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Explore the fundamental principles of life, from living vs. nonliving objects to the scientific method and taxonomy. Learn about cellular structures, energy sources, evolution, classification systems, and the scientific process in the study of biology.
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Biology Concepts 1.1 What is life?
What is life? • Living things vs. nonliving objects: • Comprised of the same chemical elements • Obey the same physical and chemical laws • The cell is the smallest, most basic unit of all life • Familiar organisms are multicellular • Some cells independent – single-celled organisms
What are emergent properties? • Levels range from extreme micro to global • Each level up: • More complex than preceding level • Properties: • A superset of preceding level’s properties • Emerge from interactions between components
What are the basic requirements of all living things? • Three requirements • Materials and Energy • Reproduction and Development • Adaptations and Natural Selection • Energy- the capacity to do work • The sun: • Ultimate source of energy for nearly all life on Earth • Drives photosynthesis • Metabolism- all the chemical reactions in a cell • Homeostasis - Maintenance of internal conditions within certain boundaries • Acquiring nutrients
What are the basic requirements of all living things? • Living things detect changes in environment • Response often involves movement • Vulture can detect and find carrion a mile away • Monarch butterfly senses fall and migrates south • Microroganisms follow light or chemicals • Even leaves of plants follow sun • Responses collectively constitute behavior
What are the basic requirements of all living things? • Organisms live and die • Must reproduce to maintain population • Multicellular organisms: • Begins with union of sperm and egg • Developmental instructions encoded in genes • Composed of DNA • Long spiral molecule in chromosomes
What are the basic requirements of all living things? • Adaptation • Any modification that makes an organism more suited to its way of life • Organisms, become modified over time • However, organisms very similar at basic level • Suggests living things descended from same ancestor • Descent with modification - Evolution • Caused by natural selection
Biological Concepts 1.2 Taxonomy and Systematics
What is taxonomy? • The rules for identifying and classifying organisms • Hierarchical levels (taxa) based on hypothesized evolutionary relationships • Levels are, from least inclusive to most inclusive: • Species, genus, family, order, class, phylum, kingdom, and domain • A level usually includes more species than the level below it, and fewer species than the one above it
What are the three domains? • Bacteria • Microscopic unicellular prokaryotes • Archaea • Bacteria-like unicellular prokaryotes • Extreme aquatic environments • Eukarya • Eukaryotes – Familiar organisms
What are the kingdoms? • Archaea – • Kingdoms still being worked out • Bacteria– • Kingdoms still being worked out • Eukarya • Kingdom Protista • Kingdom Fungi • Kingdom Plantae • Kingdom Animalia
What are scientific names? • Binomial nomenclature (two-word names) • Universal • Latin-based • First word represents genus of organism • Second word is specific epithet of a species within the genus • Always Italicized as Genus species (Homo sapiens) • Genus may occur alone (Homo), but not specific epithet
Biological Concepts 1.3 Scientific method
What is the scientific method? • Begins with observation • Scientists use their five senses • Instruments can extend the range of senses • Hypothesis • A tentative explanation for what was observed • Developed through inductively reasoning from specific to general
What is the scientific method? • Experimentation • Purpose is to challenge the hypothesis • Designed through deductively reasoning from general to specific • Often divides subjects into a control group and an experimental group • Predicts how groups should differ if hypothesis is valid • If prediction happens, hypothesis is unchallenged • If not, hypothesis is unsupportable
What is the scientific method? • Results • Observable, objective results from an experiment • Strength of the data expressed in probabilities • The probability that random variation could have caused the results • Low probability (less than 5%) is good • Higher probabilities make it difficult to dismiss random chance as the sole cause of the results
What is the scientific method? • The results are analyzed and interpreted • Conclusions are what the scientist thinks caused the results • Findings must be reported in scientific journals • Peers review the findings and the conclusions • Other scientists then attempt to duplicate or dismiss the published findings
What is a scientific theory? • Scientific Theory: • Joins together two or more related hypotheses • Supported by broad range of observations, experiments, and data • Scientific Principle / Law: • Widely accepted set of theories • No serious challenges to validity
What types of experimental variables are there? • Experimental (Independent) variable • Applied one way to experimental group • Applied a different way to control group • Response (dependent) variable • Variable that is measured to generate data • Expected to yield different results in control versus experimental groups