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Fundamentals of Biology
What is life???????
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Do we know? Biologists have never agreed upon a definition. Soooooooooo……… they describe the properties that living things have in common.
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Living things
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The ingredients of life
Beside water, carbon, hydrogen and oxygen are necessary for life. Compounds made up of these three things are known as organic compounds
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The four main groups of organic molecules
Carbohydrates Proteins Lipids Nucleic acids
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Carbohydrates Sugars and starches used for energy
Structure – chitin (shells of marine organisms) and cellulose (the main ingredient of wood and plant fibers)
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Proteins Composed of smaller subunits called amino acids
In addition to C, H, and O proteins contain Nitrogen Functions: make up muscles, enzymes, hormones, carry oxygen, and even act as antifreeze in Antarctic fishes
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Lipids Fats, oils and waxes
Functions: energy storage, waterproofing, insulation and help with buoyancy
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Nucleic Acids DNA and RNA
Functions: store and transmit the basic genetic information of all living things
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Energy Photosynthesis – plants produce usable energy (glucose) from the sun, carbon dioxide and nutrients. Respiration – use the energy formed by plants in addition to oxygen to gain the needed energy to function.
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Cells Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes Prokaryotes – no organelles
Eukaryotes – organelles : nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, golgi apparatus, etc..
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Life in the sea What is unique about living in the ocean? Salt water
Movement of water – tides and curents Temperature
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Dealing with the salt Diffusion – molecules moving from high concentration to low. Cells spend most of their energy actively transporting materials opposite the direction of diffusion.
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Marine fish have the ability to rid their body of excess salt – through their gills and in their urine
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Temperature Marine organisms are ectotherms (cold-blooded) or endotherms (warm-blooded). The organisms have adapted to live in particular temperature ranges where their enzymes would work the best.
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Reproducing Sexual – eggs, sperm and fertilization – offspring inherits genes from each parent Asexual – budding, and fission – all offspring are exact copies of parent
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Why the diversity? Theory of evolution – the gradual alteration of a species genetic make-up. Why does this occur? Natural Selection – the best adapted individuals produce more offspring
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Classifying all the organisms
KING PHILLIP CAME OVER FOR GOOD SPAGHETTI KING PHILLIP CAME OVER FROM GREECE SATURDAY Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species
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Humans Kingdom Animalia (multicellular organisms that eat other organisms; mostly mobile Phylum Chordata (animals with a semi-rigid rod, a notochord, running down its back Class Mammalia (chordates with hair and mammary glands) Order Primates (mammals with well-developed hands and a high level of intelligence Family Hominidae (primates which walk upright on two legs, hands well structured for manipulating objects; cerebrum of the brain is relatively large Genus Homo (tool-using hominids with very large brain Species Homo sapiens (only surviving species of genus Homo)
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Bottlenose Dolphin Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia
Order Cetacea Family Delphinidae Genus Tursiops Species Tursiops truncatus
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