Title: Biology in the Modern World
1Biology in the Modern World
- Dr. Heather Townsend
- Chapter 1
2Biology The Study of Living Things
3Living vs. non-living things
- How similar?
- How different?
- How do you classify one or the other?
4Characteristic of Life
- 1. Organized /Order
- 2. Regulation
- 3. Growth and development
- 4. Energy utilization
- 5. Response to environment
- 6. Reproduction
- 7. Evolution
51. Order
- Complex, but ordered organization
62. Living things are regulated
- Homeostasis staying the same
- Steady state
- Relatively constant
- Physical and chemical conditions of the
environment inside the body are maintained
73. Living things grow and develop
- Growth
- Increase in the size and number of cells
- Development
- All the changes that occur between conception and
death - Stages
84. Living things acquire materials and energy
- Energy
- Capacity to do work
- Our cells and tissues need energy
- How do we acquire energy?
94. Energy
- Where does energy come from?
- solar energy
- captured self-feeding life forms
- producers
- Photosynthesis
- Humans
- consumers
- Decomposers
- Fungi, bacteria
105. Living things respond to stimuli
- Dependant on nervous and muscular systems
- Plants track the passage of the sun
- Behavior
- Movement of an organism in response to a stimuli
- Directed toward minimizing injury, acquiring
food, and reproducing
116. Living things reproduce
- Life comes from life!
- All life can reproduce
- make another organism like itself
- Asexual reproduction
- Bacteria, protists, and unicellular organisms
- split in two
- Sexual reproduction
- Most multicellular organisms
- union of sperm and egg
127. Living things are adapted
- Adaptations
- Modifications that make an organism suited to
life - Ex Hawks hollow bones
- Come about through evolution
- The process by which a species changes through
time - Group of similar organisms that interbreed
- Leads to the diversity of organisms
13Life at its many levels.
- Atom
- Molecule
- Cellular
- Tissue
- Organ
- Organ system
- Organism
- Population
- Community
- Ecosystem
- Biosphere
14Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Atoms
- Smallest particle that is still an element
- Composed of subatomic particles
- Electrons
- Protons
- Neutrons
Atomic Nucleus
15Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Chemical level
- Atoms combine to make molecules
- 4 macromolecules in the body
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids
- Proteins
- Nucleic acids
16Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Cellular
- Cells can be eukaryotic or prokaryotic
- Contain cellular organelles (molecules)
- Structures within cells that perform dedicated
functions (small organs)
17Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Tissue
- Collection of cells that work together to perform
a specialized function - 4 basic types of tissue in the human body
- Epithelium
- Connective tissue
- Muscle tissue
- Nervous tissue
18Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Organ
- Made up of tissue
- Heart
- Brain
- Liver
- Pancreas, etc
19Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Organ system (11)
- Made up of a group of related organs that work
together - Integumentary
- Skeletal
- Muscular
- Nervous
- Endocrine
- Cardiovascular
- Lymphatic
- Respiratory
- Digestive
- Urinary
- Reproductive
20Hierarchy of Structural Organization
- Organism
- An individual human, animal, plant, etc
- Made up of organ systems
- Work together to sustain life
21Organization of the Biosphere
- Population
- Each organism is part of a population
- Community
- Populations of different organisms that interact
with one another - All species occupy that same area
- Ecosystem
- Created by communities that interact with each
other - Biosphere
- Refers to all parts of Earths water, crust, and
atmosphere
22Ecosystems
- Each organism interacts continuously with its
environment - The dynamics of any ecosystem depend on two
processes - Cycling of nutrients
- Flow of energy
23Classification of living things
- Taxonomy
- Identifying and classifying organisms according
to specific criteria - Each organism placed into a classification system
24Taxonomy
- Domain
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- species
25Domains
- Archae
- Prokaryotes
- Bacteria
- Prokaryotes
- Eukarya
- Eukaryotes
26Kingdoms
- 4 main kingdoms
- Protista
- Fungi
- Plantae
- Animalia
27Scientific Names
- Binomial (two name)
- Genus name, species name
- Examples
- Homo sapiens
- Alligator mississippiensis
- Felis domesticus
28(No Transcript)
29The Process of Science
- The word science is derived from a Latin verb
meaning to know - Science is a way of knowing
- Discovery science
- Describing nature
- Hypothesis-driven science
- Explaining nature
30Science
- Uses investigative methods to test hypotheses
based on previous observations - Scientific method
- 1. Observe some aspect of the natural world and
ask questions about it - 2. Hypothesis
- 3. Make predictions
- 4. Test the predictions
- 5. Repeat the tests or develop new ones
- 6. Analyze and report the test results and
conclusions
31The Scientific Method
32Why this course?!?!?
- Examine concepts of biology
- Relate these to our everyday lives
- Better understanding of the environment and our
impacts