Biology Trivia
List the steps of the scientific method.
1. Observe 2.) Hypothesize 3.) Predict 4.) Experiment 5.) Analyze data
The nonliving components of an environment.
Abiotic factors
Solutions that contain more hydronium ions than hydroxide ions.
Acids
The amount of energy needed to start a chemical reaction.
Activation energy
Traits that improve an individual's ability to survive and reproduce.
Adaptations
The attractive force between two particles of different substances.
Adhesion
The distribution of individuals among different ages in a population.
Age structure
What are the three parts of the cell theory.
All living organisms are composed of one or more cells. Cells are the basic units of structure an function in an organism. Cells come only from the reproduction of existing cells.
The third phase of mitosis.
Anaphase
The evolution of populations of pathogenic bacteria that antibiotics are unable to kill.
Antibiotic resistance
The production of offspring from one parent.
Asexual reproduction
The simplest particle of an element that retains all of the properties of that element.
Atom
Organisms that use energy from sunlight or from chemical bonds in inorganic substances to make organic compounds.
Autotrophs
Rod shaped bacteria.
Bacilli
What are the three domains of life?
Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
Viruses that infect bacteria.
Bacteriophage
Solutions that contain more hydroxide ions than hydronium ions.
Bases
The division of a prokaryotic cell into two offspring cells.
Binary fission
The two part naming system used for developing scientific names.
Binomial nomenclature
The variety of organisms considered at all levels from populations to ecosystems.
Biodiversity
The principle that states all living things come from other living things.
Biogenesis
The study of locations of organisms around the world.
Biogeography
The study of life.
Biology
Very large climatic regions that contain a number of smaller, but related ecosystems within them.
Biome
The thin volume of Earth and its atmosphere that supports life.
Biosphere
The living components of an environment.
Biotic factors
The number of births occurring in a period of time.
Birth rate
When cells divide uncontrollably it can cause this disease.
Cancer
The number of individuals the environment can support over a long period of time.
Carrying capacity
Chemical substances that reduce the amount of activation energy needed for a reaction to take place.
Catalysts
The smallest unit that can perform all life's processes.
Cell
The complex process in which cells make adenosine triphosphate by breaking down organic compounds.
Cellular respiration
A large, fluid-filled organelle that stores not only water, but also enzymes, metabolic wastes, and other materials. Found in plant cells.
Central Vacuole
Two chromatids of a chromosome are attached at this point.
Centromere
Use light energy to make carbohydrates from carbon dioxide and water.
Chloroplasts
Rod shaped structures made of DNA and protein.
Chromosomes
Sphere shaped bacteria.
Cocci
An attractive force that holds molecules of a single substance together.
Cohesion
A relationship in which one organism benefits, but the other organism is neither helped, nor harmed.
Commensalism
All the interacting organisms living in an area.
Community
The process by which two prokaryotes bind together and one cell transfers DNA to the other cell through a structure called a sex pilus.
Conjugation
During an experiment, this provides a normal standard against which the biologist can compare results of the experimental group.
Control group
Bonds that form when two atoms share one or more pairs of electrons.
Covalent bonds
The division of a cell's cytoplasm.
Cytokinesis
A network of thin tubes and filaments that crisscross through the cytoplasm and give shape to the cell from the inside.
Cytoskeleton
Areas that receive an average of less than 25 centimeters of rainfall per year.
Deserts
The movement of molecules from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.
Diffusion
Type of selection in which individuals that display a more extreme form of a trait have greater fitness than individuals with an average form o the trait.
Directional selection
The spatial distribution of individuals within the population.
Dispersion
Type of selection in which individuals with either extreme variation of a trait have greater fitness than individuals with the average form of the trait.
Disruptive selection
List the 8 levels of taxa in the hierarchy of classification.
Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species
The gradual, sequential regrowth of a community of a species in an area.
Ecological succession
The branch of biology that studies organisms interacting with each other and with the environment.
Ecology
The study of interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of their environment.
