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Scientific Method

Vocabulary
• Scientific Method -

Vocabulary• Journal – a specialized publication
– Science, Journal of Functional Morphology
• Peer reviewed – Work is investigated by scientists for accuracy and validity
• Inductive reasoning – use your observations to form a hypothesis– Every time you throw a ball up it comes down. You
hypothesize that it will come down every time it is thrown up.
• Deductive reasoning – use a general truth to form an hypothesis– Newton’s Theory of Gravitation says what must come up
must come down so the ball will come down every time.

Vocabulary• Independent variable – What is being
manipulated during the experiment• Dependant variable – changes in response to
the independent variable. Usually the thing being measured.
• Control – All the other factors in your experiment that you try to keep constant.
• Qualitative data – observations made with senses
• Quantitative data – measurements• Model – a mathematical description on an event

Identify the statement below that can
be answered in a scientific way.
A. Apples are more delicious than pears
B. Snails are beautiful invertebrates
C. Diamonds are the most valuable substance on Earth
D. Romaine lettuce is more nutritious than iceberg lettuce
How are scientific questions
answered?
A. By making an educated guess only
B. Through observation, testing, and analysis
C. By researching the topic and analyzing experiments of others
D. Through experimentation only
What is a hypothesis?
A. An educated guess
B. A natural phenomena
C. Something seen of heard
D. A scientific experiment
How are theories developed?
A. By making observation with the 5 senses
B. Bt thinking of one scientific hypothesis
C. Through scientific predictions
D. Through many consistent and supportable tests

Identify the statement below that is an
observation.
A. Because of the technological innovations in fishing, humans have over fished many species and so extinctions in the ocean have risen
B. If a caterpillar is fed a diet high in milkweed, then predators will avoid it as an adult
C. Gardenia bushes are very fragrant
D. How fast can a cheetah run?
What is the first step in the
scientific process?
A. Performing research
B. Forming a hypothesis
C. Surfing the internet
D. Making an observation
Identify the most subjective statement below.A. A Dodge Ram pickup gets about
24 miles to the gallonB. Hummingbirds are the most
beautiful kind of birds
C. Seven grams of CuSO4 are needed for this experiment
D. The swimming pool holds 451 gallons of water
Which of the following is evidence?A. Building a car from a kitB. In 2005, there were 2 million
square miles of artic sea iceC. By the year 2055, air pollution
levels will become toxic to humans
D. Because moths have an open circulatory system, the require warm temperatures for flight

Erica wants to test the effect of pH on frog eggs. She places some eggs in a neutral pH, some eggs in a pH of 3, and some eggs in a pH of 11. She will observe the tadpoles develop into adult frogs and see which group develops faster. What is her hypothesis?A. Tadpoles develop into adult frogs
over a period of several weeksB. If tadpoles are raised in a pH of 7
they will develop into adult frogs at a faster rate
C. Tadpoles raise in a pH of 11 took 10 weeks to fully develop
D. How does pH affect frog development?
A model is used to make a:A. HypothesisB. ConclusionC. PredictionD. Explanation
A judgment based on data gathered in an experiment is:A. A skillB. A conclusionC. A hypothesisD. An observation
Large amounts f petrified wood are found in northeast Arizona. Using inductive reasoning, four inferences are made. Which is most reasonable?A. All wood becomes petrifiedB. A living forest once stood thereC. No forests grew in other parts of
ArizonaD. Wood only becomes petrified in
northeast Arizona
Which of the following is most likely to be a peer reviewed journal?A. National GeographicB. New England Journal of MedicineC. Scientific AmericanD. Ladies Home Journal

Use the followinginformation to answer the questions:
Keisha observes goldfish in an outdoor pond. The goldfish seem to be more active when the weather is warm than when it is cold. She asks herself, ”How do temperature changes affect goldfish?”
If she were to do an experiment, which of the following would be the best hypothesis to test?A. Do goldfish like warm or cold
water?B. Goldfish are more active in warm
water than cold waterC. Goldfish live in warm and cold
waterD. Temperature changes will kill
goldfish
What sort of variable would temperature be in Keisha’s experiment?A. IndependentB. DependantC. ControlD. Responding

