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The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme • Process of Science: The Scientific Method Eight Properties of Living Things 1) Life is highly ordered and complex in structure. 2) Living things regulate their internal environments (homeostasis). 3) Living things grow by adding on new parts to pre-existing structures using energy. 4) Living things use energy to maintain order and structure. 5) Living things respond actively to the environment using energy. 6) Living things reproduce by passing on hereditary information to their offspring. 7) Groups of living things (populations) evolve over several generations. 8) Individual living things are made of one or more cells. The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme • Process of Science: The Scientific Method African savanna Increasing complexity Levels of Biological Organization Ecosystem (Biome) Organelle Mitochondrion The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme • Process of Science: The Scientific Method Cellular Basis of Life • Living things are composed of one of two types of cells – Prokaryotic • Simple and tiny • Example: bacterial cell – Eukaryotic • Complex and 10-100 times larger • Example: cells of a western hemlock tree The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme •Process of Science: The Scientific Method How Do Biologists Classify and Catalog Life? Three Domain System of Classifying Living Things Domain Eukarya Bacteria Eucarya Soil bacteria Water bacteria Disease bacteria Photosynthetic bacteria “Extreme” bacteria that live in high salt, hot water, acid, or alkali (unusual “bacteria”) All living things Plants Animals Fungi Protists Classification Is Based on a Hierarchy of Groupings or Taxons Domain etc. etc. etc. etc.etc. etc.etc. etc. etc. etc.etc.etc. etc. etc. etc.etc. etc. etc. etc.etc.etc.etc. etc.etc.etc. etc.etc.etc.etc. The Taxonomic Hierarchy The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme • Process of Science: The Scientific Method Evolution: Biology’s Unifying Theme 1. In a group of organisms of the same kind there is: – – Individual variation Overproduction & competition 2. Different individuals have different levels of reproductive success 3. Those individuals with successful traits pass on their traits to subsequent generations 4. Groups (populations) of organisms exhibit descent with modification Population with varied inherited traits Elimination of individuals with certain traits Reproduction of survivors Modification: Increased frequency of traits that enhance survival and reproductive success The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme • Process of Science: The Scientific Method Four Steps of the Scientific Method 1) Observation • Measure the natural world using own senses or extensions of the senses (microscopes, detectors, etc.) Observations Questions 2) Hypotheses Formation • Form tentative, predictive, and testable statements about two variables that explain the observations 3) Experimentation • Test how one hypothesis variable effects the other using multiple trials and baseline experiments (controls) 4) Conclusion • Accept or reject the hypotheses based on experimental data Hypotheses Prediction Test: experiment or additional observations Form conclusions The Process of Science: Can Colors Protect a Snake? Observations and Questions Questions: Are some snakes colored because it confers a survival advantage? Do predators avoid colored snakes because they learn that they have poisonous bites? The Process of Science: Hypothesis Formation with Two Variables • Making tentative, predictive, and testable statements about snake coloration Independent variable: set before the experiment begins – The more brightly colored and distinctive the pattern on a snake, the less often the snake will be attacked by predators. Dependent variable: measured during the course of experimentation – The less brightly colored and distinctive the pattern on a snake, the less often it will be attacked by predators. Null hypothesis: There is no correlation between variables – The coloration pattern of a snake has no effect on the attack frequency of predators. The Process of Science: Experimentation Birds allowed to attack different colored artificial snakes The Process of Science: Experimentation Controlled variables to guarantee that only snake color effected bird attacks Artificial snakes were all: • on the same background • exposed to attack for the same amount of time • exposed to attack during the same time each day Multiple trials: Experiment repeated 10 times for each snake type to reduce the chance of collecting “freak” or unrepresentative data • made of identical materials Process of Science: Theories • What is a scientific theory, and how is it different from a hypothesis? – Theories are widely accepted hypotheses that have undergone rigorous and repetitive testing by a large number of scientist The Study of Biology CHAPTER 1 Biology: Exploring Life • What Does It Mean to be Alive? • Levels of Biological Complexity • The Cellular Nature of Life • Categorizing Living Things • Evolution as a Unifying Theme • Process of Science: The Scientific Method