Title: Biology
1Biology
2Ch 1 The Science of Life
- 1-1 The World of Biology
- 1-2 Themes in Biology
- 1-3 The Study of Biology
- 1-4 Tools and Techniques
3Section 1-1 The World of Biology
- Relate the relevance of biology to a persons
daily life. - Describe the importance of biology in human
society. - List the characteristics of living things.
- Summarize the hierarchy of organization within
complex multicellular organisms. - Distinguish between homeostasis and metabolism
and between growth, development, and reproduction.
4Biology and You
- Biology the study of all living things
- Biology Involves
- Microscopic structure of single cells
- Global interactions of millions of organisms
- Life history of individuals
- Collective histories of groups of organisms
5- Biology can be used to both solve societal
problems and explain aspects of our daily lives. - Improving food supply
- Staying healthy
- Curing disease
- New tools and technology
- Preserving our environment
Branches of Biology Animation
6Characteristics of Life
- Organization and Cells
- Response to Stimuli
- Homeostasis
- Metabolism
- Growth and Development
- Reproduction
- Evolution
7Organization and Cells
- Organization the high degree of order within an
organisms internal and external parts and its
interactions with the living world - Organisms of the same species have the same body
parts arranged in nearly the same way and
interact with the environment in the same way. - All living organisms have some degree of
organization.
8- Cell the smallest unit that can perform all
lifes processes - All living things are composed of cells.
- Unicellular made of one cell (ex. Bacteria)
- Multicellular made of many cells (ex. A tree)
- In multicellular organisms, some cells are
specialized to play a specific role.
9Levels of Organization (text p6-7)
- Organism a living thing
- Organ System groups of specialized parts that
carry out a certain function in the organism. - Organs structures that carry out specialized
jobs within an organ system. - Tissues groups of cells that have similar
abilities and that allow the organ to function
10- Cells must be covered by a membrane, contain all
genetic information necessary for replication, be
able to carry out all cell functions. - Organelles tiny structures that carry out
functions necessary for the cell to stay alive. - Biological molecules chemical compounds that
provide physical structure and bring about
movement, energy use, and other cellular
functions - Atoms the simplest particle of an element that
retains all the properties of a certain element.
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12Response to Stimuli
- Stimulus a physical or chemical change in
internal or external environment - Ex a owls eye dilates/contracts to keep levels
of light entering the eye constant
13Homeostasis
- The maintenance of a stable level of internal
conditions even though environmental conditions
are constantly changing. - Regulatory systems maintain stable levels for
temperature, water content, uptake of nutrients,
etc. - Ex. To maintain body temp. owls can burn fuel to
produce body heat and fluff feathers for
insulation
14An example of a mechanism of homeostasis.
15Metabolism
- Metabolism the sum of all the chemical reactions
that take in and transform energy and materials
from the environment - Organisms need energy to maintain molecular and
cellular organization, growth, reproduction.
16Growth and Development
- Growth
- Living things grow as a result of cell division
and cell enlargement.(unicellularcell
enlargement multicellularboth) - Cell division the formation of two cells from an
existing cell. - Development the process by which an organism
becomes a mature adult. - Involves cell division, cell differentiation/
specialization
17Reproduction
- All organisms produce new organisms like
themselves - Not essential to the survival of individual
organisms, but is essential to the continuation
of a species. - Organisms transmit hereditary information to
their offspring (DNA deoxyribonucleic acid) - DNA makes up genes which contain the instructions
for making all the structures and chemicals
necessary for life.
18Click to animate
- Sexual Reproduction 2 parents. Offspring carry
traits of both parents and is similar but not
identical to parents. (ex. Frogs) - Asexual Reproduction 1 parent. Offspring
identical to parent. (ex. Bacteria)
19Evolution
- Populations of living organisms evolve or change
through time. - Important for survival in a changing world.
- Explains the diversity of life-forms we see on
Earth today.
Evolution by Natural Selection Animation
201-2 Themes in Biology
- Identify three important themes that help explain
the living world. - Explain how life can be diverse, yet unified.
- Describe how living organisms are interdependent.
- Summarize why evolution is an important theme in
biology.
21Themes in Biology
- Diversity and Unity of Life
- Interdependence of Organisms
- Evolution of Life
22Diversity and Unity of Life
- Diversity variety
- Bacteria that live in Arctic ice
- Whales made of 1,000 trillion cells
- Plants that capture and digest insects
- Biologists have identified more than 1.5 million
species on Earth, but many more remain to be
identified.
23- Unity features that all living things have in
common. - The genetic code the rules that govern how cells
use the heredity information in DNA - Presence of organelles that that carry out all
cellular activities.
24- The Tree of Life a model of the relationships by
ancestry among organisms - All living things share certain genes, yet no two
types of organisms have the same full set of
genes. - Organisms that have more similar sets of genes
are on closer branches or lineages. More
distantly related organisms are farther apart.
