Title: Unit 1: Scientific Process, Life Characteristics, Unity and Diversity
1Unit 1 Scientific Process, Life
Characteristics, Unity and Diversity
- Ms. Sharpe
- Regents Biology
- Name ____________________
2Scientific Process
- Have a ____________ about nature?
- Make a _______________ (educated guess)
- Distinguish between the controls (______________)
and the variable (should be only one variable in
a well ____________ experiment) - Collect _______ and organize it into a table and
maybe into a graph. - Make a ___________________ based on data
collected.
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4When designing an Experiment
- Make your population large enough that a
____________ conclusion can be drawn. -
- Make sure you only have _________ variable in the
experiment. This should be the factor you are
testing for. - Make sure there are MEASURABLE ____________that
you are collecting to analyze.
5Parts of the Experimental SetupVariables
- The variable that I manipulate in the
experiment is the _____________________ variable. - The variable that changes due to the independent
variable is the ____________________ variable.
6Parts of the Experimental SetupControl Group
vs. Experimental Group
- _____________ group is the group which has the
factor you are testing for. - __________________ group is the group which is
not getting the factor you are testing for.
7Question Does adding iron increase the plant
growth?
- Hypothesis If you add iron to a plant, then it
will grow larger. - Procedure Place 2 genetically identical plants
in the same room at the same temperature, provide
sunlight and soil, but one plant will get 1
tablespoon of iron added to its water each week
and the other will ___________. Measure the
growth of each plant every 3 days for two weeks. - Independent variable? _____________________
- Dependent variable? ______________________
- Constants? ________ and _________ and ______
- Control group? Experimental group?
8Lets Pretend We Did Thissarracenia.com
- What do we NEED to do to make this a valid
experiment?
9Lets Pretend We Did Thissarracenia.com
- What do we NEED to do to make this a valid
experiment?
10You Design an ExperimentYou are working for a
group of doctors in research. The doctors you
work for have a QuestionDoes Vitamin B
increase growth rates of developing
embryos?They suggest you use developing chicken
embryos.1.Write a hypothesisIf
___________________________________________
then,___________________________________________
11Write and Draw an Experimental Setup
- Hint chicken eggs can be placed in incubators and
can be injected with small needles. Explain what
measurable data you will collect. Include the
following - Independent variable?
- Dependent variable?
- Constants?
- Control?
12Does Vitamin B increase growth rates of
developing embryos?
- 1. Describe Procedure
- 3. Write a conclusion
13Notes on Biochemistry and Enzymes
14Biochemistry
- The study of the chemical reactions of living
things is called _______________ - A substance that cannot be broken down into
simpler substances is a called an
________________. - Some examples are
- Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and _________________
- These elements are the most abundant in living
things.
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16Atoms and Bonding
- All elements are made up of particles called
_______________. - Atoms of different elements differ in the number
of protons, neutrons, and _______________. - When two or more different atoms combine(bond)
this forms a ____________________. - Example H O H2O
17Two types of Bonding
- When atoms lose or gain electrons, they become
electrically charged particles called
___________. - These ions then create an __________ bond between
them.
- When atoms share electrons (the electrons travel
around both atoms) they are said to be
__________________ bonded. - Carbon very often shares electrons with other
atoms.
18Inorganic VS. Organic Compounds
- Both are found in __________ things.
- However, only organic compounds contain the atom
___________, except ______________ and
________________ - Examples of inorganic compounds found in cells
are ____________, salts, carbon dioxide, and
hydrochloric acid.
19Three different types of Organic Compounds
- 1. ____________________ are sugars and starches
which are primarily used as a source of
________________. - Contain C, H, and O in a ratio of 121
- For example ________________ is glucose
- Glucose is a _________________________
- Two monosaccharides bonded together form a
___________________________ such as sucrose.
20Polysaccharidesmany monosaccharides bonded
together
- _________________ found in vacuoles of plants and
animal cells - ___________________ found in the cell walls of
plants - _________________ found in the liver of animals
for a long term source of energy when you havent
eaten in a while.
21Polysaccharides
22Lipids (fats, waxes, and oils)
- Mainly a source of _____________ energy.
- Contain H, C, and ______ but in no particular
ratio. Usually many hydrogen atoms. - The _____________________ are 3 fatty acids and
one glycerol. - http//www.nida.nih.gov/Infofacts/steroids.html
- http//www.biotopics.co.uk/JmolApplet/jcontentstab
le.html
23 http//www.biotopics.co.uk/JmolApplet/jcontentsta
ble.html
24Proteins
- Contain C, H, ____ and Nitrogen
- Can be used for adding new ________________ in
the body. - Examples of Proteins Structural proteins,
________________, hormones, and antibodies. - Building blocks of proteins are
___________________________
25There are 20 different Amino Acids
- ___________ Group contains nitrogen and two
Hydrogen atoms. - ____________ group contains carbon, oxygen and
hydrogen. - The ______________ is what makes the 20 different
AA different.
26List of all 20 Amino Acids
27Carbohydrates Vs. Proteins
- Used for energy
- Have ONE building block, called _____________
- Used for _____________
- Have 20 building blocks called _______________
28Macromolecules, DNA, Genes and Chromosomes
- Large, complex organic molecules (macromolecules)
make up the basic molecular units found in living
organisms. - Complex carbohydrates
- Proteins
- Nucleic acids
- Lipids
Figure 2-7
29One Very Important Protein
- ________________ regulate the rates of reactions
in the cell and body. - Enzymes are called __________________ because in
general they speed up the chemical reactions. - Enzymes are named after the ______________ they
act on. - Example __________________ is the enzyme that
acts on maltose (disaccharide).
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324 Factors Influence Enzyme Action
- How much _____________ is available.
- 2. How much ______________ is available.
- 3. How high or how low the ___________ is.
- 4. How high or how low the ________ is.
- All of these factors can be visually demonstrated
in graphs.
33How Temperature Effects Enzyme Activity
- Each enzyme has a temperature and pH at which its
activity is greatest and the reaction it
Catalyzes proceeds at its fastest rate. - The rate of enzyme-catalyzed reactions increase
as the temperature rises to the ____________
temperature. - At very high temperatures, the enzyme molecules
become damaged or ______________. The damage is
usually permanent. - Remember Enzymes cannot die!
34How do pH levels effect enzyme activity?
Enzyme called catalase found in all cells.
_________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
___________
35Some enzymes function at a different optimal pH
Why?
36DO Now Label each X-Axis with one of the
following Enzyme Concentration, Substrate
Concentration, Temperature and pH.
Enzyme Action
Enzyme Action
Enzyme Action
Enzyme Action
?