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Chapter 3: Water and the Fitness of the Environment

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Chapter 3: Water and the Fitness of the Environment Makes life on Earth possible of Earth s surface 60- 90 % of cells mass Cytoplasm and blood are mostly water – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 3: Water and the Fitness of the Environment


1
Chapter 3 Water and the Fitness of the
Environment
  • Makes life on Earth possible
  • ¾ of Earths surface
  • 60- 90 of cells mass
  • Cytoplasm and blood are mostly water
  • Small, simple molecule
  • Very common (occurrence)
  • Very uncommon (chemistry)
  • Several unique properties know these

2
Polar covalent molecule
  • 2 hydrogen and 1 oxygen
  • Mass of 18
  • Strong zones of partial positive and partial
    negative poles
  • Cooperates in MANY hydrogen bonds
  • Results in emergent properties
  • Conditions or traits that appear (emerge) because
    of the structure or relationships between
    components.
  • Ex molecules have different properties than
    elements and a forest has different properties
    than a tree.

3
Cohesion and Adhesion
  • Surface tension
  • Cohesion means water sticks to other water
    molecules.. beads
  • This helps keep water liquid, the form we need
    most as living organisms (cytoplasm to oceans)
  • Adhesion means that water sticks to other
    substances
  • Meniscus in graduated cylinder
  • Xylem and phloem in plant stems
  • Necessary for PHOTOSYNTHESIS

4
Moderates temperature
  • Heat gt measure of total kinetic energy
  • Temperaturegt intensity of heat due to average
    kinetic energy
  • Kilocalorie gtfood cal., 1000 calories
  • Calorie gt amt of heat required to raise one gram
    of water by one degree Celsius
  • Specific heat gt amt of heat that must be gained
    or lost in order to heat or cool one gram of a
    substance by 1 degree Celsius
  • Water has relatively high specific heat

5
Specific Heat
  • Because water has a high specific heat compared
    to other molecules its size
  • It take a long time to change temp.
  • Lake stays warm in fall
  • Ocean temperatures dont vary much
  • Body temp stays steady

6
Evaporative Cooling
  • Heat of vaporization gt quantity of heat required
    to convert 1 gram of substance from liquid to gas
  • Evaporation of sweat (water) takes out a lot of
    bodys heat (lowers temperature)
  • Hottest molecules closest to phase change, lowers
    overall kinetic energy.
  • Sweat, drool, pant, large ears, capillaries, etc

7
Ice Floats
  • Liquid water has H bonds that hold water in a
    very density collection
  • Solid water (ice) actually has longer bonds,
    liquid waters bonds are further apart, less
    dense
  • Floating ice
  • Doesnt overflow
  • Acts as insulation
  • Allows for bottom to stay liquid
  • Lake can melt completely in the summer
  • Weather because of cold polar water and warm
    equatorial waters flow and currents

8
Solvent of Life
  • Solution gthomogenous liquid mixture of two or
    more substances
  • Solutegt what is dissolved, solid, smaller amt.
  • Solventgt what did the dissolving, liquid, larger
    amt.
  • Aqueous solution gt solution where solvent is
    water
  • Very common in nature

9
Solutions
  • Blood is a solution that carries dissolved
    nutrients, oxygen and waste to and from cells
  • Cytoplasm ( cytosol ) is a solution that is
    mostly water and is the site of all chemical
    reactions in cells
  • Most biochemistry is carried out in aqueous
    solutions

10
Solutions cont.
  • Hydrophilic gtwater loving
  • Hydrophobic gt water fearing
  • Molarity gt number of moles per liter of solution
    (mole is atomic mass in grams)
  • Be able to calculate molar solutions
  • Dissociationgt degree to which a substance
    separates when in solution.
  • Water separates into H and OH -
  • Acid gt has more H than OH- available
  • Base gt has more OH- than H available

11
pH
  • pH is the negative log of the H concentration
    and is a measure of how much the water has
    dissociated and how much H is available
  • Organisms are very sensitive to pH ranges.
  • Some acids include gastic acid, lemon juice,
    soda, coffee, rain(6) and urine (6)
  • Pure water should be neutral (7)
  • Some bases would include sea water (8), blood
    (7.4), Tums, ammonia/bleach and many cleaners

12
Acid Precipitation
  • Can be in any format (rain or snow)
  • Also exists as exhaust and run off
  • S and N in atmosphere bond to water creating
    acids
  • Changing pH of lakes or oceans is harmful to
    plant and animal life there
  • Changing pH of soil changes the charge and
    availability of ions and nutrients that are used
    by plants
  • Both can have impacts on food webs and our
    food/water/oxygen supply Constant fertilizer
    use can change soil ph (acidic) reverse with
    lime which is calcium carbonate
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