A hypothesis is checked by:A. Research in journalsB. Making A predictionC. ExperimentationD. Researching the internet
Ryan noticed that his cola loses its carbonation as it warms. He knows that it is carbon dioxide that causes cola to fizz. Ryan decides to do a scientific experiment to research this phenomena. What is the next step Ryan should take?A. Ask a questionB. Draw a conclusionC. Make an observationD. Form a hypothesis
Andrika has learned that the hot water in her house is always gone by 6:30am. She knows that this is because her sisters and mother always get to the shower before her.She decides to experiment with her morning routine to see if she can get a hot shower in the morning. Over the course of a week, she changes the time she gets up, making it ten minutes earlier each day. What is the dependant variable in this experiment?A. The time she gets upB. The volume of hot water her family
usesC. The temperature of the water in
the hot water heaterD. The temperature of the water in
Andrika’s shower

Municipal Solid Waste is what goes into landfills. Basically, it is the garbage we put out at the curb. It can be divided up by type as follows:
What is the best way to display this data?A. Circle graphB. Bar graphC. Multiple line graphD. Circle or bar graph
Which of the following phrases contains quantitative data?A. Green leaves surround white
flowersB. Ricky’s football jersey is
number 85C. Seeds sprout more quickly
when it is warmD. Water evaporates at a rate of
2mL per minute
Category Percentage
Rubber, leather and cloth
7.3
Yard trimmings 13.1
Food scraps 11.7
Wood 5.7
Other 3.4
Metals 7.6
Paper 34.2
Plastics 11.9
Glass 5.2

Scientific Measurement


Erlenmeyer flask
Bunsen burner
Tongs
Graduated cylinder
PipettesCaliper

Which of the following is used as a source of heat in the laboratory?A. ThermometerB. Bunsen burnerC. ThermostatD. Gasoline
Which has specific markings for measurement and is used to accurately measure liquid volume?A. Test tubeB. BeakerC. RulerD. Graduated cylinder
Which of the following pieces of equipment is used to handle liquids but is not intended for accurate measurement?A. BeakerB. Test tubeC. Erlenmeyer flaskD. All of the above
If you were instructed to heat something on the Bunsen burner, you would need to set your container on a _____ to hold your container over the burner.A. Watch glassB. HotplateC. A piece of wire gauze held by a
tripodD. Petri dish

Which material would you use a caliper to measure the width of?A. A cube of JelloB. A cube of sugarC. A cube of butterD. A pea
Which piece of equipment would be most appropriate for determining the mass of a lead brick?A. A beakerB. A analytical balanceC. A triple beam balanceD. A hot plate

Cells and Cellular Transport
• All living things (organisms) share the following characteristics– Cells– Response to stimuli– Growth– Homeostasis– Reproduction– Metabolism– Adaptation

Vocab• Cells – Basic unit of life that makes up all living things
– Multicellular – many cells– Unicellular – one cell
• Homeostasis – Ability to maintain a stable internal environment suitable for life.
• Reproduction – Organisms can reproduce either sexually or asexually– Sexual – 2 organisms create offspring– Asexual – one organism can create offspring on it’s own
• Metabolism – sum of all chemical reactions within an organism. (A way to extract energy from the environment)

Life Processes
• Nutrition• Digestion• Absorption• Transport• Biosynthesis• Secretion• Respiration• Excretion• Response• Reproduction• Photosynthesis

Which is NOT a characteristic of life?A. ReproductionB. HomeostasisC. SensitivityD. Transport
Which of the following is an example of how organisms maintainhomeostasis?A. A damaged skin cell dividing into
newer skin cellsB. A human shivering in the cold
weatherC. A crow learning to retrieve a food
reward in a laboratory experiment
D. Finches in the Galapagos developing different types of beaks
A runner eats a large pasta dinner the night before a big race. In this example, which characteristic of life is the runner using to help her win the race?A. DigestionB. HomeostasisC. SensitivityD. Metabolism
How are life processes different from characteristics of life?A. Life processes are the specific
actions that help organisms maintain characteristics of life
B. Characteristics of life are the specific actions that help organisms maintain life processes
C. Only organisms that show characteristics of life carryout life processes
D. Life processes and characteristics are the same

