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Biology: Exploring Life

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Chapter 1: Biology: Exploring Life What is Biology? The study of life or living organisms. Levels of Organization (large scale) Ecosystem Both living organisms and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biology: Exploring Life


1
Chapter 1 Biology Exploring Life
2
What is Biology?
  • The study of life or living organisms.

3
Ecosystem
Community
Population
Organism
Organ Systems
Organs
Tissue
Cell
Organelle
Molecule
Atom
4
Levels of Organization(large scale)
  • Ecosystem
  • Both living organisms and non-living or physical
    components of environment in a particular area

5
Levels of Organization(large scale)
  • Community
  • All interacting organisms in an area (living
    component only)

6
Levels of Organization
  • Population
  • Individuals of one species living in same area

7
Levels of Organization
  • Individual
  • One organism

8
Levels of Organization (within an Individual)
  • Organ Systems
  • group of organs that work together in performing
    vital body functions
  • excretory, nervous

9
Levels of Organization (within an Individual)
  • Organs
  • structure consisting of several tissues adapted
    as a group to perform specific functions
  • liver, intestine

10
Levels of Organization (within an Individual)
  • Tissues
  • integrated group of cells with a common function,
    structure, or both

Bone tissue
11
Levels of Organization (within an Individual)
  • Cell
  • Unit of living matter separated from environment
    by its membrane

red blood cell
12
Levels of Organization (within an Individual)
  • Molecule
  • Cluster of atoms

DNA, lipid, carbohydrate
13
Levels of Organization (within an Individual)
  • Atom
  • Smallest particle of ordinary matter

14
Emergent properties
  • New properties that emerge with each step in the
    hierarchy of life
  • e.g., birth rate, death rate is studied at
    population level, not organismal level or
    molecular level

15
Interconnected Webs
  • producers
  • photosynthetic organisms
  • provide food for others
  • consumers
  • eat plants or other animals
  • decomposers
  • act as recyclers, breaking down dead matter to
    simple mineral nutrients

16
Sunlight
Ecosystem
Producers (such as plants)
Cycling of chemical nutrients
Heat
Chemical energy
Consumers (such as animals)
Heat
17
Cells structural functional units of life
  • Cells-
  • most basic unit of life
  • can perform all functions necessary for life.

18
Common Features of All Life
  • Properties All Life Has in Common
  • Order
  • Regulation
  • Growth and development
  • Energy processing
  • Response to Environment
  • Reproduction
  • Evolutionary adaptation

19
Three Domains of Life
  • taxonomy
  • branch of biology that names classifies species

20
Three Domains of Life
  • Domain
  • Highest level of taxonomic classification used by
    biologists
  • Bacteria
  • Archaea
  • Eukarya

prokaryotes
21
Bacteria
22
Archaea
23
  • In Prokaryotes, the cells do not have a nucleus

24
Eukarya
  • Cells DO have nucleus
  • Includes all organisms except prokaryotes

Plantae
Animalia
Fungi
25
Unifying Theory Of Biology
  • Theory
  • Comprehensive idea that has great explanatory
    power
  • Evolution
  • Heritable changes that have produced Earths
    diversity of organisms
  • proceeds through process of natural selection

26
Charles Darwin
  • Wrote On the Origin of Species by Means of
    Natural Selection

27
Charles Darwin
  • Two main concepts
  • species living today descended from ancestral
    species
  • natural selection occurs as heritable variations
    are exposed to environmental factors that favor
    reproductive success of some individuals over
    others

28
Natural Selection
  • Inherited traits favor reproductive success of
    some individuals over others in a changing
    environment

29
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30
Natural Selection
  • Important Components
  • Variation or variability in inherited traits in a
    population
  • Environmental Factors
  • Reproductive Success of Some Individuals

31
Natural Selection
  • The process of natural selection leads to
  • ADAPTATIONS.
  • evolutionary adaptation-
  • inherited characteristic that enhances an
    organisms ability to survive and reproduce in a
    particular environment.

32
Name Those Adaptations
  • Polar Bear

33
Name Those Adaptations
  • Bats

34
Name Those Adaptations
  • Dolphin

35
Name Those Adaptations
  • platypus

36
Name Those Adaptations
  • Three-toed sloth

37
Name Those Adaptations
  • Flamingo

38
Name Those Adaptations
  • Rattlesnake

39
Name Those Adaptations
  • Tiger

40
Science is Latin for to know
So why do we do it?
41
The Process of Science
  • First Approach
  • Discovery science
  • Scientists describe some aspect of the world
  • use inductive reasoning, to draw general
    conclusions

42
What is Inductive Reasoning?
  • Take a lot of observations and from these draw
    general conclusions
  • Specific to general

43
The Process of Science
  • Second Approach
  • Hypothesis Driven
  • Use deductive reasoning
  • Propose hypothesis
  • Make deductions leading to predictions
  • Then test hypothesis

44
What is Deductive Reasoning?
  • if, then statements
  • From general ideas to specific observations
  • Opposite of inductive

45
The Scientific Method
  1. Observation
  2. Questions
  3. Hypotheses
  4. Predictions
  5. Tests

46
The Flying SquirrelStep 1 An Observation
When flying squirrels land on a tree they
scramble to the other side.
47
Step 2 The Question
  • Why do they do that? Or more specifically why do
    flying squirrels always move to the opposite side
    of the tree when they land?

48
Step 3 Hypothesis
Squirrels move around tree to prevent predation
Alternative Hypothesis Move around tree to avoid
bright moonlight.
49
Hypothesis
  • Tentative answer to a question
  • An educated guess

Alternative Hypothesis
  • Another possible explanation or answer to a
    question

50
Step 4 Predictions
  • If squirrels move around the tree to avoid
    predation, then squirrels that do NOT move will
    be preyed on and those that do move will not be
    preyed on.
  • If the squirrel move around tree to avoid light
    then if we observe them landing on the dark side
    they should NOT move.

51
Step 5 The Tests
  • Ideas?

52
Results
  • Predation Experiment
  • No difference in predation rate between squirrels
    that land on one side of the tree and move and
    squirrels that do not move

Do our results support or falsify our hypothesis?
53
Results
  • Light Experiment
  • We find that when we watch squirrels landing on
    both light and dark sides of the tree, those that
    land on the light side scramble to other side,
    those on the dark side dont

Squirrels move around tree to avoid light
Original hypothesis
Do results support or falsify our hypothesis?
54
Steps of the Scientific Method
55
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