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Week Of 4/1/134/12/13 Mrs. Tate D110 biology 4-1-13 Monday ( 5th and 6th only) Start working on the evolution web-quest. 4-2-13 Tuesday ( 5th and 6th only) Start working on the evolution web-quest ( DUE TOMORROW IF YOU DID NOT FINISH AT THE START !) 4-3-13 Wednesday Demonstrate an understanding of the structure and function of DNA/RNA; understand that there is evidence that supports evolution. 5TH/6TH PERIOD TURN IN YOUR WEBQUESTS! 1. Bell Ringer 47: EOC SE 6A practice questions ( 8 min) 2. Complete Stations 1-7 ( and turn work into the tray). 3. Closure: Reminder List Reminders: Extra Credit #3 posted on website ( due 4/9/13) You control the outcome of your grade….you determine if a zero remains a zero ( take care of them or keep that failing grade of a zero) Check the daily calendar board. ( know the due dates for homework/daily work and when you will have a quiz or a test) evolution test next Tuesday. 4-4-13 Thursday Students should be able to demonstrate an understanding of how changes in DNA results in mutations and explain and illustrate the processes of replication, translation, and transcription. ( review old SE’s) 1. 2. 3. 4. Turn in Station Rotation ( 1-7) Bell Ringer 48 ( EOC 6B and 6C ) Copy down vocab ( its due for grading 4-8-13) Relating science to life – DID YOUR CLASS EARN A FREEBIE????- IF NOT EOC BOOK CHAPTER: EVOLUTION Reminders: Extra Credit #3 posted on website ( due 4/9/13) Vocabulary Homework due 4-8-13 You control the outcome of your grade….you determine if a zero remains a zero ( take care of them or keep that failing grade of a zero) Check the daily calendar board. ( know the due dates for homework/daily work and when you will have a quiz or a test) Evolution Test Next Tuesday! Chapter 18- Classification ( homework due date 4-8-13 Taxonomy Binomial Nomenclature Kingdom Phyla ( phylum) Class Order Family Genus Species Taxon Derived ancestors Cladogram Phylogeny Domain Archaea Bacteria Eukarya Eubacteria Archeabacteria Protista Fungi Animalia Plantae 4-5-13 T. G .I. Friday Students should be able to demonstrate an understanding of how organisms are classified. 1. Bell Ringer 49 ( while you are working on this, I will walk around and check your evolution place mats/notes) 2. Classification Engage/Explain 3. Kingdom Matrix Worksheet 4. Closure: reminders Reminders: Extra Credit #3 posted on website ( due 4/9/13) Vocab Homework due 4-8-13 ( chapter 18 terms) You control the outcome of your grade….you determine if a zero remains a zero ( take care of them or keep that failing grade of a zero) Check the daily calendar board. ( know the due dates for homework/daily work and when you will have a quiz or a test) Evolution Test Next Tuesday! the similarities and differences. Bacteria Cell (Prokaryotic) Plant Cell (Eukaryotic) Review Cell Theory • All living things are composed of cells • Cell are the basic unit of structure and function in living things. • New cells are produced from existing cells What are some differences between plant and animal cells? Classification of Living Things Chapter 18 http://analyzer.depaul.edu/astrobiology/kingdoms.jpg Engage : Classification REMEMBER BIODIVERSITY ______________ total of all the living things in an ecosystem SPECIES ___________ population of organisms that share similar characteristics and can breed with each other Biologists have identified and named 1.5 million over______________ species so far. Estimates = between 2-100 million species yet be discovered http://www.millan.net WHY CLASSIFY? Identifies and names organisms Groups organisms in a logical manner TAXONOMY _______________ = branch of biology that names and groups organisms Naming and organizing animals into groups with biological significance helps make sense of relationships. BIRD . . . ? An animal with feathers Image from: http://www.flagsplus.com/flags/21778_bird_collage.jpg A good classification system: places organisms in a group with other organisms that are similar A good classification system: UNIQUE Uses names that are _________ Can CHANGE _____ as new data is discovered RELATIONSHIPS Shows _____________ of organisms Image from: http://www4.d25.k12.id.us/ihil/images/Cougar.jpg Common names can vary Example: puma, catamount, mountain