTIONS
● Answer all questions.
● Use a black or dark blue pen. You may use an HB pencil for any diagrams or graphs.
● Write your name, centre number and candidate number in the boxes at the top of the page.
● Write your answer to each question in the space provided.
● Do not use an erasable pen or correction fluid.
● Do not write on any bar codes.
● You may use a calculator.
● You should show all your working and use appropriate units.
INFORMATION
● The total mark for this paper is 80.
● The number of marks for each question or part question is shown in brackets [ ].
DC (DE) 320384
© UCLES 2022 [Turn over
2
BLANK PAGE
(a) Algae are classified in the Protoctist kingdom. All algae contain one or more chloroplasts.
State the name of another kingdom that contains organisms which have chloroplasts.
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Fig. 1.1
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(c) The student made careful drawings of seven types of alga found in the samples of lake water.
A B
C D
E F
not to scale
Fig. 1.2
Use the key to identify each of the species A to G. Write the letter of each species in the
correct box beside the key.
[5]
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[Total: 10]
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2 Fig. 2.1 is a diagram of the human alimentary canal and associated organs.
7
3
4
5
6
Fig. 2.1
(a) Table 2.1 shows enzymes, the organs that secrete these enzymes, their substrates and
products.
Table 2.1
number
organ that secretes identifying
enzyme substrate product or products
the enzyme the organ
on Fig. 2.1
amylase 1
3 protein
lipase 4
maltase
[4]
© UCLES 2022 0970/42/O/N/22
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(c) State a function of the region of the alimentary canal labelled 6 in Fig. 2.1.
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(d) Describe how food eaten by humans is reduced to smaller pieces and explain how this makes
chemical digestion more efficient.
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[Total: 14]
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3 Aphids are insects that feed on phloem sap by inserting their mouthparts into phloem tissue.
mouthparts
Fig. 3.1
(a) (i) State two features visible in Fig. 3.1 that identify this animal as an insect.
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[2]
(ii) Aphids can transmit viral pathogens when they feed on a plant.
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(iii) The aphid shown in Fig. 3.1 is feeding on phloem tissue in a leaf.
State the names of two tissues in the leaf that the mouthparts of the aphid pass through
to reach the phloem.
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2 ........................................................................................................................................
[2]
(b) Aphids have been used to investigate the translocation of sucrose in phloem tissue. While
they are feeding on phloem sap aphids excrete a sucrose‑rich fluid known as honeydew.
In an investigation, two groups of four aphids were placed at intervals along the stem of a
young willow plant, as shown in Fig. 3.2.
damp cotton
group A group B wool
glass chamber filled with Petri dishes for collecting honeydew Petri dish
carbon dioxide gas with water
containing 14C
Fig. 3.2
The leaves were enclosed in an airtight glass chamber. A special form of carbon dioxide gas
that contained radioactive carbon‑14 (14C) was supplied to the leaves for a short period of
time.
Samples of honeydew were collected at intervals from the groups of aphids. The time taken
for sucrose containing 14C to travel the distance between group A and group B was recorded.
The investigation was repeated twice using a fresh stem and different groups of aphids for
each trial. The results are shown in Table 3.1.
(i) Complete Table 3.1 by calculating the rate of movement of 14C in trial 3.
Table 3.1
2 340 75 272
3 630 150
[1]
(ii) Outline how 14C in carbon dioxide gas becomes incorporated into the sucrose molecules
that are translocated in the phloem.
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(c) Sucrose travels from the stem to other parts of the plant known as sinks, where it is used.
(i) State two parts of a plant that are sinks for sucrose.
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[2]
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[Total: 15]
4 (a) Fig. 4.1 is a flow chart showing some of the processes that occur in a biofuels power plant.
pretreatment
of biomass
complex carbohydrates
released from biomass
breakdown by enzymes
fermentation by yeast
ethanol
biofuel
Fig. 4.1
Complete the balanced chemical equation to show how ethanol is produced by yeast
respiration.
(ii) Using the information in Fig. 4.1, suggest the environmental advantages of using ethanol
as a fuel.
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Describe the disadvantages of growing giant reed plants to provide biomass for the
production of biofuels.
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(b) One problem with using biomass in the process shown in Fig. 4.1 is that the breakdown stage
produces a sugar called xylose and ethanoic acid. Yeast cannot use xylose, and ethanoic
acid is toxic to yeast.
Scientists genetically engineered a type of yeast that can use xylose and ethanoic acid.
Fig. 4.2 shows the results of one of the trial experiments done by the scientists using their
new genetically engineered yeast.
Key:
concentration of xylose
concentration of ethanoic acid
concentration of ethanol
100 2.5
80 2.0
60 1.5
concentration of concentration
xylose or ethanol of ethanoic acid
/ g per dm3 / g per dm3
40 1.0
20 0.5
0 0.0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
time / hours
Fig. 4.2
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Predict the results that you would expect for the concentration of ethanol.
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[Total: 11]
BLANK PAGE
5 Fig. 5.1 shows Mackinlay’s cuckoo‑dove, Macropygia mackinlayi, which is found on most of the
islands in the south‑west of the Pacific Ocean.
Fig. 5.1
(a) Karkar Island is one island where Mackinlay’s cuckoo‑dove is found. This species is part of
many communities that are adapted to the different habitats on the island.
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(ii) Complete the passage with the most appropriate word or phrase.
(b) The highest point on Karkar Island is 1800 m above sea level.
In 1969, a researcher surveyed the bird species on Karkar Island. He recorded the vertical
distribution of the birds between sea level and 1600 m.
Fig. 5.2 shows the ranges of four species, as recorded in the two surveys. The vertical lines
represent the range of heights where the birds were seen on the island.
1800
1600 Key:
height 1200
above sea
1000
level / m
800
600
400
200
sea level 0
A B C D
Meyer’s Mackinlay’s island thrush island leaf
goshawk cuckoo-dove warbler
bird species
Fig. 5.2
(i) Compare the range in 1969 with the range in 2013 for each of the bird species shown in
Fig. 5.2.
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[4]
(ii) Using the information in Fig. 5.2, suggest reasons for the change in the range of the
island thrush (C) on Karkar Island.
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(c) Small oceanic islands are often inhabited by species of birds that are found nowhere else.
Many of these species have decreasing populations and are often endangered.
Explain the risks to these species of birds that have decreasing populations.
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[Total: 13]
6 (a) Fig. 6.1 shows diagrams of the circulatory systems of a fish and a mammal.
The arrows show the direction of blood flow through the circulatory systems.
P
fish
gills
liver and muscle
intestine tissue
R
Q
lungs
X S
V
liver
alimentary
canal
kidneys
T
lower body
and legs
Fig. 6.1
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[4]
(ii) State the name of structure V on Fig. 6.1 and describe its function.
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(iii) Fig. 6.1 shows that fish and mammals have different types of circulation.
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(b) The blood vessels that supply the heart muscle can become blocked.
(i) State the name of the blood vessels that supply the heart muscle.
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(ii) State one way in which blockages in these blood vessels can be treated.
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(c) Substances move between blood and tissues at various sites in the circulatory system of
mammals.
(i) Oxygen is absorbed into the blood as it passes through the lungs.
State the structures in the lungs where oxygen passes into the blood from the air.
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(iii) State the name of the process in which products of digestion move into cells and are
used to become part of the cells.
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(iv) State the name of the process in which excess amino acids are broken down in liver
cells to produce ammonia.
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(v) State the name of the organ that releases oestrogen into the blood.
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[Total: 17]
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