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Biology: The study of LIFE. 1-1: Study of Life  First living thing or ORGANISM arose 3.5 BILLION years ago  Over time organisms changed  Biology studies.

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Presentation on theme: "Biology: The study of LIFE. 1-1: Study of Life  First living thing or ORGANISM arose 3.5 BILLION years ago  Over time organisms changed  Biology studies."— Presentation transcript:

1 Biology: The study of LIFE

2 1-1: Study of Life  First living thing or ORGANISM arose 3.5 BILLION years ago  Over time organisms changed  Biology studies many various things  SIX unifying themes

3 Unifying Themes 1.Cell structure and function 2.Stability and homeostasis 3.Reproduction and inheritance 4.Evolution 5.Interdependence of organisms 6.Matter, energy, and organization

4 Group Project!  You will be assigned a group of three  You will be assigned ONE of the SIX themes of Biology  On a poster you must include:  Name of the theme  Description of the theme  THREE (3) examples of organisms demonstrating the theme  Illustration of the theme  You will present your poster with your group to the class 1.Cell structure and function 2.Stability and homeostasis 3.Reproduction and inheritance 4.Evolution 5.Interdependence of organisms 6.Matter, energy, and organization

5 Cell Structure and Function  CELL: basic unit of all life; HIGHLY organized  UNICELLULAR: organisms composed of just ONE cell  MULTICELLULAR: organisms composed of multiple cells  Individual cells of multicellular organisms usually undergo DIFFERENTIATION to specialize in specific function

6 Cell Differentiation

7 Stability and Homeostasis  HOMEOSTASIS: stable level of internal conditions  temperature  water content  food intake  Human?  Seal?  Tortoise?

8 Reproduction and Inheritance  REPRODUCTION: all organisms produce organisms like themselves  Organisms transmit hereditary information to their offspring  Hereditary information is in the form of DNA or DeoxyriboNucleic Acid

9 DNA  Multicellular and some unicellular organisms  enclosed in membrane  Other unicellualr organisms  DNA loop  DNA contains all instructions or GENES  All cells have the SAME DNA in them  Some cells use different genes than others

10 Types of Reproduction  Sexual Reproduction  hereditary information from two organisms of the same species combine  egg (female) and sperm (male) combine and begin cell division  multiple cells all with SAME EXACT copies of NEW combination of hereditary information  Asexual Reproduction  hereditary information from two different organisms not combined  Ex: Bacterium splits into two; each cell containing identical copies

11 Evolution  Process of populations of an organisms changing OVER TIME  Helps us understand...  variation amongst organisms in existence  relationship between alive organisms and those in the past  basis for exploring relationships amongst living organisms  why organisms look and behave as they do

12 Natural Selection  Process by which organisms with favorable traits have are better able to reproduce than individuals with out these characteristics

13 Interdependence of Organisms  ECOLOGY: study of interaction of organisms with each other and environment  ECOSYSTEMS: environmental communities  How do you interact with other organisms and your environment?

14 Matter, Energy, and Organization  Living things require ENERGY  Almost all energy comes from the SUN  PHOTOSYNTHESIS  plants and some unicellular organisms capture energy from sun and make it usable to other living things  What did you eat today?

15 How organisms get their energy  AUTOTROPHS: From the sun  make their own food  some trap sun and convert carbon dioxide and water into usable energy, sugar  most plants and some other  HETEROTROPHS: By consuming autotrophs or other heterotrophs for food  all animals, fungi, many unicellular organisms, and some plants

16 1-2: Characteristics of Life

17 Characteristics  Cells  Organized  Use energy  Keep homeostasis  Grow  Reproduce How do these organisms fulfill these requirements?

18 Cells  All living things are composed of cells  In multicellular organisms some cells are specialized and play a specific role

19 Organization  Cells are organized by their function

20 Energy Use  METABOLISM: the process in which living things use energy  sum of all chemical processes within an organism  Organisms require energy to...  maintain cellular and molecular organization  grow  reproduce

21 Homeostasis  All living things maintain stable internal conditions  Multicellular organisms usually have more than one systems to maintain homeostasis  Cold? Too hot?