Cell Theory• All living things are made of cells
• All cells come from other living cells
• Cells are the basic unit of living things
Cellular Hierarchy
• Cells (Heart Cell)-> Tissues (Cardiac tissue) -> Organs (Heart) -> Organ system (Circulatory system)

Prokaryotic Vs. Eukaryotic Cells• Bacteria• Smaller• No nucleus – loose
DNA• No membrane bound
organelles– Only have:
• Cell wall• Cell membrane• Ribosomes• Loose DNA• Cytoplasm
• Animal and Plant• Larger• Nucleus• Membrane bound
organelles


Plant cells vs. Animal cells
• Cell wall• Large vacuole• Chloroplasts• No centrioles
• No cell wall• Small vacuole• No chloroplasts• Centrioles• Lysosomes


Organelle Functions• Cell Wall – Rigid, provides shape and support• Chloroplasts – photosynthesis• Vacuoles – food and water storage• Cell membrane – allows some molecules in while keeping
others out• Golgi bodies – packaging and distribution• Mitochondria – make energy, cellular respiration• Mirofilaments/tubules – Move cell parts• Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) – Transport of proteins• Nucleolus – makes ribosomes• Nucleus – holds DNA• Nuclear Envelope – surrounds nucleus and has pores• Ribosomes – make proteins• Centrioles – Used in cell reproduction• Lysosomes – Sac with enzymes for digestion• Cilia/ Flagella – Movement• Cytoplasm – Jelly-like substance organelles are floating in

The mitochondrion of the
cell:
A. Has only one membrane
B. Has no membrane
C. Is circular
D. Is where cellular respiration occurs
Ribosomes:
A. Are the site of protein synthesis
B. Are made by other ribosomes
C. Have their own DNA
D. None of the above
A(n) ________ is a group of
different tissues that work
together to perform a certain
function.
A. Organ system
B. Organ
C. Cell
D. Organelle
Structures that support and
give shape to plant cells are:
A. Microbodies
B. Golgi bodies
C. Nucleus
D. Cell walls

Which of the following is
part of the cell theory? All
cells:
A. Are eukaryotic
B. Are prokaryotic
C. Have nuclei
D. Come from other cells
The storage of hereditary
information in a eukaryotic
cell is in the:
A. Cytoplasm
B. Nucleus
C. Centrioles
D. Lysosomes

Cellular Transport• Solutions – a liquid mixture of solute and
solvent– Solute – something being dissolved– Solvent – What it is being dissolved in

Cell membrane
• Semi-permeable
• Phosphate heads

Passive Transport• Does not require energy• Molecules move from a higher concentration
to a lower concentration• Three kinds:
1. Osmosis – Molecules move from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration in WATER
2. Diffusion – molecules move directly through the cell membrane
3. Facilitated Diffusion – Larger molecules need the help of a carrier protein

• Hypertonic solution – has higher concentration of solutes
• Isotonic – has equal amounts of solutes
• Hypotonic – has lower concentration of solutes

Active Transport• Moves against gradient (From low to high
concentration)
• Uses energy (ATP) and proteins
• Types:– Endocytosis – uses vesicles to bring substances
into the cell– Exocytosis – Uses vesicles to remove substances
from the cell



The movement of substances into and out of a cell without the use of energy is called:A. Active transportB. Passive transportC. ExocytosisD. Endocytosis
The movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane from an area of high water concentration to an area of low water concentration is called:A. Active transportB. DiffusionC. OsmosisD. Hypotonic
A cell placed in a solution shrinks by the process of osmosis. What kind of solution is outside the cell?A. HypotonicB. HypertonicC. ActiveD. Isotonic
If the solution surrounding a cell has a lower concentration of solutes than inside the cell, water will move into the cell through osmosis, causing it to expand. What kind of solution is surrounding the cell?A. ActiveB. PassiveC. HypertonicD. Hypotonic

