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LECTURE PRESENTATIONS For CAMPBELL BIOLOGY, NINTH EDITION Jane B. Reece, Lisa A. Urry, Michael L. Cain, Steven A. Wasserman, Peter V. Minorsky, Robert B. Jackson Chapter 1 Introduction: Themes in the Study of Life Lectures by Erin Barley Kathleen Fitzpatrick © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. What is Biology? • Biology is the _________________ • Biologists ask questions such as: • Life defies a simple, one-sentence definition • Life is recognized by ____________________ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Properties of Life Figure 1.3 ______ ______________ ______________ ___________ ___________ __________ _____________ _____________ _________ ___________ ___________ Levels of Biological Organization __________ ___________ __________ ___________ ___________ __________ ___________ ____________ ___________ _____________ _________ Emergent Properties • Life exists from a ___________ to a global scale • New properties emerge at __________ of complexity • Emergent properties • Emergent properties characterize nonbiological entities as well – For example, a functioning bicycle emerges only when all of the necessary parts connect in the correct way © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. The Power and Limitations of Reductionism • Reductionism – – For example, studying the molecular structure of DNA helps us to understand the chemical basis of inheritance • An understanding of biology balances reductionism with the study of emergent properties – For example, new understanding comes from studying the interactions of DNA with other molecules © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Systems Biology • System – • Systems biology constructs models for the dynamic behavior of whole biological systems • The systems approach poses questions such as – How does a drug for blood pressure affect other organs? – How does increasing CO2 alter the biosphere? © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Theme: Organisms Interact with Other Organisms and the Physical Environment • Every organism interacts with its environment, including nonliving factors and other organisms • Both organisms and their environments are affected by these interactions © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1.5a • How do we affect our environment? © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Theme: Life Requires Energy Transfer and Transformation • _________ is used to perform life’s activities at all levels – Work, including moving, growing, and reproducing, requires a source of energy • Living organisms transform energy from one form to another • Energy flows through an ecosystem, usually entering as ________ and exiting as ________ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1.6 Sunlight Heat When energy is used to do work, some energy is converted to thermal energy, which is lost as heat. Producers absorb light energy and transform it into chemical energy. An animal’s muscle cells convert chemical energy from food to kinetic energy, the energy of motion. Chemical energy Chemical energy in food is transferred from plants to consumers. (a) Energy flow from sunlight to producers to consumers (b) Using energy to do work A plant’s cells use chemical energy to do work such as growing new leaves. Theme: Structure and Function Are Correlated at All Levels of Biological Organization • ___________ and ___________ of living organisms are closely related – A leaf is thin and flat, maximizing the capture of light by chloroplasts – A bird’s wing is adapted to flight © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Theme: The Cell Is an Organism’s Basic Unit of Structure and Function • Cell – • All cells: © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Cell Types • Eukaryotic cell • Prokaryotic cell © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Theme: Life is Based on Heritable Information in the Form of DNA • _______________ are condensed DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) making up a cell’s genetic material • DNA makes up __________ • Genes: • Basis of all reproduction, growth, and repair of multicellular organisms is _______________ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1.9 25 m DNA Structure and Function • Each chromosome has one long DNA molecule with hundreds or thousands of genes • Genes encode information for building ____________ • DNA is inherited by offspring from their parents • DNA controls the ________________ and ____________ of organisms © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1.10 Sperm cell Nuclei containing DNA Egg cell Fertilized egg with DNA from both parents Embryo’s cells with copies of inherited DNA Offspring with traits inherited from both parents • Each DNA molecule is made up of two long chains arranged in a ______________ • Made of building blocks called ___________, nicknamed A, G, C, and T © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Genes control protein production indirectly DNA RNA ____________ • Gene expression: © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Protein _____________ Genomics: Large-Scale Analysis of DNA Sequences • Genome – The human genome as well as other organisms have been sequenced using DNA-sequencing machines • Genomics is the study of sets of genes ________________________ Figure 1.12 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Theme: Feedback Mechanisms Regulate Biological Systems • Feedback mechanisms allow biological processes to ________________ • Negative feedback – • Positive feedback – © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1.13 Negative feedback A Enzyme 1 Examples: - B Excess D blocks a step. D D Enzyme 2 D C Enzyme 3 D (a) Negative feedback W Enzyme 4 Positive feedback X Enzyme 5 Examples: - Excess Z stimulates a step. Z Y Z Z Enzyme 6 Z (b) Positive feedback Evolution, the Overarching Theme of Biology • Evolution is the theme that makes sense of everything we know about biology. It explains both the unity and diversity of living organisms – Organisms are modified descendants of common ancestors – Similar traits among organisms are explained by descent from common ancestors – Differences among organisms are explained by the accumulation of heritable changes © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Diversity of Life • 1.8 million species have been identified – – – – – – 100,000 Fungi 290,000 Plants 52,000 Vertebrates 1,000,000 Insects 250,000 Protists Billions of Bacteria • 1,000’s of new species are identified each year • Totals are predicted between 10-100 million © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Grouping Species: The Basic Idea • Taxonomy – • _________________ (1707-1778) – Father of Modern Taxonomy, born in Sweden – Now called _____________________ – Groupings and principles behind groupings have been significantly changed due to new understanding of Biology (DNA, Microscopes, etc.) Table of Animal Kingdom (1735) © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Linnaeus 1775 1. D 2. K 3. P 4. C 5. O 6. F 7. G 8. S Three Domains of Life • Archaea • Bacteria • Eukarya – All eukaryotic organisms – 4 Kingdoms of Eukarya, all widely varied • ___________ (multicellular) – Produce their own food through photosynthesis • ___________ (single-celled to multicellular) – Absorb nutrients from surroundings • ___________ – Obtain nutrients through digestion • ___________ – Photosynthesis, nutrient absorption, digestion Figure 1.15 2 m (b) Domain Archaea 2 m (a) Domain Bacteria (c) Domain Eukarya Kingdom Animalia 100 m Kingdom Plantae Protists Kingdom Fungi Figure 1.14 Species Genus Family Order Class Phylum Kingdom Domain Ursus americanus (American black bear) Ursus Ursidae American Black Bear Carnivora Domain: Eukarya Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Mammalia Class: Mammalia Order: Carnivora Family: Ursidae Chordata Genus: Ursus Species: Ursus americanus Species name includes Genus and species in either format: Genus species or Genus species Animalia Eukarya Unity in the Diversity of Life • Despite diversity, life has extreme unity at all levels of hierarchy – DNA, Skeletons, Tissue Organization, Cell Structure Skeletal Muscle © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Charles Darwin and the Theory of Natural Selection • Charles Darwin published: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection in 1859 • 2 Main Points: 1. ___________________ ___________________ • • Darwin’s 3 Observations: 1. _________________________ 2. _________________________ 3. _________________________ Current species arose from a succession of ancestors 2. ___________________ • Mechanism for Descent with modification Orchid Flowers © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Fossils Charles Darwin • Darwin inferred that: – Individuals ______________ to their environment survive – Individuals in a population will have the ________________ • Evolution occurs as the ________________________of individuals • Environment selects desirable traits (_______________) • Natural selection leads to _________________ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Evolution occurs due to unequal reproductive success – Individuals with desirable traits rerpoduce and pass those traits on • Environment selects desirable traits (Natural Selection The Tree of Life, Descent with Modification • “Unity in diversity” arises from “_____________________” – ________________- forelimb of the bat, human, and horse and the whale flipper all share a common skeletal architecture • Fossils provide additional evidence of anatomical unity from descent with modification • Darwin proposed natural selection could cause an ancestral species to give rise to two or more _______________________ – For example, the finch species of the Galápagos Islands are descended from a common ancestor © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Insect-eaters Green warbler finch Certhidea olivacea Gray warbler finch Certhidea fusca Bud-eater Seed-eater COMMON ANCESTOR Warbler finches Figure 1.22 Sharp-beaked ground finch