Ecology
Includes all of the organisms and the nonliving environment found in a particular place.
Ecosystem
Negatively charged particles in an atom.
Electrons
Substances that cannot be broken down chemically into simpler kinds of matter.
Elements
Movement of individuals out of a population.
Emigration
A system of membranous tubes and sacs which functions primarily as an intracellular highway along which molecules are moved around the cell.
Endoplasmic reticulum
The ability to do work.
Energy
Biological catalysts are called:
Enzymes
Ecosystem which occurs where freshwater rivers and streams flow into the sea.
Estuaries
What are the 6 kingdoms of life?
Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia.
What are the three domains of life?
Eukarya, bacteria, archae
Type of cells that possess a membrane-bound nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
Eukaryotes
The development of new types of organisms from preexisting types of organisms over time.
Evolution
The combination of glycolysis and additional anaerobic pathways.
Fermentation
A measure of an individual's hereditary contribution to the next generation.
Fitness
A single pathway of feeding relationships among organisms in an ecosystem that results in energy transfer.
Food chain
The remains or traces of an organism that died long ago.
Fossil
The total genetic information available in a population.
Gene pool
Field of biology devoted to understanding how characteristics are transmitted from parents to offspring.
Genetics
An organisms genetic makeup (ex. AA)
Genotype
Biochemical pathway in which one six-carbon molecule of glucose is oxidized to produce two three-carbon molecules of pyruvic acid.
Glycolysis
A system of flattened, membranous sacs which receive newly made proteins and lipids, package them, and redistribute them around the cell.
Golgi apparatus
Bacteria that stain red during a gram stain.
Gram negative
Bacteria that stain purple during a gram stain.
Gram positive
The place where an organism lives.
Habitat
The transmission of characteristics from parents to offspring.
Heredity
Organisms that must get energy from food instead of directly from sunlight or inorganic substances.
Heterotrophs
when the two alleles in a pair are different.
Heterozygous
Proteins around which DNA wraps and super-coils.
Histones
The maintenance of a stable level of internal conditions even though environmental conditions are constantly changing.
Homeostasis
Anatomical structures that occur in different species and that originated by heredity from a structure in the most recent common ancestor of the species.
Homologous structure
Movement of individuals into a population.
Immigration
The idea that all organisms interact with other organisms in their surroundings and with the nonliving portion of their environment.
Interdependence of organisms.
Cells spend most of their lives in this phase.
Interphase
Bonds that form from attracting negative and positive charges.
Ionic bonds
Atoms of the same element that have a different number of neutrons.
Isotope
A photomicrograph of the chromosomes in a normal dividing cell found in a human. Chromosomes are placed in pairs and lined up.
Karyotype
Mendel's law that states that factors separate independently of one another during the formation of gametes.
Law of independent assortment
One of Mendel's laws which states that a pair of factors is segregated, or separated, during the formation of gametes.
Law of segregation
How long on average an individual is expected to live.
Life expectancy
Any factor, such as space, that restrains the growth of a population.
Limiting factor
Replication stage which allows a virus to hide in its host cell for days, months, or years.
Lysogenic Cycle
Vesicles which bud off of the golgi apparatus that contain digestive enzymes.
Lysosomes
Replication stage in which a virus invades a host cell, produces new viruses, and ruptures the host cell by releasing newly formed viruses.
Lytic Cycle
Anything that has mass and takes up space.
Matter
Division which takes place during the formation of gametes.
Meiosis
The sum of all chemical reactions that take place in an organisms.
Metabolism
The second phase of mitosis
Metaphase
Organelles that transfer energy from organic molecules to adenosine triphosphate.
Mitochondria
Division process which results in two new cells with genetic material that is identical to the genetic material of the original cell.
Mitosis
A relationship in which both organisms derive some benefit.
Mutualism
The specific role, or way of life, of a species within its environment.
Niche
Large and very complex organic molecules that store and transfer important information in the cell. Often found in the nucleus.
Nucleic acid
Organisms that cannot live where molecular oxygen is present.
