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Grade 11 University Biology – Unit 1 Some Unit Summary Notes Classifying A species is a group of related organisms that can interbreed in nature and successfully produced fertile offspring. There are three species concepts used to classify Morphological – based on structure, but “how much is too much” (i.e., How much difference is needed to define a new species?) Biological – based on ability to mate and produce fertile offspring. What happens if organisms are isolated (e.g., islands) and cannot meet to mate? Are they different? Phylogenetic – based on evolutionary history and makes use of DNA …even if organism is dead Bionomial nomenclature – A method to name species Taxonomy – process of identifying, naming and classifying species. Example below is for Homo sapiens Rank Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species Taxon Eukarya Animalia Chordata Mammalia Primate Homoinidae Homo sapiens Three types of evidence are used to classify organisms: Anatomical are physical characteristics such as size and shape (e.g., shape of bones of dinosaurs and birds suggest they are related Physiological is the functioning of organisms including the proteins they synthesize (e.g., two species may look the same, but if their bodies make different proteins, they are not related) DNA evidence refers to similarities in the genes Analyzing the relationships among species, you can construct a phylogenetic tree to illustrate the linkages. Kingdoms and Domains Two cell types classify organisms into three domains: (1) prokaryote (e.g., lacking membranebound nucleus, most are unicellular, no multicellular – rather live in colonies) and (2) eukaryote (e.g., membrane-bound nucleus, both unicellular and multicellular, larger and more complex than prokaryote) Dichotomous Key Simple process to choose between only two options (e.g., black hair – Yes or No) to identify species Types of Diversity Genetic Diversity – Variety of inheritable characteristics within a group including “invisible” characteristics that an organism carries but does not express Species Diversity – Variety and abundance of a species in a given area. This can include representatives from all six Kingdoms. A measure of a healthy environment is high species diversity Ecosystem Diversity – Variety of ecosystems found on Earth. These can differ in biotic and abiotic factors, relationships and size. They can be large (e.g., oceans) or very small (e.g., your mouth, a single plant). This ensures a wide variety of species can live on Earth Biodiversity is important for resiliency (e.g., sudden change requires a response. With greater diversity, some organisms will survive the change. A disease could kill all individuals if they were the same. With genetic diversity, some may survive and re-establish the population). Virus and Prions (2.1) Viruses are not classified in any Kingdom of living things A virus contains genetic material (DNA or RNA) BUT a virus cannot reproduce independently. Instead, a host is required to make multiple copies of the virus (replication) A virus is classified by the shape of its protein covering (capsid) A virus enters a host cell. In the lytic cycle, the viral DNA takes over the nucleus and instructs the host cell to replication the viral particles. When the cell explodes, the viral particles are released to infect other cells. In a lysogenic cycle, the viral DNA becomes part of the host cell chromosomes (...at this stage, it forms a provirus). The provirus genetic material is copied as the host cell undergoes cell division. At some point, the provirus will separate from the host chromosomes and replicate in a lytic cycle process. As a provirus, the virus can remain dormant for a long period. Prions are pathogenic variants of proteins They occur naturally in nerve cells, but they cause several degenerative brain diseases Prokaroytes: Eubacteria and Archaeabacteria (2.2) Prokaryotes have two domains: Eubacteria and Archaeabacteria Both domains have similar sizes and shapes being the smallest, simplest living organisms on Earth. They occur in air, water, soil and on other organisms. The most common shapes are coccus, bacillus (rod) and spirillium (spirals). Archaea can also be flat and square All species are unicellular BUT they can form colonies or link to form filaments Species in both domains can be aerobic or anaerobic Archaea live in extreme environments (e.g., high temperature, high salt concentration). They are called extremophiles. Only Eubacteria cause disease Some Eubacteria fix nitrogen, others are decomposers Some Archaea fix atmospheric carbon dioxide, other species live in the intestine of cows (methanogenic) and release methane gas. All species in both domains reproduce asexually by binary fission. The steps are: The singular circular chromosome consists only of double-stranded DNA The chromosome duplicates The two chromosomes attach to the inside of the cell membrane The cell elongates As the cell membrane lengthens, the chromosomes separate The plasma membrane grows inward and a septum (cell wall) forms The original cell separates into two smaller, genetically identical cells Endosymbiosis Two prokaryotic cells formed a symbiotic team --- and over millions of years – became one organism A cynobacteria becomes the chloroplasts, the heterotrophic