Geospiza difficilis Vegetarian finch Platyspiza crassirostris Mangrove finch Cactospiza heliobates Insect-eaters Tree finches Woodpecker finch Cactospiza pallida Medium tree finch Camarhynchus pauper Large tree finch Camarhynchus psittacula Cactus-flowereaters Seed-eaters Ground finches Darwin’s Galapagos Finches Small tree finch Camarhynchus parvulus Large cactus ground finch Geospiza conirostris Cactus ground finch Geospiza scandens Small ground finch Geospiza fuliginosa Medium ground finch Geospiza fortis Large ground finch Geospiza magnirostris How do we do Science? Scientific Method 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Science – • Inquiry – Observation Question Hypothesis -Observe and record data -Qualitative -Quantitative -Question about observations -Proposed answer to a testable question Results (Data) Experiment -Data collected from experiment -Tests hypothesis -Repeatable -Hypothesis cannot be proven Conclusion 1: -Data support hypothesis Conclusion 2: -Data does not support hypothesis Publish results -Share information with scientific community Types of Data • Data are recorded ______________ or items of information – Qualitative data – • Ex. Coastal Redwoods grow on the western coast of California – Quantitative data • Ex. The current tallest Coastal Redwood is 379.3 ft. © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Forming and Testing Hypotheses • Hypothesis – – Questions are based on observations or inductive reasoning • ___________________draws conclusions through the logical process of induction – Hypotheses lead to predictions that are ___________ – Hypotheses must also be ____________ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 1.24a Observations Question Hypothesis #1: Dead batteries Hypothesis #2: Burnt-out bulb Figure 1.24b Hypothesis #1: Dead batteries Hypothesis #2: Burnt-out bulb Prediction: Replacing batteries will fix problem Prediction: Replacing bulb will fix problem Test of prediction Test of prediction Test falsifies hypothesis Test does not falsify hypothesis Deductive Reasoning and Hypothesis Testing • Deductive reasoning – If organisms are made of cells (premise 1), and humans are organisms (premise 2), then humans are composed of cells (deductive prediction) • There are often _____________ alternative hypotheses • Failure to falsify a hypothesis ___________ prove that hypothesis – Ex. Replace your flashlight bulb, and it now works; this supports the hypothesis that your bulb was burnt out, but does not prove it (perhaps the first bulb was inserted incorrectly) © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. A Case Study in Scientific Inquiry: Investigating Mimicry in Snake Populations • Observation – Many poisonous animals are brightly colored (warning coloration) – Some animals appear to mimic this pattern w/o being poisonous – Predators rarely attack coral snakes, not trial and error, natural selection increased frequency of predators that avoid that coloration • Question – What is the function of mimicry? • Hypothesis – Deception is an adaptation that lowers a harmless animal’s risk of being eaten because it’s mistaken for a poisonous animal • Experiment – Tested in 2001 with the Scarlet Kingsnake and the Eastern Coral Snake © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • Both species live in the Carolinas, but the kingsnake is also found in regions without venomous coral snakes • If predators inherit an avoidance of the coral snake’s coloration, then the colorful kingsnake will be attacked less often in the regions where coral snakes are present © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Field Experiments with Artificial Snakes • To test this mimicry hypothesis, researchers made hundreds of artificial snakes: – An experimental group resembling kingsnakes – A control group resembling plain brown snakes • Equal numbers of both types were placed at field sites, including areas without poisonous coral snakes (a) Artificial kingsnake (b) Brown artificial snake that has been attacked © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. • After four weeks, the scientists retrieved the artificial snakes and counted bite or claw marks • The data fit the predictions of the mimicry hypothesis: the ringed snakes were attacked less frequently in the geographic region where coral snakes were found © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Experimental Controls and Repeatability • Controlled Experiment – • Experimental Variable – factor in experiment that can _________________(the effect of coloration on the behavior of predators) – Only one variable should differ between control group and experimental group • Experimental Groups – • Control Groups – • Observations and experimental results must be _______________ © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Theories in Science • Theory – _____________ in scope than a hypothesis – General, and can lead to ______________________ – Supported by a _________________________ in comparison to a hypothesis © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.