25This Tree of Life is a model of the relationships
by ancestry among all major groups of organisms.
The model is based on comparisons of organisms
characteristics, including body structures and
genetic information.
26- Scientists think that all living things have
descended with modification from a single common
ancestor. All of life is connected. - The many different lineages representing
different species stems from the fact that
genetic changes accumulate over the years.
Organisms change or evolve through natural
selection as they become better suited to their
own special environments.
27- Three Domains of Life
- Domains major subdivisions of all organisms.
Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya - The Six Kingdoms of Life
- Another system for grouping organisms
- Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Archaea,
Bacteria
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29Interdependence of Organisms
- Ecology the branch of biology that studies
organisms interacting with each other and with
the environment - Ecosystems communities of living species and
their physical environments. Organisms depend on
each other as well as on minerals, nutrients,
gases, heat, and other elements of their physical
surroundings.
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31- Scientists now recognize the huge effect that
humans have had on the worlds environment. (ex.
Deforestation, Greenhouse Effect, Ozone
Depletion, Soil Erosion, etc.)
32Evolution of Life
- Individual organisms change during their
lifetime, but their basic genetic characteristics
do not change. - Evolution descent with modification.
- Process in which the inherited characteristics
within populations change over generations such
that genetically distinct populations and new
species can develop.
33- The theory of evolution helps us understand
- How the many kinds of organisms that have lived
on Earth came into existence. - How organisms alive today are related to those
that lived in the past. - Basis for explaining the relationship among
different groups of organisms.
34Evolution by Natural Selection
- Organisms that have certain favorable traits are
better able to successfully reproduce than
organisms that lack these traits. - Adaptations are favorable traits produced through
natural selection - Driven in part by competition among individuals
for resources necessary for survival, such as
food. - The survival of organisms with favorable traits
causes a gradual change in populations of
organisms over many generations. Descent with
modification is responsible for the multitude of
life-forms we see today.
Animation for Evolution by Natural Selection
351-3 The Study of Biology
- Outline the main steps in the scientific method.
- Summarize how observations are used to form
hypotheses. - List elements of a controlled experiment.
- Describe how scientists use data to draw
conclusions. - Compare a scientific hypothesis and a scientific
theory. - State how communication in science helps prevent
dishonesty and bias.
36Science as a Process
- Methods of science are based on two principles
- Events in the natural world have natural causes.
- Uniformity the idea that the fundamental laws of
nature operate the same way at all places and at
all times.
37Steps of the Scientific Method
Animation
- Observation the act of perceiving a natural
occurrence that causes someone to pose a
question. - Hypothesis a proposed explanation for the way a
particular aspect of the natural world functions.
- Good hypotheses answer a question and are
testable. - Prediction a statement that forecasts what would
happen in a test situation if the hypothesis were
true.
38- Experiment used to test a hypothesis and its
predictions. - Data is analyzed and are used to draw conclusion.
- Communication of data and conclusion to
scientific peers and the public. Others can
verify, reject, or modify the researchers
conclusions.
See text p14-15
39Designing an Experiment
- Controlled Experiment compares an experimental
group and a control group while testing only one
variable. - Control Group provides a normal standard against
which biologists can compare the results of the
experimental group. - Experimental Group differs from the control
group by only one factor (independent variable)
Controlled Experiment Animation
Another Controlled Experiment Animation
40- Independent variable / manipulated variable
variable that differs between the control group
and the experimental group. The factor that is
being tested and is manipulated by the
experimenter. - Dependent variable /responding variable the
factor that is driven by or results from the
independent variable. The changes you observe
during the experiment.
41- Blind Experiments the biologist who scores the
results is unaware of whether a given subject is
part of the experimental or control group. Helps
eliminate experimental bias. - Experiments should be repeated because living
systems are variable. - Scientists must collect enough data to find
meaningful results.
42Data Collection
- Data is collected through observation and
measurement. - Scientists use tools to extend their senses (ex.
Microscope, microphone, infrared camera) - Most experiments measure the dependent variable.
43Types of Data
- Quantitative data data that can be measured in
numbers. Can be compared by scientists repeating
others experiments. - Qualitative data data that includes observations
and descriptions that do not involve numbers.
44- Sampling the technique of using a sample or
small part to represent a whole or entire
population. To be useful, samples must be large
and random.
45- Organizing Data involves placing observations
and measurements in some kind of logical order
graph, chart, table, map
46Analyzing Data
- To determine whether data are reliable and
whether they support or fail to support the
predictions of the hypothesis. - Use statistics to help determine the relationship
between the variables involved. - Compare data with other data that were obtained
in other similar studies. - Determine possible sources of error.
47Drawing Conclusions
- An experiment can only disprove, not prove, a
hypothesis. - Acceptance of a hypothesis is always tentative in
science. Can revise understanding based on new
data.
