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Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

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Life’s Hierarchical Order (figs 1.2, 2.1) (atoms), (organelles) Cells Tissues Organs Organism Population * Community * Ecosystem * Emergent properties
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Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure • Properties of life (at least 7) • Evolution, Unity and Diversity • Scientific Method Fig 1.3 Fig 1.10, 1.11 Fig 1.16, 1.17
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Page 1: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Chapter 1: What is Life?

• Hierarchy, levels of biological structure• Properties of life (at least 7)• Evolution, Unity and Diversity• Scientific Method

Fig 1.3

Fig 1.10, 1.11

Fig 1.16, 1.17

Page 2: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Life’s Hierarchical Order (figs 1.2, 2.1)

(atoms), (organelles) Cells Tissues Organs Organism Population * Community * Ecosystem *

Emergent properties

Page 3: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Emergent Properties:

Novel properties which result from interactions between components.

An organism is a living whole, greater than the sum of its parts.

Page 4: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Is it alive? (fig 1.3) Organisms are open systems & interact

with their environment Fig 1.3 lists 7 common characteristics

Why aren’t bubbles alive? Demo… Why aren’t viruses alive?

Page 5: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Life is capable of metabolism, (chemical reactions which utilize energy and also synthesize its cellular constituents.) Second, life is capable of self replication. Third, life can evolve in order to adapt to environmental changes. Life is a community of organisms which must interact with their nonliving environment through processes called biogeochemical cycles.

What is life?NASA’s Working Definition of Life

Page 6: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Examples of Cells

Page 7: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Feedback mechanisms of living things

Negative Ex. Blood glucose

levels Body temp.

Positive Ex. Breast feeding Blood clotting

HomeostasisFig 1.8

Page 8: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Classifying Life

Fig 1.10

K,P,C,O,F,G,S

General to specific

Domain (3)5?

Page 9: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Fig. 1.11 review page 11

Domains of Life (3) 1. Bacteria (prokaryotes, most ancient) 2. Archaea (prokaryotes, extreme ) 3. Eukarya (eukaryotes = protists, plants,

animals, fungi)

Page 10: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Hypothetico-deductive Reasoning

Page 11: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure
Page 12: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Sources

Campbell, Reece, Mitchell. Biology, 5th Ed. 1999, Chapter one. Pgs. 1-21.

Campbell, Reece, Mitchell. Biology, 5th Ed. 1999, Presentations CD-ROM.

Click art CD-ROM, Broderbund.

Page 13: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

Unit One, the Chemistry of Life

T.O.D. Dr’s. Mario Molina, Paul Crutzen, F.

Sherwood Rowland. 1995 Nobel Prize Ozone Layer and pollutants

Page 14: Chapter 1: What is Life? • Hierarchy, levels of biological structure

IS IT ALIVE?


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