Biology: What is Life?
cell theory
states that all cells come from preexisting cells and that all life is made up of cells; all organism are composed of cells
conclusion
states whether the hypothesis is valid or not
gene
the basic units of heredity and are made up of DNA
prediction
the expected outcome of testing a hypothesis
photosynthesis
the process by which green plants and some other organisms use sunlight to synthesize foods from carbon dioxide and water; generally involves the green pigment chlorophyll and generates oxygen as a byproduct
atom
the smallest particles of elements; basic structural units of elements; combine to make molecules
mutation
the source of differences in DNA; cause changes in the DNA
nucleus
the structure that house DNA; organelle containing DNA
science
the systematic inquiry into all aspects of the physical world; based on general underlying principles
Organ System
-a group of organs that work together in performing vital body functions
Natural Selection
-a process in which individuals inherit traits that are more likely to survive
Organ
-a specialized structure composed of several different types of tissues that together perform specific functions
Ecosystem
-all the organisms in a given area, along with nonliving factors, with which they interact -a biological community and its physical environment
Organism
-an individual living thing, such as a bacterium, fungus, protist, plant, or animal
Tissue
-an integrated group of cells with a common function, structure, or both
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
-an organism's genetic material is inherited information carried by genes; a set of instructions for life
Respond to Environment
-living things need to respond to the environment in order to get energy (food), for defense, and for survival
Homeostasis
-maintaining an internal stable conditions in their environment
Organelle
-membrane bound structure that carry out specific functions
Cell
-the basic unit of life and makes up all living organisms
Biosphere
-the entire portion of Earth inhabited by life -all of the planet's ecosystems
Biology
-the scientific study of life
Evolution
-theory that organisms evolved over time
1. Organized, made up of cells 2. Reproduce 3. Grow and Develop 4. Acquire materials and energy 5. Respond to the environment 6. Regulate/Homeostasis 7. Are composed of Cells 8. Have genetic material 9. Evolve
9 things living things have in common
adaption
Inherited traits that help organisms produce more healthy offspring become increasingly common in the population over many generations
scientific theory
a general and reliable explanation of natural phenomena developed through extensive and reproducible observations; are formulated in ways that can potentially be disproved; involve both inductive and deductive reasoning
species
a group of closely related organisms that are very similar to each other and are usually capable of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring
community
a group of interacting populations
population
a group of organisms of the same species
control
a possible factor in an experiment that is held constant
hypothesis
a proposed explanation based on limited evidence
domain or kingdom
a taxonomic category of the highest rank, grouping together all forms of life having certain fundamental characteristics in common
element
all matter consists of this; can't be broken down into smaller parts and can't be converted by natural chemical reactions
scientific method
an important tool of scientific inquiry; consists of six interrelated elements
natural law
an observable law relating to natural phenomena; do not change over time or distance
binomial system
biologists use this to name organisms
extinction
caused by human interference; if mutations that help an organism to adapt do not occur, a changing environment may doom a species to this
prokaryotic cells
composed of bacteria and archea. Greek meaning is "before nucleus". They are simple organism that lack organelles, anucleated, and are always unicellular; do not contain a nucleus; the genetic material is found in the cytoplasm
plasma membrane
composed of phospholipids; forms the external boundary of the cytoplasm of a cell and that regulates the passage of molecules in and out of the cytoplasm
eukaryotic cells
contain a nucleus that houses genetic material; they also contain other types of organelles; composed of animals, plants, fungi, and protists. Greek meaning is "true nucleus". They are complex, organelles, multicellular, and unicellular
experiment
designed to support or refute the hypothesis
spontaneous generation
emergence of life from nonliving matter
variable
factors that can be manipulated to test the hypothesis to see if they are the cause of the observation
question
form a question about the phenomenon
molecule
form the building blocks of cell
deductive reasoning
generating a hypothesis based on well-accepted scientific theory
observation, question, hypothesis, prediction, experiment, and conclusion
lists of the steps of the scientific method
multi-cellular
many-celled organisms
observation
observe a phenomenon
unicellular
organisms that are made up of a single cell and are genetically identical to their parent cell
inductive reasoning
process of generating a broad generalization based on making many observations that support it and none that contradict it