Obligate anaerobe
The production of mature eggs, or ova.
Oogenesis
Compounds made primarily of carbon atoms.
Organic compounds
What are the 7 characteristics of life?
Organization, Responsiveness, Homeostasis, Metabolism, Growth, Reproduction, Ability to evolve.
The process by which molecules of water diffuse across a cell membrane from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.
Osmosis
A relationship in which one individual is harmed while the other individual benefits.
Parasitism
The scientific study of disease.
Pathology
A diagram that shows how a trait is inherited over several generations.
Pedigree
A protein-carbohydrate compound found in bacterial cell walls.
Peptidoglycan
A permanently frozen layer of soil under the surface.
Permafrost
An organism's appearance (ex. purple flowers)
Phenotype
Large, non polar organic molecules that make up the cell membrane.
Phospholipids
Process by which autotrophs convert light energy from the sun into chemical energy in the form of organic compounds.
Photosynthesis
Clusters of pigment molecules which capture light energy in the light reaction of photosynthesis.
Photosystems
When pollen grains produced in the male reproductive parts of a flower are transferred to the female reproductive part.
Pollination
A group of organisms that belong to the same species and life in a particular place at the same time.
Population
All the members of a species that live in one place at one time.
Population
Measurement of how crowded a population is.
Population density
Situation in which an individual of one species eats all or part of an individual of another species.
Predation
The likelihood that a specific event will occur.
Probability
Single-celled organisms that do not have a membrane bound nucleus.
Prokaryotes
Type of cells that lack a membrane bound-nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.
Prokaryotes
The first phase of mitosis
Prophase
The idea that change occurred rapidly, in a few thousand, rather than a few millions years.
Punctuated equilibrium
Organelles that direct protein synthesis in the cytoplasm.
Ribosomes
Chromosomes that determine the sex of an organism.
Sex chromosomes
A trait that is coded for by an allele on a sex chromosome.
Sex-linked trait
The production of sperm cells.
Spermatogenesis
Spiral-shaped bacteria.
Spirilla
Belief prior to the 17th century that life could arise spontaneously from non-living material.
Spontaneous generation
Type of selection in which individuals with the average form of a trait have the highest fitness.
Stabilizing selection
Grapelike clusters of cocci bacteria.
Staphylococci
Small pores usually located on the undersurface of a leaf that allow for gas exchange.
Stomata
When cocci bacteria occur in chains.
Streptococci
A close, long-term relationship between two organisms.
Symbiosis (Symbiotic relationship)
The science of describing, naming, and classifying organisms.
Taxonomy
Fourth and final phase of mitosis.
Telophase
The biome that we live in in Western Kentucky.
Temperate Deciduous Forest
The second stage of photosynthesis
The Calvin Cycle (aka the dark reaction or the light-independent reaction)
The first stage of photosynthesis
The light reaction
Groups of cells that have similar abilities and that allow an organ to function.
Tissues
A genetically determined variant of a characteristic.
Trait
When a prokaryote takes DNA from its outside environment.
Transformation
The process by which water evaporates from the leaves of plants.
Transpiration
A cold, largely treeless biome that forms a continuous belt across northern north america, europe, and asia.
Tundra
An intermediate host that transfers a pathogen or parasite to another organism.
Vector
Anatomical structures that seem to serve no purpose but that resemble structures with functional roles in related organisms.
Vestigial structures
A nonliving, infectious particle made up of nucleic acid and a protein coat or nucleic acid and a lipoprotein coat.
Virus
Different variations of a gene are called:
alleles
The factor in an experiment that is observed or measured.
dependent variable
The idea that evolution and speciation occurs at a regular, gradual rate.
gradualism
When both alleles of a pair are alike.
homozygous
The factor which the experimenter manipulates during the experiment.
independent variable
A mechanism by which populations experience descent with modification; the idea that nature selects for or against certain phenotypes.
natural selection
A disease that can pass from animals to humans.
zoonosis