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Biology II Key Terms: Chapter 1 – Introduction to Life on Earth 1. adaptation – a trait that increases the ability of an individual to survive and reproduce compared to individuals without the trait 2. biodiversity – the total number of species within an ecosystem and the resulting complexity of interactions among them 3. biosphere – the part of Earth inhabited by living organisms; includes both living and nonliving components 4. community – all the interacting populations within an ecosystem 5. conclusion – the final operation in the scientific method; a decision made about the validity of a hypothesis on the basis of experimental evidence 6. control – that portion of an experiment in which all possible variables are held constant; in contrast to the “experimental” portion, in which a particular variable is altered 7. deductive reasoning – the process of generating hypotheses about how a specific experiment or observation will turn out 8. ecosystem – all the organisms and their nonliving environment within a defined area 9. evolution – the descent of modern organisms with modification from preexisting life-forms; strictly speaking, any change in the proportions of different genotypes in a population from one generation to the next 10.experiment – the third operation in the scientific method; the testing of a hypothesis by further observations, leading to a conclusion 11.homeostasis – the maintenance of a relatively constant environment required for the optimal functioning of cells 12.hypothesis – the second operation in the scientific method; a supposition based on previous observations that is offered as an explanation for the observed phenomenon and is used as the basis for further observations, or experiments 13.inductive reasoning – the process of creating a generalization based on many specific observations that support the generalization, coupled with an absence of observations that contradict it 14.metabolism – the sum of all chemical reactions that occur within a single cell or within all the cells of a multicellular organism 15.mutation – a change in the base sequence of DNA in a gene; normally refers to a genetic change significant enough to alter the appearance or function of the organism 16.natural causality – the scientific principle that natural events occur as a result of preceding natural causes 17.natural selection – the unequal survival and reproduction of organisms due to environmental forces, resulting in the preservation of favorable adaptations 18.observation – the first operation in the scientific method; the noting of a specific phenomenon, leading to the formulation of a hypothesis. 19.population – all the members of a particular species within an ecosystem, found in the same time and place and actually or potentially interbreeding 20.scientific method – a rigorous procedure for making observations of specific phenomena and searching for the order underlying those phenomena; consists of four operations: observation, hypothesis, experiment, and conclusion 21.scientific theory – a general explanation of natural phenomena developed through extensive and reproducible observations; more general and reliable than a hypothesis 22.species – the basic unit of taxonomic classification, consisting of a population or series of populations of closely related and similar organisms 23.variable – a condition, particularly in a scientific experiment, that is subject to change