CP BIO Review Guide Chapter 1 Name ______
The Study of Life
Traits of Life: All organisms have the same traits of life
1. Cell is the unit of life: unicellular, multicellular
- Information and Heredity: DNA, genetic code is universal
- Matter and Energy: raw materials and energy needed for life functions
i. Interdependence: producers, consumers, decomposers
ii. Materials cycle between biotic and abiotic
- Energy does NOT cycle, is used for life processes
- Grow and develop: cells increase number, differentiate
i. Stem cells – unspecialized
ii. Levels of organization: cells tissues organs systems
- Are organized: cell parts do specific functions
i. Multicellular: cells – tissues – organs – organ systems – organism
ii. Different body parts do specific functions
- Reproduce to continue species
i. Asexual - offspring identical to parent, same DNA
ii. Sexual – offspring is mix of two parents, shared DNA
iii. Species: organisms look similar and can make fertile offspring
- Homeostasis – maintain stable internal environment
Metabolism – all the chemical reactions in an organism
1. break large molecules down
- build larger molecules, synthesis
- Respond to changes in the environment
i. Stimulus – change that causes a reaction
ii. Response – reaction to a stimulus
- Evolve – Species slowly change to adapt; individuals cannot evolve
Evolution explains unity and diversity of life
i. Unity: Organisms share life traits, similar structure, use molecules the
same way, same genetic code shows common ancestor
ii. Diversity: evolved over time to fit different environments
Structure and function: parts evolved to do a function best
Viruses -structure, traits of life, living?
Life processes keep organisms alive
1. Cellular respiration – break down food for energy
a. aerobic uses oxygen, gets the most energy from food
b. anaerobic – no oxygen
2. Nutrition – get or make food (nutrients) and process it for cells
a. autotrophs: photosynthetic or chemosynthetic, make their own food
b. heterotrophs: find and eat food; food chains, decomposers
c. human: digestive system, stomach, intestines
3. Transport – move materials around in cells and organisms
a. human: circulatory system, heart, blood
4. Excretion – remove wastes made in metabolism
a. human: excretory systems: kidneys, lungs, liver, skin
5. Synthesis – cells make molecules needed by cells
6. Reproduction – make new cells or new organism
a. asexual and sexual
7. Growth and Development – cells specialize to perform different functions
8. Regulation – control kinds and rates of chemical reactions
a. nervous system – brain, nerves, rapid response
b. endocrine system – glands make hormones, chemical messengers
cause response in specific organs.
Science Inquiry, Experimental Design
- Discovery/observation; experimentation- tries to explain nature
- Controlled studies: two identical groups or set-ups, except for one thing
- Control set-up: has original set of variables
- Test or Experimental set-up: has one variable different from control
- Independent variable – manipulated, the one you change
- dependent variable – responds, depends on the one you changed
- Hypothesis – possible solution to a problem, can be tested
Theory – accepted explanation for a natural occurrence, supported by data