22 Growth  Nonliving growth: accumulate more of material they are made of  Ex: crystals and icicles  Living growth: cell division and cell enlargement  CELL DIVISION: formations of TWO cells from ONE cell  DEVELOPMENT: achieved by repeated cell division and cell differentiation

23 Reproduction  All species have the ability to reproduce  NOT essential to the survival of an INDIVIUAL organism  ESSENTIAL to the continuation of a SPECIES  Many species have ways to combine genetic information so that the offspring are NOT identical to the parents

24 Living or Nonliving?

25 1-3: Scientific Method

26 Steps 1.Observe 2.Question 3.Collect Data 4.Hypothesize 5.Experiment 6.Draw Conclusion

27 Observe and Ask a Question http://youtu.be/14bIz89d7QY

28 Collect Data  How?  Observe: employ one or more of the five senses  Measure: quantitative data (data that can be measured in numbers)  Sample: using a small part (sample) to represent an entire population  Organize Data  Graph, chart, table, map

29 Hypothesize  Once scientists have made MANY observations and collect MUCH data they suggest an explanation or HYPOTHESIS  Explains observations AND can be tested  Can be wrong but can NEVER be proven true beyond all doubt  Can revise original hypotheses or even discard

30 Prediction  To test a hypothesis, scientists formulate a PREDICTION which logically follows the hypothesis  PREDICTION: statement made in advanced that states the results that will be obtained from testing a hypothesis (if it is true) ***If...then...***  Hypothesis: There is a fungus spreading throughout Panama killing the Golden Frogs.  Prediction: If the Golden Frog is exposed to the fungus then it will not survive.

31 Experimenting  Process of testing a hypothesis or prediction by gathering data under CONTROLLED conditions  Controlled experiment  Two groups: Control Group & Experimental Group  Both groups identical except for one factor: INDEPENDENT VARIABLE  Another factor measured: DEPENDENT VARIABLE (driven by/dependent on other variable)

32 Golden Frogs Experiment Independent variable? Dependent variable?

33 Conclusion  Modeling: an explanation supported by data  Visual, verbal, or mathematical  Helps show relationships among data  Sometimes help generate new hypotheses or predictions  Chytrid fungus ultimately suffocate Golden Frogs when they are exposed to it.

34  INFERENCE: conclusion based on facts not observations  often drawn from data gathered and previous knowledge  NOT directly testable  Ex: If you see smoke, you may think there is a fire even though you cannot see the fire.  THEORY: a broad and comprehensive statement of what is thought to be true  supported by considerable evidence  may tie together several related hypotheses

35 Hypothesis, theory, inference

36 Communication  Scientist share their findings and data with other scientists  publish findings in scientific journals  share findings at scientific meetings  Work of every scientist is subject to examination and verification by any other scientist  Allows scientists to build on work of others

37 Microscopy and Measurement

38 Microscope  An instrument that produces an enlarged image of an object  Used to study organisms, cells, and cell parts  Increase image made by object and show it’s details  MAGNIFICATION: the increase of an object’s apparent size  RESOLUTION: power to show an object’s details clearly

39 Light Microscopes  COMPOUND LIGHT MICROSCOPE (LM)  To see small organisms and cells  Specimen must be cut thin enough so that light can pass through and mounted onto glass slide  Different set magnifications

40 Light Microscope

41 Parts of LM  STAGE: supports specimen  LIGHT SOURCE: mirror, light bulb; directs light upwards, through specimen  OBJECTIVE LENS: enlarges image of object  NOSEPIECE: holds objective lens of different magnifications  OCULAR LENS: near eyepiece; magnifies image further  CONDENSER/ DIAPHRAGM: controls the amount of light projected to specimen  COARSE FOCUS: focuses object into view  FINE FOCUS: focuses fine details of object into view

42 Electron Microscope  At about 2000x magnification images become blurry  ELECTRON MICROSCOPE uses beam of electrons instead of light to enlarge image of specimen  Types:  Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)  Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) Black Walnut Tree Leaf

43 Transmission Electron Microscope  Transmits beam of electron though very thin slice of specimen  Magnetic lenses enlarge image and project it in screen or photographic plate  PRO: 200,000x magnification  CON: Can NOT view living things

44 Scanning Electron Microscope  Provides 3-D images  Specimen not sliced but coated with a fine metal spray  Electrons bounce off metal coating and projected onto fluorescent screen of photographic plate  PRO: 100,000x magnification; 3-D image  CON: Can NOT be live specimens

45 LM vs TEM vs SEM Mitochondria, mammalian lung Fly Head Diatom, 1000x

46 Measurements  SI: Système International d’Unités or International System of Measurements  SEVEN fundamental basic units that describe  length  mass  time  temp.

47 The power of 10...

48 SI Derived Units  Area: m 2  Area= length x width  m x m = m 2

49 That’s all for Chapter 1! You now have the answers for your first test! GOOD LUCK!


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