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Biology Midterm

Terms

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nucleolus
makes ribosomes
heterotroph
organism that gets food from others
4,600,000,000
how old is the earth
hydrophobic
(non-polar) molecule that is repelled from a mass of water
vertebrate
animal that has a vertebral column, or backbone ex. fishes, amphibeans, reptiles, birds and mammals
vacuole
found in both plants and animals and stores liquids and dissolved materials
surface tension
attractive property of the surface of a liquid, it causes the surface of a portion of liquid to be attracted to another surface
sex
reproduction
natural selection
process by which individuals that are better suited to their environment survive and reproduce most successfully, also called survival of the fittest
respiration
the process in which molecules are converted into useable energy
diffusion
process by which molecules tend to move from an area where they are more concentrated to an area where they are less concentrated
diffusion
no energy
cytoskeleton
provides structure and support for the cell and helps with cell movement
linnaeus
swedish botanist, physician and zoologist who laid the foundation for the modern scheme of binomial nomenclature. "father of taxonomy"
protists
from what group did plants evolve?
law of superpositioning
fossils found in deeper rock layer will be the oldest
rough endoplasmic reticulum
covered with ribosomes, transport proteins
molecular biology
the study of biology at a molecular level; organisms have similar DNA, we evolve from similar ancestors, similar in DNA and proteins
autotroph
organism that makes it's own food
kingdom
second broadest taxon
porifera
an animal that has tiny openings all over themselves; multicellular, heterotrophic; they have no cell walls and contain a few specialized cells
embryology
early stages, or embryos of many animals with backbones are very similar ex. lizards, turtles, pigs, humans; and the more similar the embryos are, the better factor that we have a common ancestor
binomial nomenclature
cassification system in which species are assigned a two-part scientific name
hypotonic cell
opposite to hypertonic; solution has little solute relative to cell
hydrophillic
typically charge; polarized and capable of hydrogen bonding, enabling it to dissolve more readily in water than in other hydrophobic solvents
hydrogen
ex. attraction between the hydrogen atom on one molecule and the oxygen atom on another water molecule
leukoplast
plant organelle that contains starches and pigment
plants
eukaryotic, multi-cellular, autotroph, ex. flower
cnidaria
a polyp, also known as an anemone or coral and then the other type is a medusa who's common name is a medusa; have a life cycle, which includes becoming a polyp to a medusa; are normally only a few cells thick and have pretty simple body systems
field of view
what you see
ribosomes
protein factory
prokaryote
first organism to evolve on earth
nematoda
a roundworm; a skinny worm with tapering ends, they grow to different sizes from microscopic to a meter in length; most of them are free and inhabitant soil, salt flats, aquatic sediments, and water, and the others live in hosts that are almost every type of plant and animal
bilateral
body plan in which only a single imaginary line can divide the body into 2 equal halves
radial
body plan in which parts repeat around the center of the body; characteristics of sea anenome and sea stars
plasmolysis
in hypertonic, plant cell wall lose water and the plasma membrane will pull away from the cell
solution
mixture of a liquid and a substance that dissolves
adaptation
inherited characteristics that increases an organism's chance of survival
lamarck
believed that traits were directly passed to offspring
species
eighth broadest taxon
taxonomist
discipline of classifying organisms and assigning each organism a universally accepted name
animals
eukaryotic, multicellular,heterotroph, ex. human
DNA polymerase
adds monomers to make extra copies
nucleus
contains the DNA in eukaryotic cells
chordata
includes fishes and amphibians; an animal that has, for at least some stage at its life had a dorsal, hollow nerve cord, a notochord, pharyngeal pouches; and a tail that extends beyond the anus; some swim, others fly or even crawl.
osmosis
diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
isotonic cell
same concentration
class
fourth broadest taxon
dichotomous key
device constructed from a series of highly organized statements arranged into couplets, which identify plants and animals in taxonomy
prokaryote
unicellular lacking a nucleus-bacteria
transmission electron microscope
greater magnification
fitness
ability of an organism to survive and reproduce in its environment
adhesion
water molecules stick together because they're polar; attraction between molecules of the same substance
mitochondria
converts chemical energy from food (sugar) into cell energy (ATP)
exocytosis
cell vomiting, things going out of cell
nucleotide of DNA
phosphate, deoxyribose, nitrogenous base (a,t,c,g)
eubacteria/archaebacteria
kingdom of unicellular prokaryotes whose cell walls are made up of peptidoglycno
classify
to make identifying new organisms easier, to find similarities and relationships, to organize or unify the system
fossil record
information about past life, including the structure of organisms, what they ate, of organisms, what they ate, what ate them, in what environment they lived, and the order in which they lived
cohesion
water molecules stick together because they're polar; attraction between molecules of the same substance
creation of fossil
decomposers first eat caracass, then shallow streams quickly bury the skeleton, sediments turn to fossil over millions of years
endocytosis
process in which extensions of cytoplasm
polar
