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Biology CP 2014 Marking Period 1 Quarterly Exam Review Sheet This review sheet is to be used as a guide to help you focus your studies for the MP1 Quarterly examination. Note: This review sheet is not intended to be all-inclusive. Lab Skills Unit Scientific Method- Know the steps in the scientific method (ex. Observation, Hypothesis, Conclusion…) Be able to identify which part of the scientific method is illustrated by examples Be familiar with the usage of basic lab tools (ex. ruler, thermometer, graduated cylinder) Controlled experiments: o Be able to make hypotheses, draw conclusions o Quantitative and qualitative data – definitions/examples of each. o Identify the experimental and control groups in an experiment and their purpose o Identify controlled variables & their importance o Identify independent variable(s) and dependent variable o Be able to critique an experimental procedure o Importance of testing ONE variable at a time Data Tables & Graphing: o Know how to construct & read/interpret data in a data table or graph o Know which data goes on the axes: X (independent variable) vs. Y (dependent variable) Unit 1A: Characteristics of Living Things Organism = general term for a living thing Definition of a cell Contrast living and nonliving things Features of Life (as discussed in class / listed in textbook) – what it means to be ‘alive’ – you don’t need to be able to list them, but you should be able to identify and explain with examples Growth vs. Development – be able to define and explain with examples Define metabolism Define cell 1 Asexual vs. sexual reproduction Unicellular vs. multicellular (and examples of each) Autotrophic vs. heterotrophic (and examples of each) Importance of DNA as the genetic material of the cell Adaptation & evolution Homeostasis Photosynthesis and cellular respiration o basic definition/equation of each process o what types of organisms do each process o importance of ATP produced by cellular respiration Unit 1B Intro to Ecology Food chains & Food webs Abiotic & biotic factors of ecosystems Feeding strategies/trophic levels o Producer, primary/secondary/tertiary consumer, decomposer, herbivore, carnivore, omnivore What is the importance of decomposers in an ecosystem? Competition Competitive exclusion principle Ecological Pyramids: pyramid of energy, pyramid of numbers, pyramid of biomass In an ecosystem, matter is RECYCLED; energy flows but is not recycled (and is ultimately lost as heat) Summarize the reactions of cellular respiration & photosynthesis, be able to recognize overall equations for each What is meant by the “range of tolerance” (tolerance range) of an organism for a particular environmental condition? Do all organisms undergo cellular respiration? Why or why not? Do all organisms undergo photosynthesis? Why or why not? What do plants use glucose for? What do animals use glucose for? How do organisms get energy? What is the ultimate source of energy for Earth’s ecosystems? How photosynthesis and cellular respiration are interdependent and critical to the carbon/oxygen cycles Be able to explain the 10% rule Why lower trophic levels contain the most available energy 2 How a change in the size of the population of one organism in an ecosystem may affect another population Importance of decomposers in an ecosystem Know the hierarchy (organization) of levels of the biosphere (biome, ecosystem, community, population, species) and be able to give examples of each level Name that biome in which Livingston is found Unit 2A: Basic Chemistry Definition of atom, molecule, element, compound Basic Atomic Structure o Compare/contrast proton, neutron, electron o Why atoms in their elemental state are neutral o Draw diagram of an atom showing numbers and locations of subatomic particles and energy levels o Be able to identify the parts of an atom, their charges, and their locations. o Be able to draw and/or interpret Lewis dot diagrams and/or Bohr models for atoms Periodic Table o Atomic Mass (mass number) vs. Atomic Number o How to determine the valence of an atom o Be able to determine # of bonds an atom can form o Given its atomic number, determine the number of electrons, and covalent bonds an atom will form Reactivity & Bonding o What determines the reactivity of an atom? What is the importance of Valence Electrons? Why are some atoms “stable” and “nonreactive” while others are “unstable” and “reactive”? o Know how covalent bonds are formed o What determines if atoms will combine? o # of bonds needed for C, H, O & N (the four most common elements of living things) to become stable (HONC 1234) → 3 Chemical Formulas, Equations, Reactions o Know that in a chemical reaction, bonds in the reactant(s) are broken, atoms are rearranged, and new bonds are formed in the product(s) o Molecule vs. compound o Coefficients, subscripts, arrow, reactant vs. products Given a chemical formula with a coefficient and subscripts, determine the number of atoms or molecules o Understanding chemical equations, what all the symbols and numbers mean and which substances are the reactants and products. Example: photosynthesis and cellular respiration o Determine if an equation is balanced: Law of Conservation of Matter o Identify the number of atoms of each element found in a formula o Be able to draw and/or interpret a structural formula for a molecule 4