Fundamentals of Biology: Building Blocks, Challenges, and Evolution
Building Blocks of Life: Important Molecules Water (H 2 O) Gases (O 2, CO 2 ) Nutrients Nitrate (NO 3 - ), nitrite (NO 2 - ), ammonia (NH 4 + ) Phosphate (PO 4 -3 ) Silica (SiO 2 ) Iron (Fe), and other trace metals
Important Molecules Carbohydrates (C, H, O) sugars, starches – energy cellulose, chitin - structure Lipids (C, H, O, some P) fats, oils, waxes – energy, buoyancy, insulation structural – cell membranes hormones – messengers
Important Molecules Proteins (C, H, O, N, some S) amino acids enzymes – metabolism hormones – messengers hemoglobin – oxygen transportation structural – hair, nails, feathers, skin, muscle
Important Molecules Nucleic acids (C, H, O, N, P) nucleotides – genetic information DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) – chromosomes, genes RNA (ribonucleic acid) – translate to proteins ATP (adenosine triphosphate) – store and transfer energy
From Atoms to Ecosystems
molecules → organelles → cell (organism) molecules → cell (organism) cells → tissues → organs → organ systems → organism cells → tissues → organism
From Atoms to Ecosystems organism → population → community → ecosystem
Ecosystems and Adaptations Adaptation: The adjustment or changes in behavior, physiology, and structure of an organism to become more suited to an environment. ( A characteristic of an organism that makes it fit for its environment or for its particular way of life. (McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Bioscience. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.)
Challenges of Life in the Ocean Organisms deal with challenges that are unique to marine environment Must maintain suitable conditions inside their body, regardless of the external conditions - Homeostasis
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Temperature Dictates where organisms live Affects how organisms metabolize Physiologically adapted to live within a certain temperature range USFWS NOAA
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Temperature
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Temperature Ectotherms “Cold-blooded”, metabolic heat lost Cannot regulate internal temperature, so same temperature as environment (poikilotherms) Most marine animals (invertebrates, most fish, most reptiles) NOAA
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Temperature Endotherms “Warm-blooded”, metabolic heat retained (fat, feathers for insulation) Can regulate internal temperature, regardless of external environment (homeotherms) Mammals, birds
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Temperature Endotherms Some large fish and turtles are endotherms, but not homeotherms Metabolic heat retained, so warmer than surroundings, but internal temperature is relative, not set
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Salinity Diffusion – molecules move from high concentrations to low until equal Cell membranes are selectively permeable to different substances Osmosis – passive diffusion of water across membranes Active transport – expend energy to work against diffusion
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Salinity Osmoconformers – do not regulate
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Salinity Osmoregulators
Challenges of Life in the Ocean - Salinity Osmoregulators Hawksbill turtles have glands (near eyes) to excrete excess salt
Evolution The gradual change in the genetic makeup of species and populations The diversity of organisms today is the result of billions of years of evolution
Evolution Theory of evolution – not a hypothesis, but a widely accepted scientific concept Evidence exists from the past (fossils) Evolution observed within our lifetime (bacteria, plants, worms, insects)
Evolution Adaptation and natural selection – individuals best adapted to their environment survive and produce offspring Changes and challenges – adapt or become extinct
Phylogenetics Reconstructs evolution by grouping organisms by their relatedness Fossil record (incomplete) Body structure Reproduction and behavior Embryology and larval development Genetics (DNA, RNA)
Phylogenetics using ribosomal RNA sequence Carl Woese
Phylogenetics
Classification of Organisms Kingdom
sub-, super-, infra-categories, too: - subclass Placentalia (placentals) - suborder Odontoceti (toothed whales) Classification of Organisms
Species – binomial nomenclature (Linnaeus) Genus species Use instead of common names to avoid confusion: “Dolphin” Coryphaena hippurus – Mahi mahi fish Tursiops truncatus – Flipper
Classification of Organisms Species – “populations of organisms that have common characteristics and can successfully breed with each other” Acropora palmataAcropora cervicornis
Classification of Organisms One species or three? Montastraea annularisMontastraea faveolataMontastraea franksi