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					Chapter 1 A View of Life Your skin is an ecosystem There are more individual organisms living on your skin right now than there are people in the world.  Most bacteria are not harmful to you  ◦ Normal flora/resident bacteria ◦ Actually helpful  You and those bacteria actually have a lot in common Image from: http://mercola.com The Characteristics of Life There’s no “official” check-off list  I’ve seen lists with as few as 5 characteristics and as many as 8  Some things occupy a gray area  ◦ Viruses  So, what do a shark and an orchid have in common?  Shark: http://britannica.com  Orchid: http://www.landscape-and-garden.com Living Things: Are Organized  Acquire Materials and Energy  Maintain an Internal Environment  Respond  Reproduce and Develop  Have Adaptations   See your book for pictures and more examples Evolution: The Core Concept of Biology A shared family history for every living thing on the planet.  Evolution explains both the unity and the diversity of life on the planet today  ◦ Unity: Cells, DNA, common enzymes ◦ Diversity: Sharks and orchids!  An evolutionary tree is a lot like a megafamily tree. ◦ It starts out narrow and small and then branches out. Image from: http://www.cropsforhealth.colostate.edu Organizing Life’s Diversity  Humans like to organize things ◦ Lots of reasons why Taxonomy: identifying and naming organisms  Systematics: putting those organisms into groups based on evolutionary relationships  Categories of Classification Domain  Kingdom  Phylum  Class  Order  Family  Genus  Species  Scientific Names  Modern system invented by Carl Linnaeus ◦ Early to mid 1700’s Name each organism using binomial nomenclature (two-name naming system)  Uses Latin (dead language)  Genus species or Genus species  Homo sapiens, Pisum sativum  ◦ H. sapiens, P. sativum Domain This is probably a new one for you.  Bigger than kingdoms  3 domains  ◦ Bacteria (regular bacteria—prokaryotes) ◦ Archaea (strange prokaryotes—extreme environments) ◦ Eukarya (all eukaryotes) Kingdoms Figuring out kingdoms for archaea and bacteria has turned out to be kind of tricky  Eukarya kingdoms  ◦ Animalia (multicellular, no photosynthesis) ◦ Plantae (multicellular, photosynthesis) ◦ Fungi (single or multi-celled, no photosynthesis) ◦ Protista (mostly single celled, some photosynthesis) Natural Selection Process by which evolution occurs  Darwin and Wallace both figured it out independently in the mid-1800’s  Darwin is more famous because he wrote the book On the Origin of Species  Important for understanding modern-day problems like antibiotic resistance  Descent with Modification Leads to the diversity of life  One species can be the common ancestor of many different species  Adaptations can be due to differences in:  ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Where they live How they acquire energy Reproduction strategies Other things too Ecosystems and the Biosphere  Ecosystems can be large or small ◦ The Sahara desert vs. the skin in your nose  Any ecosystem is made of ◦ Individuals—which belong to ◦ A population—which interact to form a ◦ Community  Nutrients and other resources are constantly cycled through and ecosystem due to the law of conservation of matter Energy in Ecosystems Energy is constantly being added to the Earth system from the sun  That energy flows from one living thing to the next  Energy cannot be destroyed, but it does become more unorganized and less useable  So, all (most) living things depend on the constant input from the sun  The Impact of People Birds build nests, termites make mounds, pine trees drop needles  All organisms have an impact on the environment where they live  Humans are unique in the scope and size of the modifications we make to our environment  Science: A Way of Knowing There are lots of ways to learn about your world and the things in it  It depends on what you want to know and for what purpose  Religion, aesthetics, ethics and science all aim to answer different kinds of questions  Science attempts to answer questions about how the natural world works through the process of the scientific method  The Scientific Method It’s not a check-list, it’s the way you approach a question  Observation—it’s how you know there’s a question that needs to be answered  ◦ Not just with eyes—other senses ◦ Can be aided by tools/technology Inductive reasoning—using creativity to link separate ideas and “see” connections  Hypothesis—a possible, testable explanation  Experiments  A good experimental design ensures that: ◦ You are testing what you want to test ◦ The results will be meaningful As many variables as possible are kept constant  One experimental (independent) variable  One responding (dependent) variable  Test groups vs. control groups  Many repetitions  Using models  When the real thing is: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦  Too big/small Too expensive Too complex Too rare Examples ◦ Computer models ◦ Mice instead of humans—drug trials ◦ Terrarium  Models aren’t perfect Data  Data (pl.), datum (sing.) ◦ “The data are convincing.” Can be qualitative or quantitative  Use statistics to analyze  ◦ Determine significance  Data may suggest a correlation between two variables ◦ Be careful! Correlation does not necessarily equal causation Conclusion Rejecting the hypothesis may turn out to be just as useful as accepting it  Leads to different/further investigations   Scientists report their findings in peerreviewed journals ◦ Lots of critical reviewing from others in the same field ◦ It can be hard to get published Scientific Theory “It’s just a theory.”—NO  Theories in science are unifying concepts  ◦ Big, wrap-around ideas that tie a bunch of stuff together  Cell theory, Germ theory of disease, Gene theory  T.V. shows use it wrong almost all of the time Controlled Study Basics Placebo—a “sugar” pill. It looks like you’re getting the treatment, but you’re not.  Blind study—you don’t know if you’re getting the placebo or the real treatment  Double blind study—person and researcher don’t know who is getting a placebo  Science Publications  Peer-reviewed journals ◦ Research findings are submitted by scientists and a panel of other scientists in that field decide if the research was good or not and whether to publish it.  Scientific magazines ◦ Can be popular or technical ◦ Report information from the journals to the general public Bioethical Issues Scientific investigations can lead to the development of new technologies  What to do with those technologies (whether and how to use them) is an ethical decision  What do we do with the information we discover?  What laws need to be put in place to regulate different issues?  The End! You did it! Let’s look at the Bioethical Issue on pg 18 of your book.
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            