In order to be classified as living, an organism must have:A. A heart and lungsB. The ability to nourish itself,
grow and reproduceC. The ability to
photosynthesize and to eliminate waste products
D. A true nucleus and nuclear membrane
If a cell has a flagellum on it’s surface, it is:A. An animal cellB. A plant cellC. A viral cellD. A diseased cell
________ are the main products produced in a cellA. LipidsB. Amino acidsC. ProteinsD. Carbohydrates
A _______ is a type of cell that has a true nucleusA. ProkaryoteB. EukaryoteC. BacteriumD. Virus

If a plant cell is placed in distilled water, it will:A. Remain the same sizeB. ShrinkC. Swell and eventually explodeD. Swell, but stop when the cell wall
prevents further expansion
When you perspire on a hot, humid day, drinking water will restore ______ in your body.A. SubstancesB. OxygenC. HomeostasisD. Proteins
The process by which food is takeninto the cell is called:A. NourishmentB. ResuscitationC. AbsorptionD. Nutrition
The ability of the cell to rid itself of waste products is called:A. ExcretionB. EliminationC. VoidingD. Absorption
Two structures found in plant cells that are not in animal cells are the:A. Mitochondria and
ribosomesB. Cell wall and plastidsC. Cell membrane and
centriolesD. Nucleolus and endoplasmic
reticulum

When more water goes in through a cell membrane than out of it, the solution around the membrane is:A. IsotonicB. HypotonicC. PermeableD. Hypertonic
Amoebas obtain food by wrapping the cell membrane around the food particle, creating a vesicle. The food is then brought into the cell. This process is called:A. ExocytosisB. EndocytosisC. OsmosisD. Photosynthesis
Which organelle is the site of protein synthesis?A. PlastidB. RibosomeC. NucleolusD. Mitochondrion
Groups of cells that perform the same function are collectively known as:A. PlastidsB. TissuesC. OrgansD. Molecules
Prokaryotic cells have no:A. NucleusB. Energy exchangeC. Cell membraneD. Metabolism

Organic Molecules

Chemistry of the Cell• Element - type of matter made of only on kind
of atom, can not be broken down into simpler structure– Common elements : Sulfur, Phosphorous, Oxygen,
Nitrogen, Carbon, Hydrogen (SPONCH)
• Organic molecule – contains carbon, carbon is in ALL living things
• Inorganic molecule – Molecules without carbon

Bonds
• Energy is stored in the bonds between atoms
• Covalent bonds – sharing electrons
• Ionic bond – attraction through opposite charges

Covalent Bond
Ionic Bond

C-C bond is non-polar covalent

Four Main Types of Organic Compounds
Polymers• Carbohydrates
– Polysaccarides– Sugars, Cellulose, Starch
• Lipids (Fats)– Waxes, Steriods, Trigycerides
• Proteins– Polypeptides
• Nucleic acids– DNA,RNA
Monomers Monosaccarides
• glucose
• Fatty acid
• Amino acids – (20 kinds)
• Nucleotides

Testing for Organic Compounds
• Glucose –Bennedicts - Turns orange with heat
• Starch – Iodine or Lugals – Turns Blue
• Lipids – Brown paper bag – Grease present
• Proteins – Buirets - Turns purple

What molecules make up the bulk of a cell?A. CarbohydratesB. LipidsC. ProteinsD. Water
Carbon is important to living things because:A. It metabolizes easily,
creating a quick energy source
B. It is abundant on the Earth’s surface
C. It can form 4 covalent bonds with other atoms
D. It has 12 protons and neutrons
Nucleotides are to nucleic acids as amino acids are to:A. DNAB. PolypeptidesC. ProteinsD. Carbohydrates

Characteristics of Water
Polar Covalent Bonds – A covalent bond where one atom pulls the electrons closer to it than the other
-+
+

Energy• Free Energy – the energy available to do work,
stored in chemical bonds
• ATP – Adenosine triphosphate breaks down into ADP (adenosine diphosphate)
• Cellular respiration – The process of breaking down glucose to release the energy in it’s bonds

Catalysts and Enzymes• Activation Energy – Amount of energy needed to start a reaction
• Catalyst – Speeds up a chemical reaction by decreasing the activation energy– Is not changed– Can be reused

