Title: Invitation to Biology
1Invitation to Biology
21.1 Impacts/IssuesThe Secret Life of Earth
- Biology
- The systematic study of life
- We have encountered only a fraction of the
organisms that live on Earth - Scientists constantly discover new species
- Extinction rates are accelerating
3Video Lost worlds and other wonders
4Exploring New Guinea
- A rare golden-mantled tree kangaroo
51.2 Lifes Levels of Organization
- The building blocks (atoms) that make up all
living things are the same ones that make up all
nonliving things - The unique properties of life emerge as certain
kinds of molecules become organized into cells
6Lifes Levels of Organization
- Atom
- Fundamental building block of all matter
- Molecule
- An association of two or more atoms
- Cell
- Smallest unit of life
- Organism
- An individual consists of one or more cells
7Lifes Levels of Organization
- Population
- Group of individuals of a species in a given area
- Community
- All populations of all species in a given area
- Ecosystem
- A community interacting with its environment
- Biosphere
- All regions of Earth that hold life
8Nature and Life
- Nature
- Everything in the universe, except what humans
have manufactured - Emergent property
- A characteristic of a system that does not appear
in any of a systems component parts
9Levels of Organization in Nature
10Animation Lifes levels of organization
11Active Figure Levels of organization
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131.3 Overview of Lifes Unity
- All living things have similar characteristics
- Require energy and nutrients
- Sense and respond to change
- Reproduce with the help of DNA
14Energy Sustains Lifes Organization
- One-way flow of energy through the biosphere and
cycling of nutrients among organisms sustain
lifes organization - Energy
- The capacity to do work
- Nutrient
- Substance that is necessary for survival, but
that an organism cant make for itself
15Organisms and Energy Sources
- Producers
- Organisms that make their own food using energy
and simple raw materials from the environment - Example plants
- Consumers
- Organisms that get energy and carbon by feeding
on tissues, wastes, or remains of other organisms - Example animals
16Energy Flow and Material Cycling
17Stepped Art
Fig. 1-3a, p. 6
18Fig. 1-3b, p. 6
19Animation One-way energy flow and materials
cycling
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21Organisms Sense and Respond to Change
- Organisms sense and respond to change to keep
conditions in their internal environment within a
range that favors cell survival (homeostasis) - Homeostasis
- Set of processes by which an organism keeps its
internal conditions within tolerable ranges - Receptor
- Molecule or structure that responds to a stimulus
22Response to Stimuli
23Organisms Grow, Develop and Reproduce
- Organisms grow, develop, and reproduce based on
information encoded in DNA, which they inherit
from their parents - Growth
- Increase in size, volume, and number of cells in
multicelled species - Development
- Multistep process by which the first cell of a
new individual becomes a multicelled adult
24Organisms Grow, Develop and Reproduce
- Reproduction
- Process by which parents produce offspring
- Inheritance
- Transmission of DNA from parents to offspring
- DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid)
- Molecule that carries hereditary information
about traits
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261.4 Introduction to Lifes Diversity
- The millions of species on Earth vary greatly in
details of body form and function - Each species is given a unique two-part name that
includes genus and species names - Species
- A type of organism
- Genus
- Group of species that share a unique set of traits
27Classification Systems
- Classification systems group species according to
traits and organize information about species - One system sorts all organisms into one of three
domains Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya - The eukaryotes include plants, protists, fungi
and animals
28Lifes Diversity Three-Domain Classification
System
29Animation Lifes diversity
30Prokaryotes
- Prokaryotes
- Single celled organisms in which DNA is not
contained in a nucleus - Bacterium
- A member of the prokaryotic domain Bacteria
- Archaeans
- A member of the prokaryotic domain Archaea
31Eukaryotes
- Eukaryotes
- Organisms whose cells typically have a nucleus
- Fungus
- Eukaryotic consumer that obtains nutrients by
digestion and absorption outside the body - Protists
- Eukaryotes that are not plants, animals, or fungi
32Eukaryotes
- Plant
- Typically a multicelled, photosynthetic producer
- Animal
- Multicelled consumer that develops through a
series of embryonic stages and moves about during
all or part of the life cycle
33Animation Three domains
34 351.5 The Nature of Scientific Inquiry
- Critical thinking
- Mental process of judging the quality of
information before deciding whether or not to
accept it
36The Scope and Limits of Science
- Science is a way of looking at the natural world
which helps us to communicate our experiences
without bias by focusing only on testable ideas
about observable phenomena - Science does not address the supernatural
- Science
- The systemic study of nature
371.6 How Science Works
- Researchers make and test potentially falsifiable
predictions about how the natural world works - Generally, scientific inquiry involves forming a
hypothesis (testable assumption) about an
observation then making and testing predictions
based on the hypothesis - A hypothesis that is not consistent with the
results of scientific tests is modified or
discarded
38Common Research Practices
- 1. Observe some aspect of nature
- 2. Frame a question about your observation
- 3. Propose a hypothesis (a testable explanation
of the observation)
39Common Research Practices
- 4. Make a prediction a statement based on a
hypothesis, about some condition that should
exist if the hypothesis is not wrong - 5. Test the accuracy of the prediction by
experiments or gathering information (tests may
be performed on a model)
40Common Research Practices
- 6. Assess the results of the tests (data) to see
if they support or disprove the hypothesis - 7. Conclusions Report all steps of your work and
conclusions to the scientific community
41Making Observations A Field Study
42A Scientific Theory
- Scientific theory
- A hypothesis that has not been disproven after
many years of rigorous testing - Useful for making predictions about other
phenomena
43Laws of Nature
- Law of nature
- Generalization that describes a consistent and
universal natural phenomenon for which we do not
yet have a complete scientific information - Example gravity
44Examples of Scientific Theories
45Animation An example of the scientific method
461.7 The Power of Experiments
- Natural processes are often influenced by many
interacting variables - Variable
- A characteristic or event that differs among
individuals
47The Power of Experiments
- Experiments simplify interpretations of complex
biological systems by focusing on the effect of
one variable at a time - Experiment
- A test to support or falsify a prediction
48Experimental and Control Groups
- Experimental group
- A group of objects or individuals that display or
are exposed to a variable under investigation - Control group
- A group of objects or individuals that is
identical to an experimental group except for one
variable
49Potato Chips and Stomachaches
50Stepped Art
Fig. 1-10, p. 14
51Example Butterflies and Birds
- Question
- Why does a peacock butterfly flick its wings?
- Two hypotheses
- Exposing wing spots scares off predators
- Wing sounds scare off predators
- Two predictions
- Individuals without spots are eaten more often
- Individuals without sounds are eaten more often
52Peacock Butterfly Defenses
53Experiments and Results
- Four groups of butterflies were exposed to
predators (birds) - Butterflies without spots
- Butterflies without sounds
- Butterflies without spots or sounds
- Control group
- Test results support both original hypotheses
54Results Peacock Butterfly Experiment
55Sampling Error
- Biology researchers experiment on subsets of a
group, which may result in sampling error - Sampling error
- Difference between results derived from testing
an entire group of events or individuals, and
results derived from testing a subset of the group
56Sampling Error
57Probability
- Researchers try to design experiments carefully
in order to minimize sampling error - Statistically significant
- Refers to a result that is statistically unlikely
to have occurred by chance
58Animation Sampling error
591.8 Impacts/Issues Revisited
- Biologists constantly discover new species
- Mouse lemur (Microcebus lehilahytsara),
discovered in Madagascar in 2005
60Digging Into DataPeacock Butterfly Predator
Defenses