a molecule with a positive charge on one end and a negative charge on the other; a covalent bond between atoms in which the electrons are shared equally; an atom with stronger electro-negativity forces the other atom closer, because it needs more electrons to be happy
phylum
third broadest taxon
darwin
english naturalist who realized and demonstrated that all species of life have evolved over time from common ancestors through the process he called natural selection
antibiotics
compound that blocks the growth and reproduction of bacteria; chemotherapeutic agent with activity against bacteria, fungi or activity against bacteria, fungi or protozoa
genus
seventh broadest taxon
echinodermata
includes animals such as a sea star, sea urchin or sand dollar; characterized by spiny skin, internal skeleton, a water vascular system, and suction-cuplike structures called tube feet; body parts usually occur in multiples of five and are arranged around the central body like the spokes of a wheel
eubacteria
prokaryotic, unicellular, autotroph/heterotroph, ex. ecoli
nitrogenous
contains nitrogen
lysosomes
cleans up the cell (contain special digestive enzymes)
product
element or compound provided by a chemical reaction
annelida
worm that has a segmented body, and has a true coelem that is lined with tissue derived from mesoderm; have a tube-within-a-tube digestive tract, which passes food through the mouth to the anus
solute
(usually H2O) "universal solvent" mixture composed of 2 or more substancese
double helix
shape of each DNA molecule
endosymbiosis
name three cell parts associated with this process; theory that eukaryotic cells formed from a symbiosis among several different prokaryotic organisms, then ancestral eukaryote prokaryote and started working together
mollusca
animals that are included in the group are snails, slugs, clams, squids, and octopi; size varies from a size that is not visible with the naked eye to 20 meters long; they come in various different sizes, shapes and forms.
helicase
unzips DNA
ribonucleic acid
RNA
characteristics of life
response to stimuli, regulation, energy use, cellular organization, growth and development, reproduction and waste removal
osmosis
movement of water across membrane, requires no energy
scanning electron microscope
black/white image (artificially colored) non living, 3D
homologous structures
term used to refer to chromosomes that each have a corresponding chromosomes from the opposite sex parent (common ancestor)
evolution
change in a kind of organism over time, process by which modern organism have descendents from ancient organisms
plantae
producers, multicellular, eukaryotic
biogeography
study of the distribution of biodiversity over space and time, aims to reveal where organisms live, and at what abundance
golgi apparatus
collects, modifies, repackages an ships out large proteins/products
deoxyribonucleic acid
DNA
reactant
element or compound that enters into a chemical reaction
archaebacteria
prokaryotic , unicellular, autotroph/heterotroph, ex. thermoplasma
covalent
form of chemical bonding that is characterized by the sharing of pairs of electrons between atoms, or between atoms and other covalent bonds
dissecting scope
low magnification, 3D
platyhelmithe
it's common name is a flatworm; a flattened worm that has tissue and internal organ systems; they are usually no more than a few millimeters thick.
protist
eukaryotic, multicellular, autotroph/heterotroph, ex. paramisium
sedimentary rock
when sediments pile up over time and pile into rock (surface of earth)
enzyme
catalyzes chemical reactions
homeostasis
proves by which organism maintain a relatively stable internal environment
arthropoda
common names included in the group is animals like insects, crabs, centipedes and spiders; have a segmented body, a tough exoskeleton, and jointed appendages; most diverse and successful animals of all time
asymmetrical
if you cut down middle, isn't identical
hypertonic cell
solution has a lot of solute relative to cell
nuclear envelope
controls what enters and leaves the nucleus (breaks into spindle fibers)
vestigial structure
organ/structure that were important to our ancestors but have no uses for us today (whales with legs, tailbones for us today, the appendix)
invertebrate
animal that does not have a backbone, or vertebral column
phylogenetic trees
a tree showing the evolutionary relationships among various biological species or other entitles that are believed to have a common ancestor; show where a species started out/ came from and how they evolved and which ancestor didn't survive
pump
active transport goes from low to high concentration
dehydration synthesis
removes water to make something (2 monomers combined- H2O= polymer) ANABOLISM
mutation
change in a DNA sequence that affects genetic information
solvent
liquid or gas hat dissolves a solid/liquid/gaseous solute; liquid
animalia
no cell walls, most animals can move about for some part of their life, multicellular and heterotrophic
domain
broadest taxon
comparative anatomy
when you find similarities; the study of similarities of differences in the anatomy of organisms
nucleotide of RNA
phosphate, ribose, nitrogenous base (a,u,c,g)
light microscope
color, living organism
fungi
eukaryotic, multicellular, hetero, ex. mushroom
magnification
zoom, 3x, 2x...etc
chloroplast
converts solar energy into chemical energy
transport vessicle
transport channel and storage for lipids
order
fifth broadest taxon
theory
well-tested explanation that unifies a broad range of observations
family
sixth broadest taxon
ionic
"chemical bond" atom/molecule that has lost or gained one or more electrons giving it a positive or negative electrical charge
cellulose
what are cell walls of plants composed of?
eukaryote
organism whose cell contains a nucleus-plants, animals, fungi, protists
hydrolysis
chemical reaction during which one or more water molecules are split into hydrogen/hydroxide ions

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