48- Inference a conclusion made on the basis of
facts and previous knowledge rather than on
direct observation. Not directly testable. - May apply findings to solve practical problems or
build models to represent or describe things
(physical model, mathematical equation.)
49Theory
- When a set of related hypotheses is confirmed to
be true many times and can explain a great amount
of data. (ex. Cell theory, theory of evolution by
natural selection) - Non-scientific theory an untested idea, guess.
50Communicating Ideas
- Scientists often work together in research teams.
- Share research results with other scientists
through scientific journals or presenting at
scientific meetings. - Allows others working independently to verify
findings or to continue work on established
results.
51Publishing a Paper in a Scientific Journal
- 4 sections
- Introduction (problem and hypothesis)
- Materials and Methods
- Results
- Discussion (gives significance of experiment and
future direction the scientist will take)
52- Peer Review Scientists who are experts in the
field anonymously read and critique the research
paper. - Checks for enough info so experiment can be
duplicated, good experimental design, accurate
conclusion, and clearly written. - Prevents dishonesty.
53Honesty and Bias
- Must be careful to prevent previous ideas and
biases from tainting both experimental process
and the conclusion - Scientist may wish for their hypothesis to be
supported - Experiments are repeated to verify previous
findings. - Avoid conflict of interest. (ex. Owning a
biotechnology company and being in charge of
testing drug safety and effectiveness.) - The threat of a potential scandal based on
misleading data or conclusions is a powerful
force in science that helps keep scientists
honest and fair.
54Section 1-4 Tools and Techniques
- List the function of each of the major parts of a
compound light microscope. - Compare two kinds of electron microscopes.
- Describe the importance of having the SI system
of measurement. - State some examples of good laboratory practice.
55Microscopes
- An instrument that produces an enlarged image of
an object. Shows details - Used to study organisms, cells, and cell parts
that are too small to otherwise be seen. - Magnification increase of an objects apparent
size. - Resolution the power to show details clearly.
56Types of Microscopes
- Compound Light Microscope
- Electron Microscope
57Compound Light Microscope(LM)
- The image of a transparent specimen is enlarged
as it passes through the objective and ocular
lenses. - Specimen is mounted on a glass slide
- Specimen must be sliced thin enough to be
transparent or must be very small.
Also see p.1070-1071
58Compound Light Microscope(LM)
59Compound Light Microscope (LM) - continued
- The set of objective lenses have different powers
of magnification. - Power of magnification
- Factor of enlargement. Objective x ocular total
power of magnification. - Resolution of LM is limited by the physical
characteristics of light. Blurry beyond about
2000x. - As power of magnification increases, resolution
drops.
60Light Microscope Images
- Amoeba eating algal cells
61Light Microscope Images
62Electron Microscope
- View specimens smaller than cells cell parts,
viruses, bacteria - A beam of electrons rather than a beam of light
produces an enlarged image of the specimen - Types of Electron Microscopes
- Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
- Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
63Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
- Transmits beam through a very thinly sliced
specimen. - Magnetic lenses enlarge the image and focus it on
a screen or photographic plate. - Up to 200,000x.
- Cannot be used to view living specimens.
64Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
65TEM images
66TEM images
- HIV infection in lymph tissue 27,630X
- Red blood cell in a capillary 5,370X
67Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
- 3-D images
- Up to 100,000x.
- No live specimens. Specimen sprayed with fine
metal coating - Beam of electrons passed over surface causing
metal to emit a shower of electrons projected
onto a fluorescent screen or photographic plate
producing image of object.
68Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
69SEM images
- Black Widow Spider Claw 500X
70SEM images
71SEM images Dennis Kunkel Microscopy, Inc.
- Surface of blade of grass
72Object Size and Magnifying Power of Microscopes
73Measurement
- International System of measurements (SI)
- System International dUnites
- Single standard of measurement used by all
scientists - Seven Base Units Table 1-1 p23
74SI Base Units
75Multiples of base units
- Multiples of a base unit (in powers of 10) are
designated by prefixes. - Table 1-2 p23.
- They are used to find appropriately sized unit
for a particular measurement.
76Some SI Prefixes
77Derived Units
- Produced by the mathematical relationship between
two base units or between two derived units.
Table 1-3 p23
78SI Derived Units Used in Biology
79Other units
- Some units of measurement are not part of SI but
are commonly used with SI. Table 1-4 p23
80Other Units Acceptable for Use with SI
81Safety
- Hazards can be chemical, physical, radiological,
or biological. - Good Laboratory Practice establishing safe,
common-sense habits - Never work alone in the lab or without proper
supervision by the teacher. - Always ask your teacher before using any
equipment. - Protect yourself and review safety alerts.
(Figure 1-15 p24, p1066-1069)
82- Holt Resources Practice Quiz
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