Title: Great Ideas in Science Lecture 10 - Living Things
1Great Ideas in Science Lecture 10 - Living Things
- Prof. Robert Hazen
- UNIV-301
2Every Living thing
- Can be classified in one scheme
- Is modular composed of a few simple molecules
- Is made of cells lifes chemical factories
- Uses the same genetic code
- Evolved from a first cell by natural selection
- Lives in ecosystems of many interdependent
organisms
3Ways of Thinking About Living Things
- Biosphere
- Ecosystem
- Community
- Population
- Organism
- Anatomy physiology
- Cellular
- Molecular
4What is Life?
- Encapsulation All life is separated from the
environment by a membrane. - Metabolism All life obtains energy and atoms
from the environment. - Reproduction All life reproduces via genetics.
5The Characteristics of Life
- High degree of order and complexity
- Part of larger systems of matter and energy
- Life depends on chemical reactions in cells
- Life requires liquid water
- Organisms grow and develop
- Regulate energy use
- Share same genetic code, code is heritable
- All living things are descended from a common
ancestor
6Great Idea Living things use many different
strategies to deal with the problems of acquiring
and using matter and energy.
- Linnaean classification
- Hierarchy
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
7Why is Taxonomy Important?
- Think about how to describe a tree.
- Names are essential for accurate communications
- But taxonomy can be rather
- arbitrary
- Lumpers versus splitters
- Local variations in species
8Why is Taxonomy Important?
Dracorex (top left) and Stygimoloch (top right),
as growth stages of Pachycephalosaurus (bottom).
9Why is Taxonomy Important?
C
A
B
10Classifying Life
- Kingdoms
- Monera
- Protista
- Fungi
- Plants
- Animals
11Taxonomy of Animals
12Classifying Human Beings
- Kingdom Animals
- Phylum Chordates
- Subphylum vertebrates
- Class Mammals
- Order Primates
- Family Hominid
- Genus Homo
- Species sapiens
13A New ViewThree Domains of Life
14Implications of Linnaean Classification
- You can use genetic material.
- Similarities depend on time and change.
- Classification results from real events.
Nothing in biology makes sense except in the
light of evolution.
15Strategies of Fungi
- Growth
- Filaments
- Decomposers
- Structure
- Mass of filaments
- Many forms
- Reproduction
- Break filaments
- Spores (usually asexual)
- Lichens
- Fungi Algae
- Two interdependent species
16The Simplest Plants
- Phylum Bryophytes
- Structure
- No roots
- Photosynthetic
- Reproduction
- Sexual
- Asexual
17Vascular Plants
- Phylum vascular plants
- Structure
- Roots, stems, leaves
- Control water loss
- Reproduction
- Spore fertilized egg
- Cone holds egg or sperm
- Seed egg plus nutrients
- Pollen sperm
- Strategies
- Seedless (Ferns - spores)
- Seeds but no flowers (Gymnosperms - cones)
- Seeds and flowers (Angiosperms)
18Angiosperms
19Invertebrates
- No backbone
- Most diverse animals
- Arthropods
- 70 of known animal species
- Structure
- Exoskeleton
- Jointed legs
20The Molecules of Life
- All life is modular composed of a few simple
molecules.
21Key Ideas about the molecules of life
- Based on Carbon (Organic chemistry)
- Six main elements (CHNOPS)
- Modular built from simple units
- Molecular shapes determine their function
22Nutrition Facts
- Lipids
- Sugars
- Amino acids
23Carbohydrates (sugars)
Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen
24Cellulose and Starch
25Lipids
26Saturated and Unsaturated Lipids
27Amino Acids
- Amino group
- Carboxyl group
- Side-group (20 different things)
28Protein sequence of amino acids
- Primary chain of amino acids
- Secondary folding of chain
- Tertiary
- Quaternary
29Proteins
30Proteins Enzymes
31Dietary Amino Acids