bacteria becomes the mitochondria and the spiral shaped bactreria forms the flagella Eukaryote: Life Cycles and Reproduction (2.3) Asexual Reproduction Budding and fragmentation This involves mitosis – cell division in which daughter cells receive the exact chromosome and genetic makeup as a parent cell (i.e., clones) Sexual Reproduction Gametic Life Cycle Animals and some brown algae Meiosis – a diploid cell (two copies of each chromosome) produces haploid gametes (one copy of each chromosome). The gametes fuse during fertilization to produce a diploid zygote. All cell division after that is mitosis. Only haploid cells are gametes (…egg and sperm) Zygotic Life Cycle All fungi, some green algae and many protozoans Zygote undergoes meiosis The only diploid cell is the zygote. All other cells are haploid Sporic Life Cycle Plants and many algae Mitosis occurs in both diploid and haploid phases – called alternation of generations (i.e., spore-producing sporophyte generation and gamete-producing gametophyte generation Kingdom Protista (2.4) All eukaryotes except animals, plants and fungi Three groups of unicellular protests: (1) protozoans (aquatic, animal-like heterotrophs that ingest or absorb food), (2) slime moulds and water moulds (fungus-like, heterotrophs) and (3) diatoms, dinoflagellates and euglenoids (plant-like, autotrophs) Protozoans Live in water, soil, and living and dead organisms Special vacuole for digesting food and removing waste Classified by means of movement Carcazoans – produce limb-like extensions of cytoplasm (peusdopod) to move and engulf food Ciliates – short, hair-like cilia to swim. Food (bacteria) are swept into an oral groove in the body, and a vacuole forms to digest the food Flagellates – one or more long flagella to swim Sporozoans – no movement. Rather, parasites with a life cycle adapted to transferring offspring to a new host Fungus-like Like fungus – produce spores Like protozoan – glide from place to place and ingest food Like plants – cell walls with cellulose Different types Plasmodial slime moulds – similar to protozoans, but produce spores Cellular slime moulds – part of life cycle is independent with mitosis cell division. Water moulds – aquatic – appear as fuzzy, white grow on decaying matter – grow as mass of threads over plant or animal, digest it, and then, absorb nutrients from the organism – produced reproductive cells with flagella Plant-like Unicellular, aquatic, chlorophyll-containing BUT do not have leaves, stems, roots or water-conducting tissues Different types Diatoms – body with two halves, cell walls contain silica, yellow-brown choloroplasts to photosynthesize Dinoflagellates – live in oceans, protective coats of cellulose plates, most have two flagella (one is hidden in a grove), Gonyaulax sp. makes ride tide Euglenoids – plant and animal characteristics, chloroplasts, no cell wall, swim with flagella, eyespot to find light for photosynthesis, also absorb nutrients across cell membrane. Algae (3.1) Algae are in the Kingdom Protista Like plants, algae are autotrophs and store food energy as starch. Algae and plant DNA sequences are very similar. Yet, algae lack true stems, roots and leaves. As well, algae are all aquatic because their zygote and embryo are not covered by protective layers. Algae have chlorophyll, but it can be different colours (Why? Pigments mask the green colour of the chlorophyll). Algae are named by the pigment: brown, red or green. Brown Algae Structurally diverse from simple filaments to long blades Large brown algae is commonly called sea weed or kelp Anchored by holdfasts Blades have air vescicles that keep the blades near the surface of the water (...and sun energy) Red Algae Green Algae Small and delicate May have filamentous branches Red pigment allows them to absorb limited sunlight – Thus, able to live at deep depths Build up carbonate layers to form reefs Cause “red tides” Range from one cell to multicellular organisms May live on trunks of trees, but most are aquatic Closely related to green plants because (1) cell wall contains cellulose, (2) possess similar chlorophyll and (3) store food as starch Evolution to Land Plants are adapted to living on land. To survive, many evolutionary adaptations were required Vascular bundle to support a stem, as well as transport water and minerals (xylem and phloem). Xylem contain lignin which is a support material Thick cellulose cells and waxy cuticle to prevent drying out Roots to anchor the plant and allow for uptake of water and minerals from the ground Leaves to perform photosynthesis and allow for gas exchange). Sporic life cycle (i.e., alternation of generations) Enclosed embryo to protect it and use of wind to disperse spores or seeds Kingdom Plantae (3.2) Plants have three categories: (1) non-vascular plants, (2) seedless vascular plants and (3) seedproducing vascular plants. The category is based on (1) presence or absence of vascular tissue and (2) the type of structure (seed or spore) that disperses the species A seed is a plant organ that contains an embryo with a food supply covered by a protective coat. Fertilization (fusion of female and male cells) takes place before the seed leaves the parent plant A spore is a reproductive cell that forms without fertilization and produces a new organism. Spores do not have stored food, but they are surrounded by a