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The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools and Techniques

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Page 1: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

The Science of LifeChapter 1

Table of Contents

Section 1 The World of Biology

Section 2 Themes in Biology

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Section 4 Tools and Techniques

Page 2: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Objectives

• Relate the relevance of biology to a person’s daily life.

• Describe the importance of biology in human society.

• List the characteristics of living things.

• Summarize the hierarchy of organization within complex multicellular organisms.

• Distinguish between homeostasis and metabolism and between growth, development, and reproduction.

Page 3: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Biology and You

• Biology and Society– Biology is the study of life and can be used to

both solve societal problems and explain aspects of our daily lives.

Page 4: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life

• Living things share the same 7 characteristics o properties: organization and cells, response to stimuli, homeostasis, metabolism, growth and development, reproduction, and evolution.

Page 5: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Chapter 1

The Seven Properties of Life

Section 1 The World of Biology

Page 6: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued• Organization and Cells

– Organization is the high degree of order within an organism’s internal and external parts and in its interactions with the living world.

– A cell is the smallest unit of an organism that can perform all life’s processes.

– Unicellular- organisms are made up one cell.– Multicellular organisms are made up of many

cells and show a hierarchy of organization going from the organism to the atom.

Page 7: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Organization and Cells

Page 8: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Response to Stimuli– Another characteristic of life is that an organism

can respond to a stimulus—a physical or chemical change in the internal or external environment.

Page 9: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Homeostasis– All living things have mechanisms that allow them

to maintain stable internal conditions. Homeostasis is the maintenance of a stable level of internal conditions even though environmental conditions are constantly changing.

Page 10: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Metabolism– Metabolism is the

sum of all the chemical reactions that take in and transform energy and materials from the environment.

Page 11: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Growth and Development– The growth of living things results from the

division and enlargement of cells.

Page 12: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Growth and Development– The growth of living things results from the

division and enlargement of cells.– Development is the process by which an

organism becomes a mature adult. – Continuous: offspring similar to parent– Metamorphic: major body changes occur

Page 13: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Reproduction– Living organisms pass on hereditary information

from parents to offspring, also called reproduction.

Page 14: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Reproduction– Living organisms pass on hereditary information

from parents to offspring, also called reproduction.

– Asexual: one parent, creates two identical offspring.

– Sexual: two parent combine genetics to create unique offspring that are genetically different from the parent.

Page 15: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 1 The World of BiologyChapter 1

Characteristics of Life, continued

• Change Through Time– Populations of living organisms evolve or change

through time. – This leads to adaptations for survival.

Page 16: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

The Science of LifeChapter 1

Table of Contents

Section 1 The World of Biology

Section 2 Themes in Biology

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Section 4 Tools and Techniques

Page 17: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Objectives

• Identify three important themes that help explain the living world.

• Explain how life can be diverse, yet unified.

• Describe how living organisms are interdependent.

• Summarize why evolution is an important theme in biology.

Page 18: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Diversity and Unity of Life

• Unity in the Diversity of Life– Life is so diverse,or full of variety. Yet, life is also

characterized by unity, or features that all living things have in common.

Page 19: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Diversity and Unity of Life, continued

• Unity in the Diversity of Life– The tree of life shows that all living things have

descended with modification from a single common ancestor. Yet, there are many different lineages, or branches, representing different species.

Page 20: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Chapter 1

Phylogenetic Diagram of Living Organisms

Section 2 Themes in Biology

Page 21: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Diversity and Unity of Life, continued

• Three Domains of Life– The three domains of life are Bacteria, Archaea,

and Eukarya.– The six kingdoms include Archaea, Bacteria,

Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia.

Page 22: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Interdependence of Organisms

• Organisms live in interdependent communities and interact with both organisms and the environment.

Page 23: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Evolution of Life

• Evolution, or descent with modification, is the process in which the inherited characteristics within populations change over generations.

• Evolution helps to explain how species came to exist, have changed over time, and adapt to their environment.

Page 24: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 2 Themes in BiologyChapter 1

Evolution of Life, continued

• Natural Selection– Natural selection is a process by which

organisms that have certain favorable traits are better able to survive and reproduce successfully than organisms that lack these traits.

– Natural selection can lead to the evolution of populations.

Page 25: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

The Science of LifeChapter 1

Table of Contents

Section 1 The World of Biology

Section 2 Themes in Biology

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Section 4 Tools and Techniques

Page 26: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Objectives• Outline the main steps in the scientific method.

• Summarize how observations are used to form hypotheses.

• List the elements of a controlled experiment.

• Describe how scientists use data to draw conclusions.

• Compare a scientific hypothesis and a scientific theory.

• State how communication in science helps prevent dishonesty and bias.

Page 27: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Science as a Process

• Steps of the Scientific Method– The scientific method involves making

observations, asking questions, forming hypotheses, making predictions, designing experiments, analyzing data, and drawing conclusions.

