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The Nature of Biology

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Title: The Nature of Biology


1
The Nature of Biology
  • Module 1 How to Define Life

2
How do you design an experiment?
  • A. Problem/Purpose
  • The question the lab will answer
  • Identifies the independent and dependent
    variables
  • Independent variable the factor the scientist
    changes from group to group
  • Dependent variable the factor the scientist
    measures to see the effect of the independent
    variable
  • Variables and Controls Videoclip

3
How do you design an experiment?
  • B. Research/Background Information
  • Lets the reader learn about the topic
  • Helps the scientist develop an educated
    hypothesis
  • C. Hypothesis
  • An educated prediction
  • Can be tested, proven false, and agrees with
    previous research

4
How do you design an experiment?
  • D. Procedure/Experiment
  • Steps must be precise and detailed
  • Has one control group
  • Normal conditions or absence of independent
    variable
  • Used for comparison
  • Experimental group(s) have only one changing
    variable (which is the independent variable)

5
How do you design an experiment?
  • E. Observations/Data
  • Must be objective.
  • Good Example The bacterial colony is yellow.
  • Bad Example The bacterial colony is nasty.
  • Use measurements whenever possible.
  • Good Example There are 50 bacterial colonies.
  • Bad Example There are a whole bunch of colonies.

6
How do you design an experiment?
  • E. Observations/Data
  • Do not draw conclusions in the data section of
    the report.
  • Good Example There are bacteria and fungal
    colonies in the shoe section.
  • Bad Example The shoe was really dirty and so it
    was the most contaminated and grew a lot of
    stuff.
  • Should be organized.
  • May use a graph, table, or drawing(s).
  • Always include units of measurement and a title.

7
How do you design an experiment?
  • F. Analysis/Conclusions
  • Answers the purpose question.
  • Accepts or rejects the hypothesis.
  • Explains what can be inferred from the data.

8
How do we know it is good science?
  • A. Scientific knowledge must be shared, which
    allows other scientists to repeat and verify the
    work of others (peer review).
  • A. Scientific knowledge is tentative.
  • Theories are the most logical explanation based
    on current evidence, become stronger as more
    evidence is gathered, and give us a basis for
    prediction.
  • Laws are universal generalizations that are
    virtually unchanging.

9
How do you know something is alive?
  • A. Biology means the study of (-ology) all life
    (bio-) and includes many branches.
  • B. Biologists organize living things into
    kingdoms. There are currently six kingdoms

Kingdom Example
Archaebacteria Extremophile bacteria
Eubacteria Typical bacteria
Protista Seaweed, Amoeba, Slime Mold
Fungi Yeast, Mushrooms
Plantae Moss, Fern, Holly, Oak tree
Animalia , Fish, Birds, Frogs, Humans
10
How do you know something is alive?
  • Characteristics of Life - Alive! Videoclip
  • 1. Organization (The level of complexity)
  • a.

Organism
Organ System
Organs
Tissues
Cells
Molecules
Atoms / Elements Meet the Elements - They
Might Be Giants
11
How do you know something is alive?
  1. All living things need six essential elements
    (atoms) Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen,
    Phosphorus, Sulfur (CHNOPS)
  2. All living things are made of cells.
  3. One-celled organism unicellular
  4. Many-celled organism - multicellular

12
How do you know something is alive?
  • 2. Energy Use
  • a. Organisms need energy constantly to build
    molecules (synthesis) and cells and to break down
    (digest) substances (such as breaking down food
    for nutrition)
  • b. Organisms must transport nutrients to be used
    in cellular respiration to produce energy.
  • c. An organisms chemical reactions are called
    its metabolism

13
How do you know something is alive?
  • 3. Reproduction
  • a. Organisms must replace themselves so the
    entire species will survive.
  • b. May be asexual (only one individual
    contributes genetic material) or sexual (two
    individuals contribute genes).

14
How do you know something is alive?
  • 4. Growth and Development
  • a. Growth to increase in size. Increases the
    number of cells of a multicellular organism.
  • b. Development change that takes place in
    structure and function of an organism during its
    life cycle.
  • Example Embryo becomes a fetus

15
How do you know something is alive?
  • 5. Respond to Stimuli
  • a. A quick, non-permanent change
  • b. Stimulus any condition that causes an
    organism to react.
  • Example A loud noise (stimulus) causes your dog
    to run under the bed (response).

16
How do you know something is alive?
  • Adjust to Environment
  • a.Homeostasis - the regulation of an
    organisms internal environment to maintain
    conditions suitable for life
  • Ex Getting rid of wastes by excretion

17
How do you know something is alive?
  • b. An adaptation is an inherited structure,
    behavior, or internal process that enables
    organisms to better survive an environment.
  • Ex Gills on a fish

18
Life Processes STERNGRR
  • Synthesis making materials
  • Transport moving materials
  • Excretion getting rid of wastes
  • Respiration gas exchange AND production of
    energy (ATP)
  • Nutrition gaining and using energy from food
  • Growth and Development getting bigger and/or
    changing
  • Regulation controlling internal processes
  • Reproduction producing new cells or new
    organisms

19
What technology allows biologists to study
microscopic life?
  • A. Compound Light Microscope
  • Has two lenses ocular (eyepiece) and objective
  • In order to be viewed, specimen must be thin (so
    the light may shine through the specimen) and
    placed on a slide.
  • Specimen may be stained to better see structures

20
What technology allows biologists to study
microscopic life?
  • B. Electron Microscope
  • Uses electrons to produce an image
  • Types
  • Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
  • Sends a beam of electrons across the objects
    surface
  • Produces a 3-D image
  • Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
  • Designed to look at structures inside a cell
  • Capable of greatest magnification

Eye of an ant
21
What technology allows biologists to study
microscopic life?
  • C. Limitations of microscopes
  • Magnification is limited by the strength of the
    lens.
  • Calculating magnification
  • Ocular lens x objective lens total
    magnification
  • Example
  • Ocular (10x) x objective (40x) 400x
  • As magnification increases resolution/(sharpness)
    decreases.
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