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Biology Chapter's 1 and 17 notes Mr. Lesar Name ---------------------- Chapter 1 Biology - The study of living things. Living things share several characteristics. • • • • • • • • • These characteristics include the following: Living o o Living Living Living things are made up of units called cells Unicellular - one celled Multicellular - composed of more than one cell things grow and develop. things reproduce. things are based on a universal genetic code. o DNA Living things obtain and use materials and energy. o Metabolism Living things respond to their environment. o Stimulus - response Living things maintain homeostasis to survive in diverse environments. o Homeostasis - the maintenance of constant internal conditions in an orgamsm. Structure and function are related in biology. Taken as a group, living things change over time. Levels of organization Biosphere: The part of the Earth that contains all ecosystems Ecosystem: Community and its nonliving surroundings Community:Populations that live together in a defined area Population:Group of organisms of one type that live in the same area Organism: Individual living thing. Organsystem: Example digestive system Organ: Example: Stomach Tissues: A group of cells working together Cells: Smallest functional unit oflife Molecules: Groups of atoms Atoms: Smallest unit of matter. Chapter 1 - backgroundknowledge Control- Variable- Hypothesis - Inference- Theory- Law Chapter17 Notes 17-1 Finding Order in Diversity: The Linnaean System of Classification What is taxonomy? It is the science of naming and classifying organisms. Why not use common names? - Because of regional dialects/terminology etc. Bubbler vs. water fountain, chipmunk vs. ground squirrel, soda vs. pop, etc. Binomial nomenclatureE : ach species is assigned a two partscientific name. • The first part of a scientific name is the genus. • The second part of a scientific name is the species. • Binomial nomenclature was developed by the Swedish botanist CarolusLinnaeus. • The correct way to write a scientific name is as follows. o The grizzly bear is Ursus arctos. Notice how the first letter of the genus is capitalized and the species first letter is lowercased. The genus and species is also underlined. You may also italicize the two words. Hence, Ursus arctos is also acceptable. o Human beings = Homo sapien or Homo sapien o House cat= Felis domesticus or Felis domesticus Linnaeus's system of classification: • Each group or level or organization is called a taxonomic category, or taxon. • There are seven taxonomic categories. They are - from largest to smallest: o Kingdom - The largest and most inclusive of the Linnaeus' classification categories. • Phylum - Composed of similar classes • Class - Composed of similar orders o Order- A broad taxonomic category that consists of "NESTING" - Each level is similar families. nested in the next-higher • Family - A group of genera that share many level. For example all characteristics members of a genus are • Genus - First name in binomial nested in the same family. nomenclature, the 2"d most specific taxon. It Members of the same family consists of one or more physically similar are nested in the same order, species. etc. o Species - A group of organisms so similar to one another that they can breed and produce fertile offspring. I 7-2 Modem Evolutionary Classification • Biologists now group organisms into categories that represent lines of evolutionary descent, not just physical similarities. o What does this mean? Species placed in the same genus should be more closely related to species of any other genus. o Genus placed within a family should be more closely related to one another than to members of any other family. • This strategy, grouping organisms together based on their hypothetical evolutionary history, is called evolutionary classification. Classification using cladistic analysis or cladograms. o Characteristics that appear in recent parts of a lineage but not in its older members are called derived character.s o Derived character can be used to construct a cladogram. A cladogram shows evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms. • • Molecular Clocks o A model known as a molecular clock uses DNA comparisons to estimate the length of time that two species have been evolving independently. To understand molecular clocks, think about a pendulum clock. It marks time with a periodically swinging pendulum. A molecular clock also relies on a repeating process to mark time- mutations. I will NOT test you on this concept. Your backgroundknowledge/vocabulary isn't quite ready. A Simple Cladogram With Derived Characters Alright, as promised, the terms the textbook infers you know because it assumes you covered Chapter's 2-16. We'll take it slow. Don't be overwhelmed by the list. • • • • • • • • • • Unicellular - composed of only one cell Multi-cellular- composed of two or more cells. Autotroph- Organisms that can make its own food. Heterotroph- Organisms that cannot make its own food. o Carnivore - Omnivore - Herbivore - Frugivore - Piscivore - etc Producer- Autotroph or plants Consumer- Heterotrophs Prokaryote- A single celled organism that lacks a nucleus. (All bacteria - both Domain Archaea and Bacteria and Kingdom Eubacteria and Archaebacteria. Eukaryote- Organism whose cells contain nuclei. Aerobic - In the presence of oxygen Anaerobic - Not in the presence of oxygen 17-3 Kingdoms and Domains 1 . DomainBacteria a. Kingdom Eubacteria (think "new" bacteria) i. Unicellular prokaryotes which can be autotrophic or heterotrophic ii. Ecologically diverse group ranging from soil organisms to deadly parasites. 2. Domain Archaea a. Kingdom Archaebacteria (think archaic= old) i. Unicellular prokaryotes which can be autotrophic or heterotrophic ii. These organism live in some of the most extreme environments you can imagine - both aerobic and anaerobic 3. Domain Eukarya a. Kingdom Protista i. Most Unicellular, some colonial, some multicellular, ii. Eukaryotic iii. Autotrophic or heterotrophic b. Kingdom Fungi i. Most multicellular, few unicellular ii. Eukaryotic iii. Heterotrophic c. Kingdom Plantae I. All multicellular ii. Eukaryotic iii. Autotrophic d. Kingdom Animalia I. All multicellular II. Eukaryotic m. Heterotrophic