P 44249 A
P 44249 A
Biology
Unit: KBI0/4BI0
Paper: 2B
Instructions
t Use black ink or ball-point pen.
t Fill in the boxes at the top of this page with your name,
centre number and candidate number.
t Answer all questions.
t Answer the questions in the spaces provided
– there may be more space than you need.
t Show all the steps in any calculations and state the units.
Information
t The total mark for this paper is 60.
t The marks for each question are shown in brackets
– use this as a guide as to how much time to spend on each question.
Advice
t Keep
Read each question carefully before you start to answer it.
t Write anyoureyeanswers
on the time.
t Try to answer everyneatly and in good English.
t Check your answersquestion.
t if you have time at the end.
Turn over
P44249A
©2015 Pearson Education Ltd.
*P44249A0116*
1/1/1/1/1/1/1/
Answer ALL questions.
1 Read the passage below. Use the information in the passage and your own
knowledge to answer the questions that follow.
However, breathing in dust or fumes may also cause COPD. There is also
a small genetic risk linked to COPD called alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency.
Alpha-1-antitrypsin is a molecule that protects your lungs from being digested
by a protease enzyme released by white blood cells in the lungs. People who
10 have an alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency usually develop COPD at a younger age.
There are about 65 million people in the UK and 835000 are known to have
COPD. There are thought to be another 2 million who have COPD but have
not been diagnosed because they have not asked for medical help. They seem
content to put up with what they call smoker’s cough. Sadly, there are about
15 25000 deaths a year in the UK because of COPD.
The symptoms of COPD do not usually show until after the age of 35. They
include breathlessness when exercising, persistent coughing of mucus and
frequent chest infections, particularly in winter. The walls of the airways get
thicker in response to inflammation, more mucus is made and the air sacs
20 are damaged. Although any damage that has already happened to the lungs
cannot be reversed, it is possible to prevent COPD from getting worse by
making lifestyle changes.
Chest infections are common and can be caused by bacteria or viruses. People
with COPD are advised to have two vaccinations. A yearly ‘flu jab’ each autumn
25 protects against possible influenza and any chest infection that may develop
due to this. Vaccination against Pneumococcus, a bacterium that can cause
serious chest infections, involves a one-off injection.
Treatment for COPD usually involves relieving the symptoms, such as using an
inhaler to make breathing easier. Other treatments such as steroids, antibiotics,
30 breathing oxygen from a cylinder, and inhaling mucolytic (mucus-thinning)
medicines are sometimes prescribed in more severe cases, or during a
worsening of symptoms.
2
*P44249A0216*
(a) COPD includes diseases such as emphysema (line 2).
Give two causes of emphysema.
(2)
(b) The white blood cells in the lungs release protease (a protein digesting enzyme)
(line 9).
Suggest the function of this enzyme in the white blood cells in the lungs.
(2)
(c) Calculate the number of people who may have COPD that are smokers
(lines 4 and 5 and lines 11 and 12).
Show your working.
(2)
Answer .................................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(d) (i) Name the air sacs in the lungs responsible for gas exchange (line 19).
(1)
(ii) Suggest how damage to the air sacs can cause the symptom of breathlessness
when exercising (line 17).
(2)
3
*P44249A0316* Turn over
(e) Explain how the vaccination against Pneumococcus provides protection from
further infection (lines 24 to 27).
(2)
(f ) (i) Suggest how mucolytic medicines help to treat the symptoms of COPD
(lines 30 and 31).
(2)
4
*P44249A0416*
BLANK PAGE
5
*P44249A0516* Turn over
2 The table shows the energy requirements (in kilojoules) for females at different ages
and different levels of activity.
(a) Plot a line graph on the grid below to show how age affects the energy
requirements at each level of activity.
Use a ruler to join the points with straight lines.
(5)
6
*P44249A0616*
(b) Describe how increasing age changes the energy requirements of females.
(2)
(c) Explain the effect that the level of activity has on the energy requirements of
females.
(3)
7
*P44249A0716* Turn over
3 Nitrogen is an essential element for plant growth. Most plants can only use nitrogen
in the form of nitrate ions. Only legumes that have bacteria living in their root
nodules can use nitrogen from the air.
(a) (i) Explain how nitrate ions help plants to grow.
(1)
(ii) Name the type of bacteria that live in the root nodules of legumes.
(1)
(b) Many animals excrete urine that contains urea. Some soil microorganisms use the
enzyme urease to change urea to ammonium ions and carbon dioxide.
Describe how ammonium ions can be converted to nitrate ions in the soil.
(2)
8
*P44249A0816*
(c) The graph shows the effect of different temperatures on the rate of urease
activity.
120
100
rate of urease activity in arbitrary units
80
60
40
20
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
temperature in °C
(i) Explain the change in rate of urease activity from 10°C to 36 °C.
(2)
9
*P44249A0916* Turn over
4 The diagram shows a salmon fish farm in the sea.
predatory
birds
net
fence dead salmon with
fungus growing on it
float seal
salmon
wild salmon
(a) Suggest three ways in which the net protects the salmon.
(3)
10
*P44249A01016*
(b) Waste food and faeces can collect in the mud beneath the fish farm.
Suggest how this could affect the growth of the salmon.
(3)
(c) Suggest what should be done with the dead salmon with fungus growing on it.
(2)
(d) Give the example of biological control shown in the diagram of the fish farm.
(1)
11
*P44249A01116* Turn over
5 A student wanted to investigate the conditions required for the germination of seeds.
He set up 5 boiling tubes each containing 10 cress seeds on cotton wool sealed with
rubber bungs.
Tube A contained dry cotton wool and was placed at room temperature in the
light.
Tube B contained moist cotton wool and was placed at room temperature in the
light.
Tube C contained moist cotton wool and was placed in a fridge in the dark.
Tube D contained moist cotton wool and was placed at room temperature in the
dark.
Tube E contained moist cotton wool and was placed at room temperature in the
light and contained alkaline pyrogallol to absorb oxygen.
The student left the tubes for 3 days and then returned to observe the results.
He measured the height of the seedlings and recorded how many had germinated.
Some of his results are shown below.
(4)
A room yes
B yes
C 0.3
12
*P44249A01216*
(b) Explain how the student could tell whether the seeds had germinated.
(2)
(c) The student’s teacher commented that there were too many different
independent variables in his experiment.
Identify the independent variables in the experiment.
(2)
13
*P44249A01316* Turn over
6 When organic material in sewage, manure, silage effluents and waste milk enters a
lake or river it causes pollution.
The organic material is broken down by microorganisms. This process removes
oxygen from the water.
The amount of oxygen removed from the water is called the Biological Oxygen
Demand (BOD).
The table shows data for different pollutants.
BOD
Pollutant
in mg of O2 per litre of pollutant
(a) Explain which pollutant is likely to have the most severe effect on the organisms
in a river.
(2)
(b) A quantity of pollutant is released into a river. The effect on the organisms will
depend on the BOD value and other factors.
Suggest one of these other factors.
(1)
14
*P44249A01416*
(c) Waste milk is one of the pollutants.
Name one of the biological molecules found in milk that the microorganisms
could feed on.
(1)
(d) Suggest a reason for the difference between the BOD of raw domestic sewage
and the BOD of treated domestic sewage.
(2)
15
*P44249A01516*
BLANK PAGE
16
*P44249A01616*