Enzymes• Specific proteins that combine with substrates
to break them down quickly in living organisms.– A catalyst– End in –ase Ex: Lipase, Maltase,
Amylase

Factors That Effect Enzymes• pH
• Temperature• Enzyme concentration• Most enzymes have an optimum point for
temperature and pH– This is the point where the enzyme works best
(fastest)

Denature

ATP stands for:
A. Adenosine triphosphate
B. Adenine triphosphate
C. A triphosphate
D. None of the above
What are enzymes?
A. Catalysts used by living things
B. Catalysts used in all reactions
C. Chemicals used to increase activation energy
D. Fats used by living things to help speed up chemical reactions
What type of bond is the result
of unequal sharing of
electrons?
A. Non-polar covalent bond
B. Polar covalent bond
C. Ionic non-polar bond
D. Ionic polar bond
Organic molecules most often
form using which type of bond?
A. Ionic bonds
B. Covalent bonds
C. Polar ionic bonds
D. Hydrogen bonds

Photosynthesis
• Takes place in chloroplasts (plastid) Goal of photosynthesis is to make complex carbohydrates like glucose, starch, and cellulose
• 2 stages:– Light-dependant - on the thylakoid membrane– Light-independent (Calvin cycle) – In the stroma
LIGHT


Light-Dependant• Sunlight hits plant and is absorbed by pigments
(Chlorophyll)
• Electrons get excited and go through electron transport chain
• Water is split to get H+ and Oxygen is a waste product
• Makes ATP and NADPH (used in light independent reaction)

Light-independent Reaction• Uses ATP and NADPH• Carbon dioxide enters
the system• Makes glucose by
turning the Calvin cycle and extracting energy from the ATP (turning it into ADP) and H+ from NADPH (turning it into NADP+)


Cellular Respiration• Process of breaking down food to get energy
– Used by plants animals and some bacteria
• 2 kinds:– Aerobic – when oxygen is present– Anaerobic – when oxygen is absent

Aerobic Respiration3 phases:
1. Gycolysis (in cytoplasm) – breaks down glucose to make Pyruvic ATP and NADH
2. Krebs cycle (in mitochondria) - take pyruvic and put it into the cycle, cycle produces 2 ATP's, 8 NADH's, 2FADH2's and carbon dioxide
3. Electron transport - creates a gradient which is used to produce ATP, produces 32 ATP's
Makes 36 ATPs total! Most Efficient!

Glycolysis

Krebs Cycle

Electron Transport Chain

Anaerobic Respiration = Fermentation
• Breakdown of sugar without oxygen– Muscle cells, fungi, and some bacteria (yeast)
• Start with glycolysis and then either make alcohol or lactic acid

What form of energy is used by cells?A. EnzymesB. CofactorsC. ATPD. DNA
The process of releasing energy from the chemical breakdown of compounds in a cell is:A. HesitationB. ExpirationC. EliminationD. Respiration
What is released when ATP is broken down into ADP and one phosphate?A. OxygenB. Water C. Energy D. Hydrogen
The Krebs cycle and the electron transport chain phases of cellular respiration take place in which organelle?A. NucleusB. CytoplasmC. RibosomeD. Mitochondrion

The process by which energy from the sun is used to create glucose molecules is known as:A. Cellular respirationB. PhotosynthesisC. ChemosynthesisD. Fermentation
How does a plastid function within a cell?A. Digest food and break
down wastesB. Produce proteinsC. Carry on cellular respirationD. Carry out photosynthesis
and provide color
What do complex carbohydrates break down into?A. EnzymesB. Amino acidsC. Simple sugarsD. ATP
Which of the following biomolecules are fat molecules that store energy?A. ProteinsB. CarbohydratesC. Nucleic acidsD. Lipids