Page 28: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Scientific Processes

Page 29: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Observing and Asking Questions• The process of science begins with an observation.

• An observation is the act of perceiving a natural occurrence that causes someone to pose a question.

• A hypothesis is a proposed explanation for the way a particular aspect of the natural world functions.– Predicting

• To test a hypothesis, scientists make a prediction that logically follows from the hypothesis.

Page 30: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Chapter 1

Performing the ExperimentA controlled experiment compares an experimental group and a control group and only has one variable.

Controlled Experiment and Variable

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Page 31: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Designing an Experiment, continued

• Performing the Experiment– The control group provides a normal standard

against which the biologist can compare results of the experimental group.

– The experimental group is identical to the control group except for one factor.

Page 32: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Designing an Experiment, continued

• Performing the Experiment– The experimenter manipulates the independent

variable.– The experimenter measures the dependent

variable because it is is affected by the independent variable.

Page 33: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Chapter 1

• Performing the Experiment– The experimenter manipulates the

independent variable.– The experimenter measures the dependent

variable because it is affected by the independent variable.

Independent and Dependent Variables

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Page 34: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Designing an Experiment, continued

• Testing the Experiment– Experiments should be conducted without bias

and they should be repeated. • Analyzing and Comparing Data

– Scientists analyze data to draw conclusions about the experiment performed.

Page 35: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Drawing Conclusions

• Making Inferences– An inference is a conclusion made on the basis of

facts and previous knowledge rather than on direct observations.

• Applying Results and Building Models– Scientists often apply their findings about the

natural world to solve practical problems.

Page 36: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Constructing a Theory

• A theory is a set of related hypotheses confirmed to be true many times, and it can explain a great amount of data.

Page 37: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Communicating Ideas

• Publishing a Paper– Scientists submit research papers to scientific

journals for publication.– In peer review, the editors of a journal will send

submitted papers out to experts in the field who anonymously read and critique the paper.

Page 38: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 3 The Study of BiologyChapter 1

Honesty and Bias

• Communication between scientists about their methods and results helps prevent dishonesty and bias in science.

• Conflict of Interest– The threat of a potential scandal based on

misleading data or conclusions is a powerful force in science that helps keep scientists honest and fair.

Page 39: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

The Science of LifeChapter 1

Table of Contents

Section 1 The World of Biology

Section 2 Themes in Biology

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Section 4 Tools and Techniques

Page 40: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Objectives

• List the function of each of the major parts of a compound microscope.

• Compare two kinds of electron microscopes.

• Describe the importance of having the SI system of measurement.

• State some examples of good laboratory practice.

Page 41: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Microscopes as Tools

• Light Microscopes– A compound light microscope is a microscope

that shines light through a specimen and has two lenses to magnify an image.

– Four major parts of a compound light microscope are the ocular lens, objective lens, stage, and light source.

Page 42: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Microscopes as Tools

• Light Microscopes– The eyepiece magnifies the image.– The objective lens enlarges the specimen.– The stage is a platform that supports slides with

specimens.– The light source is a light bulb that provides light

for viewing images.

Page 43: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Microscopes as Tools, continued

• Magnification and Resolution– Magnification is the increase of an object’s

apparent size.– Resolution is the power to show details clearly in

an image.

Page 44: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Object Size and Magnifying Power of Microscopes

Page 45: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Microscopes as Tools, continued

• Electron Microscopes– In an electron microscope, a beam of electrons

produces an enlarged image of the specimen. – Electron microscopes provide greater

magnification and resolution than light microscopes.

Page 46: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Microscopes as Tools, continued

• Electron Microscopes– Scanning electron microscopes pass a beam of

electrons over the specimen’s surface for better viewing the external surface of a specimen.

Page 47: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Microscopes as Tools, continued

• Electron Microscopes– Transmission electron microscopes transmit a

beam of electrons through a thinly sliced specimen for better viewing the internal structures of a specimen.

Page 48: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Units of Measurement

• Base and Other Units– Scientists use a single, standard system of

measurement, called the metric system. The official name of the metric system is Système International d’Unités or SI.

Page 49: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Units of Measurement

• Base and Other Units– The metric

system has seven base units.

Page 50: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

Section 4 Tools and TechniquesChapter 1

Safety

• Good Laboratory Practice– Lab safety involves safe and common-sense

habits such as never working alone in a lab or without proper supervision by the teacher.

Page 51: The Science of Life Chapter 1 Table of Contents Section 1 The World of Biology Section 2 Themes in Biology Section 3 The Study of Biology Section 4 Tools

The Science of LifeChapter 1

Table of Contents

Section 1 The World of Biology

Section 2 Themes in Biology

Section 3 The Study of Biology

Section 4 Tools and Techniques