Biology: Exploring Life: Click To Edit Master Subtitle Style
Biology: Exploring Life: Click To Edit Master Subtitle Style
Biology: Exploring Life: Click To Edit Master Subtitle Style
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Learning objectives
The aims of this course are to enable students to: recognise the scope of biology. explain evolution, unity and diversity. explain the general concept of science and its process. identify the application of biology in everyday life.
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Learning outcome
Successful students will be able to: define the levels of biological organization from molecules to the biosphere list the scope of biology according to its level of organization. identify the common features of living things. state how evolution explains the unity and diversity of life. categorize living things into the main domains and kingdoms. describe the basic steps of the scientific method. compare discovery science and hypothesisbased 5/17/12 science.
Community All organisms on the Florida coast Population Group of brown pelicans Organism Brown pelican Spinal cord Organ system Nervous system Brain Nerve Tissue Nervous tissue Organ Brain
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Molec Union of two or more atoms of ule the same of different elements.
Cell
The cell, which is composed of a variety of molecules working together, is the basic unit of structure and function of all living thing.
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Organism
An individual; complex individuals contain organ systems. Unicellular or multicellular. 5/17/12
Ecosystem
An ecosystem consists of all the organisms living in a particular area, as well as all the nonliving, physical components of the environments that affect the organisms, such as air, soil, and sunlight.
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Biosphere
All the ecosystems together. Regions of the Earths crust waters, and atmosphere inhabited by living things.
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Ai r
C O2 C O2
Produc ers
Consum ers
H2 O
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Decompo sers So il
can perform all activities required for life. A cell can: generate its internal environment; take in and use energy; respond to the environment around it; and develop and maintain its complex organisation; basis for all reproduction; growth etc. The properties of life that arises from 5/17/12
1.3 Cells are the structural and functional units of life Cell the lowest level of structure that
DNA
1.4 The unity of Life: All forms of life have common features
A C T A T A C C G T A G T A
Figure: One chain of a DNA molecules, its message written in the order of the four building 5/17/12 blocks labelled A, T, C,
The foundation for the unity of life is the genetic information in DNA molecules. Each DNA molecule is made up of two long chains of coiled together- double helix The chain are make up of four different building blocks with letter abbreviation of their name Life occurs in cast diversity of forms because they have different genes and DNA sequences
Figure: Double helix DNA
Figure: regulation
4.
5.
Figure: Venus flytrap response to the environmental stimulus of cricket landing on it.
Figure: Reproduction
6. 7.
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Order Regulation Growth and development Energy utilisation Response to the environment Reproduction Evolution
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characteristics.
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2. Regulation The environment outside an organism changes but mechanisms regulate the organisms internal environment, keeping it within limits thatsustain life. E.g. Rabbit can regulate body temperature with blood 5/17/12
Figure: regulation
Figure: Hummingbird
Figure: Reproduction
7. Evolution reproduction underlies the capacity of populations to change (evolve) over time. E.g. appearance of pygmy seahorse has evolved in a way to 5/17/12 camoflauge itself in
Classifying Diversity
Taxonomy is the branch of biology that names and classifies species. It formalizes the hierarchical ordering of organisms.
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Hierarchical classification
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Biologists divide the diversity of life into three main groups called domains. The three domains of life are: Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya.
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Darwin was struck by the diversity of animals on the Galpagos Islands. He thought of adaptation to the environment and the origin of new species as closely related processes. As populations separated by a geographic
Natural selection
Observation 1: Individual variation. Individuals in a population vary in many heritable traits. Observation 2: Overproduction and competition A population of any species has the potential to produce for more offspring that will survive to produce offspring of their own. With more individual than the environment can support, competition is inevitable. Inference: Unequal reproductive success From these two observation, Darwin inferred that individuals are unequal in their likelihood of surviving 5/17/12 are reproducing. Those individuals
Reproduction of survivors
Evolutionary adaptation
Killer whale
Pangoli n
Product of natural selection: Evolutionary adaption, the accumulation of favorable variations in a population over time. Individuals with heritable traits that made them best adapted to their environment had the greatest reproductive success.
Science is a way of knowing Science seeks natural causes for natural phenomena. Biology blends two scientific approaches: 1. Discovery science- which is most about describing nature 2. Hypothesis-based science, which is most about explaining nature. . Most research combines these two 5/17/12 forms of enquiry.
Discovery science
In discovery science, scientific describe some aspect of the world and use inductive reasoning to draw general conclusion. Inductive reasoning goes from a set of specific observations to general conclusions: I observed cells in x, y, and z organisms, therefore all animals have cells. e.g. all organisms are made of cells is an inductive conclusion based o the discovery of cells in very microscopic biological 5/17/12 specimen observed by biologist over two
Hypothesis-based science
In hypothesis-based science, they attempt to explain observation by testing hypothesis. Deductive reasoning flows from general to specific. From general premises, a scientist would extrapolate to specific results: if all organisms have cells and humans are organisms, then humans should have cells. This is a prediction about a specific case based on the general premises. E.g. If all organisms are made of cells (permise 1), and humans are organisms (permise 2), then humans are composed of cells (deduction about specific case). 5/17/12 deductive is a prediction that can be tested by This
Observations
Question Hypothesis # 1: Dead batteries Prediction: Replacing batteries will fix problem Hypothesis # 2: Burnt-out bulb Prediction: Replacing bulb will fix problem
Test prediction
Test prediction
Hypothesis-based science involves observation, questions, hypothesis as tentative answer to question, deductions leading to predictions, and then tests of the predictions to see if the hypothesis are falsifiable. If hypothesis is correct and we test one of its predictions (by performing an experiment or making observations), then a particular outcome will occur. In experimental designed to test hypothesis, the use of control groups and
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Genetic engineering
DNA fingerprinting cloning genetic screening and counseling cancer research development of antibiotics, vaccines, antivenom improving surgical
Medicine
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Is an important