Which of the following elements can be found in all living and previously living organisms?A. HeliumB. SulfurC. CarbonD. Nitrogen
Which biomolecule is a polymer assembled from some combination of the 20 amino acids?A. LipidsB. DNAC. ProteinD. Nucleotide
Which proteins in the cell speed up chemical reactions?A. LipidsB. DNAC. EnzymesD. Glucose
Cellular respiration takes place inside which type(s) of cell(s)?A. An animal cell onlyB. A plant cell onlyC. Both plant and animal cellsD. Neither plant or animal cells

The chemical energy
supply for all living cells is
contained in a molecule that,
when broken down, releases
the energy so that it may be
used for activities such as
muscle contractions,
photosynthesis and
locomotion. Which molecule
is a storehouse of energy?
A. ATP
B. DNA
C. RNA
D. ADP
To obtain and use cellular
energy, plant cells use
which process below?
A. Photosynthesis only
B. Photosynthesis and cellular respiration
C. Cellular respiration only
D. Chemosynthesis
How is cellular energy
stored?
A. Chemical bonds
B. Enzymes
C. Membrane potential
D. Protein shapes

Pepsin, a digestive enzyme in the human stomach, has an optimum pH that can be described as:A. BasicB. NeutralC. AcidicD. Very acidic
What are the main product(s) of the cell?A. LipidsB. Amino acidsC. ProteinsD. Carbohydrates
Which of the following foods represents the largest source of protein?A. Potato chipsB. OrangesC. ChickenD. Cauliflower
What are the largest carbohydrates called?A. MonosaccharidesB. DisaccharidesC. OligosaccharidesD. Polysaccharides
What chemical is used to test for starch?A. IodineB. Brown paper bagC. PhenylpthaleinD. Sodium hydroxide

Nucleic Acids and Cell Division• DNA = Deoxyribonucleic acid
• Found in nucleus
• Carried the genetic code for ALL organisms
• Shape = double helix

DNA Structure• DNA is composed of
strands of nucleotides• A nucleotides is
composed of:– 5 carbon sugar– Phosphate– One Nitrogen Base
• Adenine• Guanine• Thymine• Cytosine


Complementary Pairs• A – T• C – G

Protein SynthesisUsing genes, which are pieces of DNA that code for specific proteins, to assemble proteins.
1. DNA must be copied in the nucleus of the cell into mRNA
1. DNA can not fit through the nuclear pore – It is double stranded while mRNA is single stranded
2. The single stranded mRNA leaves the nucleus through the nuclear pore and moves to a ribosome
3. tRNA carrying amino acids attaches to the complimentary bases on the mRNA
4. The amino acids form a chain that folds up into a protein

Protein synthesis
• Transcription – transcribing DNA into mRNA
• Translation – mRNA is translated by tRNA into a strand of amino acids or a protein
• Codon – 3 nucleotide codon on mRNA
• Anticodon - 3 nucleotide codon on tRNA

http://www.teachersdomain.org/search/?mode=refined&results_to_show=10&query=protein+sysnthesis&lower_grade=K&upper_grade=12&media_types=video&media_types=audio&media_types=interactive&media_types=image&media_types=document&media_types=lesson_plan&media_
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/tryit/dna/#


Protein synthesis begins with the manufacture of a molecule of:A. mRNAB. rRNAC. tRNAD. Nucleotide
Which of the following is the last step in protein synthesis?A. tRNA bonds to an amino
acid in the cytoplasmB. The stop codon binds to the
ribosome and the polypeptide is released
C. DNA unravels to expose a gene segment
D. mRNA bonds to tRNA
Proteins are made up of polypeptide chains. Polypeptide chains are composed of:A. mRNAB. rRNAC. tRNAD. Amino acids
What does transfer RNA carry?A. The mRNA to the ribosomeB. The nucleotide bases to the
mRNAC. An amino acid to the ribosomeD. An amino acid to the cytoplasm
What are ribosomes made of?A. mRNAB. rRNAC. tRNAD. Nucleotide

Vocab
• Somatic cells – Body cells• Gametes – Sex cells (Egg and sperm)• Haploid – Single set of chromosomes
– 23 in humans
• Diploid – Sets of chromosomes– 46 in humans
• Homologous chromosomes – matched pairs• DNA helicase – unzips DNA• DNA polymerase – attaches new nucleotides during
DNA replication• Stem Cells- Cells that can produce any kind of cell

