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1-1 Themes of Biology

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1-1 Themes of Biology Six unifying themes How energy is acquired Compare/contrast living vs. non-living things BIOLOGY Biology science of life is the study of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 1-1 Themes of Biology


1
1-1 Themes of Biology
  • Six unifying themes
  • How energy is acquired
  • Compare/contrast living vs. non-living things

2
BIOLOGY
  • Biology science of life is the study of ALL
    living things from unicellular organisms (too
    small to see with the naked eye) to interactions
    among millions of organisms.

3
BIOLOGY
  • 40 million species inhabit the Earth but only 2
    million have been identified
  • First organism was probably unicellular and about
    3.5 billion years ago. These lasted for millions
    of years alone. Then over time, we have what we
    see today

4
6 Major Biological Themes (ICHORE)
  • 1. Cell structure and function
  • 2. stability and Homeostasis
  • 3. Reproduction and inheritance
  •  
  • 4. Evolution
  • 5. Interdependence of organisms
  • 6.matter, energy and Organization

5
Cell Structure and Function
  • Cell-basic unit of life. All organisms are made
    of cells. Unicellular is 1 cell and multicellular
    is more than 1 cell. Cells have different
    functions. Cells are small but highly organized
    and they contain information to carry on lifes
    processes.
  • Surrounded by membrane. Inside cell is set of
    instructions (genetic material) necessary to make
    new cells.
  • Unicellular organisms produce exact organisms.
    Multicellular organisms go through cell
    differentiation to produce new cells, which are
    different.

6
Stability and Homeostasis
  • Stable level of internal conditions is
    homeostasis. Found in all living things. Human
    body temperature is 98.60 F or 370 C.

7
Reproduction and Inheritance
  • Reproduction is to produce new organisms like
    themselves. Hereditary information is passed on.
    This is in the form of a large molecule called
    deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). DNA in 1 human would
    extend several feet. Humans have 50 trillion
    cells.

8
Reproduction and Inheritance
  • A short segment of DNA that contains instructions
    for development of a single trait is called a
    gene.
  • sexual reproduction combining hereditary
    information from two organisms of same species to
    form 1 new offspring that contains the hereditary
    information of both. EX. Sperm with egg

9
Reproduction and Inheritance
  • Asexual reproduction hereditary
    information from different organisms is not
    combined. 1 cell gives rise to 2 cells with exact
    identical copy of hereditary information. EX.
    Bacteria and single cell algae.

10
Evolution
  • To change over generations
  • Natural selection is the driving force in
    evolution. Those, which have the best traits, are
    better able to reproduce and pass these traits on

11
Interdependence of Organisms
  • Ecology is the study of interactions of organisms
    with one another and their environment. Small
    ecosystems (a spider and its web) to a large
    ecosystem (the rain forest).

12
Interdependence of Organisms
  • The rain forest has fragile topsoil but very
    stable environments. Humans are destroying the
    rain forest. They cut and burn the trees, they
    build roads, and they use it for farmland. This
    all causes plants and animals to become extinct,
    it depletes the topsoil of minerals and causes it
    to dry up and harden under the heat of the sun
    and oxygen is replaced by carbon dioxide.
  • Use to be 6 million square miles in the 90s but
    55,000 square miles are destroyed each year. At
    this rate, the rain forest could be gone in 100
    years.

13
Interdependence of Organisms
  • Products from the rain forest include rubber,
    coffee, fruits and nuts, wood for furniture (teak
    and mahogany), wood for paper.

14
Matter, Energy and Organization
  • All living things need a constant supply of
    energy.
  • Photosynthesis is light to put together. To
    capture energy from the sun and change it to a
    usable source

15
Autotrophs
  • Organisms that obtain energy by making their own
    food.
  • EX. Plants convert water and carbon dioxide
    into sugars and starches.

16
Heterotrophs
  •  Organisms that must take in food to make their
    energy.
  • EX. All animals, some fungi and many unicellular
    organisms.
  • Must consume autotrophs or other heterotrophs

17
Living vs. Non-living
  • Living things, even the smallest (algae) are more
    advanced than non-living things (salt crystals,
    rock crystals)
  •  
  • Living things have greater organization, greater
    stability, greater growth, more energy use and
    better reproduction.
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