lion, cougar . . . are all names for same animal By using a universally accepted scientific name, scientists can be sure they are discussing the same organism Common names vary Chipmunk Streifenhornchen (German) Tamia (Italian) Ardilla listada (Spanish) Image from: http://www.entm.purdue.edu/wildlife/chipmunk_pictures.htm Common names can be misleading Ex: A jellyFISH isn’t a fish, but a seaHORSE is! Image from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jellyfish Sea cucumber sounds like a plant but… it’s an animal! Image from: http://www.alaska.net/~scubaguy/images/seacucumber.jpg Common names can be misleading http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Buteo_buteo_5_%28Marek_Szczepanek%29.jpg In the United Kingdom, BUZZARD refers to a hawk In the United States, BUZZARD refers to a vulture. http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/HoodedVulture(HM).jpg By mid 19th century, scientists recognized that using common names was confusing. Scientists agreed to use ____________ Latin and Greek to give a single name to each species. EXAMPLE: RED OAK Quercus foliis obtuse-sinuatis setaceo-mucronatis “oak with deeply divided leaves with deep blunt lobes bearing hair-like bristles” PROBLEMS: Names too hard and long to remember! Different scientists described different characteristics. Carolus Linnaeus comes to the rescue! Swedish botanist who devised a new classification system This system is still used today! (1707-1778) Image from: http://www.medusozoa.com/images/linnaeus.jpg Linnaeus’s System Organisms are grouped in a hierarchy of 7 different taxonomic levels TAXONS OR ____________ Each organism has a two part scientific name = BINOMIAL _________________________ NOMENCLATURE Linneaus System of Classification Kids Prefer Cheese Over Fried Green Spinach Kingdom (broad) Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species (specfic) Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Carnivora Family Felidae Genus Panthera Species leo http://www.vetmed.wisc.edu/dms/fapm/personnel/tom_b/2004-lion.jpg BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE (2-name naming system) 1st name = _______________ GENUS NAME • Always capitalized 2nd name = _________________ SPECIES NAME –Always lower case UNDERLINED or Both names are ______________ ITALICS written in ____________. GENUS = group of closely related species GENUS = Ursus(Includes many kinds of bears) Ursus arctos Ursus maritimus Ursus americanis SPECIES = unique to each kind of bear http://www.macecanada.com/images/bears/kodiak_bear.gif http://students.cs.byu.edu/~tole/Virtual%20Zoo/polar-bear.jpg http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Black_bear_large.jpg Binomial nomenclature Humans Homo sapiens Homo sapiens Image from: http://www.earlylearning.ubc.ca/images/photo_baby.jpg MODERN EVOLUTIONARY CLASSIFICATION 18-2 In a way, organisms determine who belongs to their species by choosing with whom they will __________! Taxonomic groups are “invented” by scientists to group organisms with similar MATE _______________. characteristics BUT. . . which characteristics are MOST IMPORTANT? Should a dolphin be grouped with fish because it has fins and lives in water? OR with mammals because it breathes air and makes milk for its young? Look at these 3 organisms: BARNACLE CRAB http://greatescapetravel.com/album/MAUI2001/pages/molokini_kona_crab.html http://nearctica.com/ecology/habitats/barnacle.jpg http://siena.earth.rochester.edu/ees207/Gastropoda/ LIMPET BIOLOGY by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishers© 2006 Judging by appearances you would probably put limpets and barnacles together in a group and crabs in a different group. BUT LOOKS can be deceiving! Look more closely! LIMPET BARNACLE Limpet and barnacle larvae are very different. Barnacles have jointed limbs. Limpets DON’T ! Barnacles have a segmented body Limpets DON’T ! Barnacles have an exoskeleton that molts. Limpets DON’T ! CRAB Look more closely! LIMPET CRAB BARNACLE Crab and barnacle larvae are very similar Barnacles have jointed limbs. So do CRABS ! Barnacles have a segmented body So do CRABS ! Barnacles have an exoskeleton that molts. So do CRABS ! LIMPET SNAIL Limpets have an internal anatomy more like snails, which are MOLLUSKS. Because of