The Cell Cycle


Variation• 2n = number of possible
varieties of cells from a set number of chromosomes
• Ex A plant cell has 3 chromosomes
• Number of possible varieties = 23 or 8




All body cells, except the sperm and the ova are _____ cells.A. GermB. ReproductiveC. SomaticD. Spindle
The type of nuclear division that produces gametes is:A. MeiosisB. CytokinesisC. InterphaseD. Mitosis
A type of nuclear division that takes place in somatic cells is:A. MeiosisB. CytokinesisC. InterphaseD. Mitosis
When DNA is in long strands prior to coiling, it is in the form of:A. ChromosomesB. CentromeresC. ChromatinD. Chromatids
The length of time it takes for a cell to complete the cell cycle is:A. Around 2 hoursB. Different for each cellC. The same for each kind of
cellD. Around 2 minutes

In fertilization, gametes fuse to form a(n)A. EmbryoB. Somatic cellC. ZygoteD. Reproductive cell
Stem cells are:A. Cells that can produce any
kind of offspring cellB. Cells that contain stem
structures used in reproduction
C. Haploid cells that can produce any type of offspring cell
D. Found only in plant cells
In the DNA molecule, guanine pairs with another base called:A. QuinineB. RiboflavinC. CytosineD. Thymine
What are the long strands of DNA made of?A. Elastic rubber basesB. Sugar nucleotides and
potassiumC. Sugar, phosphates, and
nitrogenous basesD. Oxygen and nucleotides

What are the sections of
DNA that resemble rungs
on a latter called?
A. Genetic codes
B. Reprocessors
C. Base pairs
D. Lipid pairs
What does mitosis
generate?
A. Daughter cells identical to the mother cell
B. Many reproductive cells
C. Diseased cells
D. Gametes
Meiosis is a type of cell division
that:
A. Leads to genetic mutation
B. Causes deformity
C. Is necessary for sexual reproduction
D. Causes alleles to deform
DNA can make exact copies of
itself. What is this process
known as?
A. Translation
B. Duplication
C. Replication
D. Transcription

A type of cellular reproduction when the nuclear division of somatic cells takes place is:A. MeiosisB. CytokinesisC. InterphaseD. Mitosis
When preparing for cell division, the chromatin condenses and becomes which of the following?A. GeneB. ChromosomeC. ProteinD. Codon
Which molecule transports the code of information from DNA to the ribosome?A. tRNAB. rRNAC. mRNAD. An amino acid
What is the process in which paired twin chromosomes exchange pieces of DNA during meiosis called?A. Crossing overB. FertilizationC. Self pollinationD. Replication

During translation adenine on mRNA will pair with which base on tRNA?A. UracilB. GuanineC. CytosineD. Thymine
What is the correct term to refer to the number of chromosomes in a gamete?A. ChromatinB. HaploidC. HeterozygousD. Diploid
A fruit fly has a haploid number of 4 chromosomes. How many possible distributions of chromosomes can occur in it’s homologous pairs?A. 4B. 8C. 16D. 254

Heredity - vocab• Alleles – different forms of a gene• Genotype – alleles inherited• Phenotype – the physical expression of the genotype
Complete dominance• Dominant gene – Trait that is expresses if one or more
allele is present (TT, Tt)• Recessive gene – trait that is expressed only if two
alleles are present (tt)• Homozygous – two of the same alleles for a trait (TT,
tt)• Heterozygous – two different alleles (Tt)

Complete Dominance
• Find the genotype and phenotype for each
• G = green g = yellow Cross GG with Gg
• H = Hairy h = bald Cross Hh with HH
• E = Ear lobes attached e = unattached
Cross Ee with Ee

Incomplete Dominance
• Has an intermediate• Blending of dominant
and recessive phenotype of the heterozygous genotype
• What is the genotypic and phenotypic ratio?

