fundamentals of biology chapter 4

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Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

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Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4. Atom Level Tissue Level Ecosystem Level Molecule Level Individual Level Organelle Level Organ System Level Cell Level Community Level Population Level Organ Level. Atom Level Molecule Level Organelle Level Cell Level Tissue Level Organ Level - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Fundamentals of BiologyChapter 4

Page 2: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Levels of Organization• Atom Level• Tissue Level• Ecosystem Level• Molecule Level• Individual Level• Organelle Level• Organ System Level• Cell Level• Community Level• Population Level• Organ Level

• Atom Level• Molecule Level• Organelle Level• Cell Level• Tissue Level• Organ Level• Organ System Level• Individual Level• Population Level• Community Level• Ecosystem Level

Page 3: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

MoleculeCombinations of atomsthat are bonded together

AtomThe fundamental unit of all matter

Organelle A subcellular membrane-bound compartment

Page 4: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Cell

Tissue

Organ

The basic unit of life

Group of similar cells thatperform a common function

Two or more different tissuesthat perform a commonfunction

Page 5: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

PopulationAll individuals of thesame species thatoccupy a given area

OrganSystem

Individual

Group of related organs thathave a common function

A single organism

Page 6: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Community

Ecosystem

All the species in anecosystem that caninteract

A community and itsphysical environment

Page 7: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

The Ingredients of Life• Elements- substances composed of only one type of atom.

– 94 naturally occurring.– Carbon, Nitrogen, Hydrogen, and Oxygen account for 90% of the elements in living

things.

Page 8: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

The Building Blocks

Page 9: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Cells and Organelles

Page 10: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Eukaryotic vs. Prokaryotic Cells

Feature Eukaryotic ProkaryoticOrganisms Animals, plants Bacteria,

Archaea

Size 10-100 µm 1-10 µm

Organelles Yes No

DNA form Coiled, linear Circular

DNA location Nucleus Cytoplasm

Internal membranes Yes No

Cytoskeleton Yes No

Page 11: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Robert Hooke (1635-1703)

Page 12: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Cell Theory

• CELL THEORY- proposed in 1839 by Schleiden and Schwann. 1. All living things are composed of cells.

2. The cell is the basic unit of life.

3. New cells arise only from preexisting cells.

4. Cells contain hereditary information which is passed from cell to cell during cell division.

5. All cells are similar in chemical composition.

6. All of the energy flow of life occurs within cells.    

Page 13: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Invention of the Microscope

• Invented circa 1595 AD by Zacharias Janssen (1580-1638), a spectacle maker from Holland.

Page 14: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

4 Types of Microscopes Used to Study Cells

• Dissecting microscope- 4-50X.– Light is passed through or reflected on a specimen.– Focus with a set of glass lenses.

• Compound light microscope- 1,000X.– Light is passed through a specimen.– Focus with a set of glass lenses.

• Transmission electron microscope- 50,000X.– Electrons are passed through a specimen.– Focus with a set of magnetic lenses.

• Scanning electron microscope- 10,000X.– Electrons are scanned over the surface of a specimen that has

been coated with a metal.– No Focus, produces a three-dimensional image collected from

electrons that are emitted from the metal.

Page 15: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Dissecting Microscope

Page 16: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4
Page 17: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Diffusion

• Diffusion- the spontaneous tendency of a substance (solute or solvent) to move from a more concentrated to a less concentrated area.– T or F. Diffusion results in

the uniform distribution of a substance.

Page 18: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4
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Page 21: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Osmosis• Osmosis- the diffusion of water through a selectively

permeable membrane from a region of higher concentration to a region of lower concentration.

Page 22: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

When referring to two solutions that are separated by a selectively permeable membrane:

• Isotonic solutions have the same concentration of solute as the cell.

• Hypotonic solutions have lower solute concentrations than the cell.

• Hypertonic solutions have higher solute concentration than the cell.

Page 23: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4
Page 24: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

3 Domains and 6 Kingdoms

Page 25: Fundamentals of Biology Chapter 4

Classifying Living Things