these characteristics, scientists have concluded that barnacles are more closely related to crabs than to MOLLUSKS http://siena.earth.rochester.edu/ees207/Gastropoda/ Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing ©2006 BOTH crabs and barnacles have been classified as CRUSTACEANS MODERN TAXONOMY Grouping organisms based on their evolutionary history = Evolutionary classification _____________________ MODERN TAXONOMY The study of an organism’s evolutionary history = phylogeny ____________is a system of classifying CLADISTICS organisms that considers only characteristics that are “new evolutionary innovations”. Characteristics that appear in recent parts of a lineage but not in its older members = __________________ Derived characters Derived characters can be used to construct a diagram that shows evolutionary relationships among groups of organisms = ________ Image from:http://sps.k12.ar.us/massengale/images/clip0075.jpg cladogram Derived characters appear at branches of the cladogram showing where they first arose. Cladograms help scientists understand how one lineage branched from another Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing ©2006 All of the classification methods discussed so far are based on physical similarities and differences. Even organisms with very different anatomies can share common traits. EX: All living things use ______________to pass on DNA and RNA information and control growth. http://sbchem.sunysb.edu/msl/dna.gif GENES of many organisms show remarkable similarity at the molecular level. Similarities in DNA can be used to help determine classification and evolutionary relationships between organisms. http://sbchem.sunysb.edu/msl/dna.gif Humans have a gene that codes for a protein that helps our muscles move MYOSIN called __________ Researchers have found a gene in yeast that codes for a myosin protein, that enables internal cell parts to move. http://universe-review.ca/I11-32-yeast.jpg Similarities in DNA can be used to help show evolutionary relationships and how species have changed. African vulture American vulture Stork Traditionally these first two were classified together in falcon family. Storks were put in a separate family. Images from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 American vultures have a peculiar behavior. When they get overheated, they urinate on their legs to cool off African vulture American vulture Stork The only other bird that does this is the STORK. Images from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 DNA comparisons showed more similarities between American vulture and stork DNA than DNA from the two kinds of vultures suggesting a recent common ancestor more ______________________ between storks and American vultures African vulture American vulture Images from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 Stork Comparisons of DNA can also be used to mark the passage of evolutionary time A model that uses DNA comparisons to estimate the length of time that two species have been evolving independently MOLECULAR CLOCK = ________________ Mutations ____________ occur all the time and cause slight changes to the DNA code. Degree of dissimilarity _________ is an indication of how long ago two species shared a common ancestor Image from: Biology by Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall Publishing©2006 Different genes accumulate mutations at different rates so there are many molecular clocks “ticking”. http://www.kahlert.com/web/images/tech_clock.gif Allows scientists to time different kinds of evolutionary events, like using different hands on a clock. Kidspiration by Riedell Source: see end of show 4-8-13 Monday Biology – students should understand the different characteristics of kingdoms. 1. Bell Ringer # 50 ( I will check vocabulary homework as you work on your bell work) – EOC 8A practice questions (1-3) 2. Matrix Review/Clean-up/ 18-3 Notes 4. 