Chapter 1 - Invitation To Biology PDF
Chapter 1 - Invitation To Biology PDF
Chapter 1 - Invitation To Biology PDF
Chapter 1
1.1 Impacts/Issues:
The Secret Life of Earth
Biology
The systematic study of life
Molecule
An association of two or more atoms
Cell
Smallest unit of life
Organism
An individual; consists of one or more cells
Community
All populations of all species in a given area
Ecosystem
A community interacting with its environment
Biosphere
All regions of Earth that hold life
Nature
Everything in the universe, except what humans
have manufactured
Emergent property
A characteristic of a system that does not appear
in any of a systems component parts
Nutrient
Substance that is necessary for survival, but that
an organism cant make for itself
Consumers
Organisms that get energy and carbon by feeding
on tissues, wastes, or remains of other organisms
Example: animals
Receptor
Molecule or structure that responds to a stimulus
Development
Multistep process by which the first cell of a new
individual becomes a multicelled adult
Inheritance
Transmission of DNA from parents to offspring
Genus
Group of species that share a unique set of traits
Classification Systems
Classification systems group species according
to traits and organize information about species
One system sorts all organisms into one of three
domains: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
The eukaryotes include plants, protists, fungi
and animals
Prokaryotes
Prokaryotes
Single celled organisms in which DNA is not
contained in a nucleus
Bacterium
A member of the prokaryotic domain Bacteria
Archaeans
A member of the prokaryotic domain Archaea
Eukaryotes
Eukaryotes
Organisms whose cells typically have a nucleus
Fungus
Eukaryotic consumer that obtains nutrients by
digestion and absorption outside the body
Protists
Eukaryotes that are not plants, animals, or fungi
Eukaryotes
Plant
Typically a multicelled, photosynthetic producer
Animal
Multicelled consumer that develops through a
series of embryonic stages and moves about
during all or part of the life cycle
Critical thinking
Mental process of judging the quality of information
before deciding whether or not to accept it
Science
The systemic study of nature
A Scientific Theory
Scientific theory
A hypothesis that has not been disproven after
many years of rigorous testing
Useful for making predictions about other
phenomena
Laws of Nature
Law of nature
Generalization that describes a consistent and
universal natural phenomenon for which we do
not yet have a complete scientific information
Example: gravity
Experiment
A test to support or falsify a prediction
Experimental group
A group of objects or individuals that display or
are exposed to a variable under investigation
Control group
A group of objects or individuals that is identical
to an experimental group except for one variable
Hypothesis
Olestra causes intestinal cramps.
Prediction
People who eat potato chips made with Olestra will be more
likely to get intestinal cramps than those who eat potato
chips made without Olestra
Experiment
Control Group
Eats regular
potato chips
Experimental Group
Eats Olestra
potato chips
Results
93 of 529 people
get cramps later
(17.6%)
Conclusion
Percentages are about equal. People who eat potato chips
made with Olestra are just as likely to get intestinal cramps
as those who eat potato chips made without Olestra.
These results do not support the hypothesis.
Stepped Art
Fig. 1-10, p. 14
Two hypotheses
Exposing wing spots scares off predators
Wing sounds scare off predators
Two predictions
Individuals without spots are eaten more often
Individuals without sounds are eaten more often
Sampling Error
Sampling Error
Probability