protective coat. Fertilization takes place after the spore leaves the plant Non-vascular plants: Bryophytes Includes liverworts and mosses Do not have vascular tissues – Thus, they lack true roots, stems and leaves Life cycle is alternation of generations. The adult generation (sporophyte) produces spores while the spore generation (gametophyte) produces sex cells. Seedless vascular plants Ferns Have vascular tissue. Xylem transports water and minerals, as well as supports the plant against the pull of gravity. Phloem transports organic nutrients. Ferns produce spores, but like seed-bearing plants, ferns have leaves, stems and roots. In the life cycle, the sporophyte is larger and longer lived. The sporophyte and the gametophyte are both photosynthetic and capable of survival and growth independently Seed vascular plants: Gymnosperms and Angiosperms A seed contains a plant embryo and stored food. Within the seed are all the parts needed to produce a new plant. Seeds contain the next sporophyte generation. Two types of spores develop inside the body of the sporophyte: (1) a pollen grain (reduced gametophyte) produces non-flagellated sperm and (2) the female gametophyte (located in the ovule) produces the egg Gymnosperms Conifers Developed vascular tissue extending from root, through stem to needle-like leaves Produce uncovered seeds Angiosperms Flowering plants Produce seeds covered by fruits Petals of flowers attract pollinators Ovary develops into fruit to aid seed dispersal Sexual reproduction occurs in the flower Monocots (one cotyledon) or dicot (two cotyledons). Cotyledon = seed leaf inside the seed Kingdom Fungi (3.3) Except yeast, fungi are multicellular eukaryotes that are heterotrophic by absorption (i.e., excrete digestive enzymes into environment and absorb nutrient molecules through their cell membrane) Basic structure is threadlike filaments called hyphae that develop into spores. Hyphae elongate at their tips and branch to form a filamentous network called mycelium Lack chloroplasts Cell wall is chitin Produce windblown spores during both asexual and sexual reproduction Four major Phyla types determined by (1) reproductive strategy and (2) structure of fruiting body Chytrids – single-celled, primitive fungi Male and female gametes fuse to make a resting spore Asexual reproduction is the cytoplasm cleaves in a sporangium to produce motile zoospores Ascomycota - Sac Fungi Largest fungal group Sexual reproduction produces ascospores within asci (inside fruiting body) Asexual produces spores Yeasts are unicellular sac fungi that reproduce asexually by budding or mitosis Zygospore Fungi Sexual reproduction has a zygospore form prior to mitosis Asexual reproduction involves spores forming within sporangia (see illustration) Club Fungi (Basidiomycota) Sexual reproduction Hyphae from two types fuse. Resulting mycelium has two nuclei and may form fruiting bodies of mass of hyphae called basidia. The fruiting body releases spores called basidiospores (see illustration left) Fungi Imperfecti Unknown mode of sexual reproduction Always reproduce asexually by producing spores Lichen Symbiotic relationship between fungus and cynobacteria or green algae. May be parasitic relationship Kingdom Animalia (3.4) Evolved from Protista Over 30 animal Phyla All eukaryotes Homo sapiens are members of the Chordata Phylum – animals with a notechord (...a flexible, rod shaped body found in embryos, and in vertebrates, it becomes the main element of the vertebral column). Most Chordata have vertebrates and an internal skeleton of bone or cartilage Heterotrophs Mobile by means of muscle fibres Multicellular with specialized cells that form tissues and organs Live cycle in which adult is a diploid Reproduce sexually and produce an embryo that undergoes stages of development Classification of animals is based on the following anatomical features Anatomical Feature Variation between Groups Cells not organized into tissues Cells organized into tissues Tissues organized into organs Organs organized into system Number of Body Layers Two cell layers – ectoderm (outside) and endoderm (inside) Three cell layers – ectoderm, endoderm and mesoderm Symmetry Asymmetrical – Body shape is irregular Radial – Any longitudinal cut through the midpoint yields equal halves Bilateral – Only one longitudinal cut through the midpoint yields equal halves Sac Plan – Mouth used for intake of nutrient molecules and exit of waste molecules Tube-within-a-Tube Plan – Separate openings (mouth and anus) for food intake and waste exit Acoelomate – Have no coelom (fluid-filled cavity lined with mesoderm that runs length of the body, absorbs shock, allows organs to exist unattached to body) Pseudocoelomate – Have false coelom, coelom incompletely lined with mesoderm Coelomate – Have true coelom In protostomes the first (protos) embryonic openings become the mouth (stoma) In deuterostomes, the first opening becomes related to the anus and the second (deuteron) opening becomes the mouth No segmentation (no repeating parts) Segmentation – Series of repeating parts from anterior to posterior Sessile – Adults are not able to move around but animal is motile at some point in its life Motile – Able to more spontaneously and actively Asexual Sexual Level of Organization Body Plan Body Cavities Embryonic openings Segmentation Movement Reproduction