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What is Biology? Bio = Life ology = the study of Biology= the study of life OBJECTIVES • 1. Relate the relevance of Biology to a person’s daily life. • 2. List the characteristics of living things. • 3. Summarize the hierarchy of organization within complex multicellular organisms. • 4. Distinguish between homeostasis and metabolism and between growth, development, and reproduction. Characteristics of Life • The world is full of familiar things: What criteria do we use to determine what is living or once alive? Living things share 7 characteristics of Life: • 1. Organization and the presence of one or more cells. • 2. Response to stimuli • 3. Homeostasis • 4. Metabolism • 5. Growth/ Development • 6. Reproduction • 7. Change through time 1. Organization and Cells • Organization is the highest degree of order within organisms. • CELL: smallest unit that can perform life’s processes. • Cells can be UNICELLULAR: one cell. Ex. Bacteria • Cells can be MULTICELLULAR: more than 1 cell. • Cell tissue Organ Organ system Organism 2. Response to Stimuli • This means that living organisms have physical or chemical changes in the internal or external environment. CAUSE AND EFFECT. • Ex. When you flash a pen light into your pupil, your pupil constricts • Ex. Increase the temp of water will make fish more active • Ex. A rabbit gets scared so it runs away. • Ex. You get cold so you put on a jacket. Another example is plant stem growth. It has a positive response to light. You can see this in the picture below. The process of the plant growing to the sun is: PHOTOTROPISM If you touch your hand to a hot pan, you will have a negative response. (If you don't, you should have some serious concerns.) • For example, if I put chocolate chip cookies out on the lab stations tomorrow during class (dream on) most of you would have a positive response. You would get up and move towards the stimulus. 3. Homeostasis • This is a mechanism that allows organisms to maintain stable internal conditions. • Ex. Cells can only take in or release certain amounts of water or the cell will burst or shrivel up and die. This mechanism keeps the cell from doing this. • Organisms have regulatory systems that do this When our body gets too hot, what is our bodies response? Why? • Ex. Our body response is to sweat. This is a homeostatic mechanism to maintain an ideal body temperature. • Ex. When we get really cold, what is our homeostatic response? – We shiver. This is a similar mechanism to maintain body temperature. Can you think of other homeostatic mechanisms? 4. Metabolism • Metabolism is the sum of all chemical processes that our bodies use. It is all the processes that take in and use energy for cellular processes. • Our bodies get the energy they need from food through metabolism, the chemical reactions in the body's cells that convert the fuel from food into the energy needed to do everything from moving to thinking to growing. • Metabolism is a complicated chemical process, so it's not surprising that many people think of it in its simplest sense: as something that influences how easily our bodies gain or lose weight. 5. Growth and Development • These concepts are different. • All living things GROW and increase in size. • Ex. The growth of living cells is a process called: Cell Division. • Development is when an organism becomes a mature adult. • Ex. The human body develops from one single, fertilized egg. • Ex. Tadpoles develop into a frog. 6. Reproduction • All organisms produce new organisms like themselves in a process called Reproduction. • During reproduction, organisms pass on hereditary information . • Hereditary info is encoded segments of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). – 2 types of reproduction: • Sexual and Asexual 7. Change through Time • Organisms change during the lifetime of lifecycle, but genetic info doesn’t change. • However, populations of living organisms evolve or change over time. • Evolution of animals is essential to the survival of species. • Ex. Peppered Moth- changes over the last 200 years. Were lighter colored, but with pollution, moths have evolved a darker color to help camouflage themselves against predation. • Ex. Darwin’s Finches- Differences in beaks due to what was prevalent to eat. • Ex. Bacteria evolve and become resistant to antibiotics. This is a change over time. Themes in Biology • With the vast array of animal species on Earth, how can one understand so many different types? • Scientists use unifying themes to help explain the world and biology. • The themes are: Diversity and Unity of Life, Interdependence or Organisms, and the Evolution of Life DIVERSITY and UNITY OF LIFE • What is diversity? –It refers to the variety of organisms. • If life is diverse, how can we also explain it as UNIFIED? • All Organisms have specific things in common. – Genetic code: rules of how cells use hereditary info in DNA – Presence of organelles that carry out cellular activities • The “Tree of Life” is a representation showing the relationships by ancestry among organisms. • While organisms share certain genes, no 2 types of organisms have the same full set of genes. This shows that there are 3 main lineages of life: THREE DOMAINS OF LIFE • 1. Bacteria • 2. Archaea • 3. Eukarya INTERDEPENDENCE of ORGANISMS • Organisms interact with each other throughout the living world. • ECOLOGY is a branch of biology that deals with organisms interacting with each other and with the environment. • Interdependence is defined as: – is a dynamic of being mutually responsible to and sharing a common set of principles with others. – Animals are interdependent because they often rely on others for survival and stability. – Ex. Panther eats a bird which eats a nut from a tree. Tree needs CO2 and water, CO2 is waste product of all animals. EVOLUTION of LIFE • Evolution is “descent with modification”. This means = change over time. • Natural selection- organisms that have certain favorable traits are better able to survive and reproduce. • Adaptation: traits that improve an individual’s ability to survive and reproduce.