18 1-3 worksheets ( work with your desk-mate ONLY Closure ( reminders) Reminders: Evolution Test tomorrow. Extra credit assignment #3 due tomorrow Vocabulary test this week over chapter 18 terms Classification test this Friday 18-3 Ref. Fig. 18-12 Domains are more inclusive and larger than kingdoms. The three domains are: Eukarya ( protists, fungi, plants, and animals), Bacteria ( organisms from kingdom Eubacteria), and Archaea ( organisms from kingdom Archaeabacteria) Characteristics of each kingdom pages 458-461 Archaea and Bacteria Domains Archaea Domain: Archaea are prokaryotic cells which are typically characterized by membranes that are branched hydrocarbon chains attached to glycerol by ether linkages. The presence of this ether containing linkages in Archaea adds to their ability of withstanding extreme temperature and highly acidic conditions. Extreme halophiles - i.e. organisms which thrive in highly salty environment, and hyperthermophiles - i.e. the organisms which thrive in extremely hot environment, are best examples of Archaea. Bacteria Domain: Even though bacteria are prokaryotic cells just like Archaea, their membranes are made of unbranched fatty acid chains attached to glycerol by ester linkages. Cyanobacteria and mycoplasmas are the best examples of bacteria. As they don't have ether containing linkages like Archaea, they are grouped into a different category - and hence a different domain. There is a great deal of diversity in this domain, such that it is next to impossible to determine how many species of bacteria exist on the planet. Eukarya Domain Eukarya Domain: As the name suggests, the Eukaryote are eukaryotic cells which have membranes that are pretty similar to that of bacteria. Eukaryote are further grouped into Kingdom Protista (algae, protozoans, etc.), Kingdom Fungi (yeast, mold, etc.), Kingdom Plantae (flowering plants, ferns, etc.) and Kingdom Animalia (insects, vertebrates, etc.). Not all Eukaryotes have a cell wall, and even if they do they don't contain peptidoglycan as bacteria do. While cells are organized into tissues in case of kingdom Plantae as well as kingdom Animalia, the presence of cell walls is only restricted to the members of kingdom Plantae. Domains continued…. Each of these three domains of life recognized by biologists today contain rRNA which is unique to them, and this fact in itself forms the basis of three-domain system. While the presence of nuclear membrane differentiates the Eukarya domain from Archaea domain and Bacteria domain - both of which lack nuclear membrane, the distinct biochemistry and RNA markers differentiate Archaea a nd Bacteria domains from each other Reading for knowledge…. Characteristics of each kingdom pages 458-461 of Chapter 18 in your biology book. 4-9-13 Biology Agenda - Place your belongings ( except for a writing utensil ) on the lab tables and grab your journals! Biology: demonstrate an understanding of the mechanisms of evolution and the evidence that supports it; understand how a dichotomous key works. 1. Dichotomous Keys ( explain ( notes) and explore ( practice)- 20 min 2. Test: Evolution ( 30 minutes) – 2 minutes per each question (when you finish continue to work on your dichotomous key worksheet ) Turn worksheet into tray Reminders: extra credit due today. Classification test Friday Chapter 18 vocabulary quiz tomorrow journal check today! How do we determine the identity of something (like the name of a butterfly, a plant, or a rock)? A _______________ is a series of questions which leads to the identification of an item. dichotomous key Dichotomous means “divided into two parts.” There, dichotomous keys will always provide two choices in each step. For Example: Question 1: Is the person ______ or female? male Question 2: Does the person wear glasses or not? Question 3: Is the person wearing blue jeans or not? etc. 4-10-13 Wednesday Biology: Demonstrate an understanding of how organisms are classified within science; understand how to use a dichotomous key. Today’s Agenda 1.Dichotomous Key Project Over view. ( 5 min) 2.Chapter 18 vocabulary quiz ( 15 min) 3. Kingdom Dichotomous Key Station Rotation ( 15 minutes per each station) - which means you should complete TWO rotations today.---Use your own paper 4. Reminders/Clean up room ( 5 min) Reminders: Zeros remain zeros until YOU handle it! Grades will be fully updated by 8 pm tonight. Check skyward and if you are failing, HANDLE YOUR BUISNESS! Classification Test this Friday ( hope you study every evening) I will except extra credit assignment #2 until next Friday, #3 by this Friday. Your project will be due next Wednesday ( 4/17/13)