Codominance
• Both traits show up in the heterozygous genotype

Multiple Allele Crosses



Classification
• Kingdom• Phylum• Class• Order• Family• Genus• Species
• Carl Linnaeus- Binomial nomenclature
• Homo sapiens

Kingdom Archaebacteria• Prokaryotic bacteria living in harsh
environments
• Anaerobic
• Classified according to environment– Thermoacudophiles – acidic sulfur springs in yellow
stone park

Kingdom Eubacteria• True bacteria• Single celled or clustered to form colonies• DNA in a plasmid• 3 feeding strategies
– Heterotrophs– Autotrophs– Chemotrophs
• Found everywhere, most are harmless– Make yogurt, cheese, vinegar
• Decomposers• Asexual reproduction – binary fission


Which of the following groups of categories is listed from broadest to most specific?A. Family, order, classB. Phylum, class, kingdomC. Order, family, genusD. Genus, family, species
The two part system used to name organisms is called?A. Dual identificationB. Binomial nomenclatureC. Double nomenclatureD. Linnaean nomenclature
Organisms that obtain their energy from feeding on living organisms, dead organisms, or organic waste are:A. AutotrophsB. HeterotrophsC. ChemotrophsD. Plants

Kingdom Protista• Uni and multicellular• Eukaryotic• Can be plant-like, animal-like, or fungus-like• Plant-like – Algae, Euglenas
– Produce most of the oxygen on Earth
• Animal- like – Protozoa (Ameoba)– Have cilia and flagella– Reproduction by binary fission– Some may cause disease ex - malaria– Some have pseudopods – false feet
• Fungus-like – Slime molds, mildew– decomposers


All algae are:A. AutotrophsB. HeterotrophsC. DecomposersD. Ciliates
Why are algae important?A. They create color on
EarthB. They produce the most
nitrogen on EarthC. They are decomposersD. They produce most of
the oxygen on Earth
Fungus-like protists are:A. DecomposersB. AutotrophsC. ConsumersD. Producers

Kingdom Fungi• Heterotrophic• Decomposers or Saprophytes - live in or on
matter that they decompose• Sexual reproduction - Reproductive cells are
called spores produced by the fruiting body (the mushroom you see)
• Asexual reproduction – Budding (a [piece detaches and continues to live)
• Mold, yeast, mushrooms, lichen• Penicillium – flavors cheese and is derived into
Penicillin



Fungi secrete enzymes to:
A. Breakdown materials so that they can absorb them
B. Catalyze chemical reactions in the air
C. Help photosynthesis take place by activating plasmids
D. None of the above
Examples of fungi include:
A. Dinoflagellates and algae
B. Cyanobacteria and monera
C. Mushrooms and yeast
D. Sporozoa and sarcodines

Kingdom Plantae
• Multicellular
• Eukaryotic
• Photosynthesis
• Alternation of generations – two distinct generations– Gametophyte – sexual phase, pollen (hapliod)– Sporophyte – asexual phase, spores (diploid)


Non-Vascular Plants• Lack tissues to transport water and sugars
– No true root system
• Ex Bryophytes – mosses and liverworts
• Live in moist habitats
• Leaves have cuticle – waxing covering to help retain moisture

Vascular Plants
• Have tube-like structures for the transport of water and sugars (Vascular tissue)– Xylem – move water from roots– Phloem – move starch and sugar from leaves
• Have a root system


Seedless Vascular Plants
• Ex ferns• Produce spores• Need moist
environment because they have an aquatic stage
Fronds

Vascular Seed Bearing
• Gymnosperms
• Angiosperms

Gymnosperms
• Non-flowering, produce cones, needle like leaves
• Ex conifers – pine trees
• Have male and female cones
• Pollen transported by wind from male cones to female cones


Angiosperms
• Flowering plants, have roots, stems, leaves, and seeds
• Deciduous
• Seeds are found in a fruit


Monocots Vs DicotsBased on the number of cotyledons the seed hasCotyledons are seed leafs that provide nutrition to
the developing seed
Monocots• One cotyledon• Parallel veins in their
leaves• Fibrous root system• Floral part arranged on
3s or 5s• Ex – Grasses, palms,
lilies, orchids
Dicots• Two Cotyledons• Net-veined leaves• Taproot system• Floral parts arranged in
4s or 5s• Ex – roses, melons,
beans

