Honors Biology 1st quarter Mid-Term Study Guide KEY
Graphing/ Scientific Method
1. Circle the independent variable and underline the dependent variable in the following statement:
A chef hypothesized the temperature at which a cake is baked will determine how high the cake will rise.
Susan is doing an experiment where she is measuring the effect of fertilizer on plant growth. She measures the
growth (height) of tomato plants over a week. She has one group of 5 plants which she waters with a Miracle
Grow fertilizer solution. The other group of 5 plants just gets water. All of the plants started from the same seed
package. They are all in the same size of pots and have the same amount of soil and sunlight. The only thing
different is the fertilizer she is adding.
2. What is the independent variable in Susan’s experiment? Fertilizer
3. What is the dependent variable? Plant Growth
4. What is the control group in the experiment? The plant with just water.
5. What are the constants she used? Same seeds, same size pots, same amount of soil and sunlight
6. Why is it important for Susan to have constants for her experiment? To ensure that there is consistency and
you are only changing and measuring one thing at a time.
Here is the data Susan collected from her experiment:
Time/Days Plants with fertilizer Plants without fertilizer
1 30 cm 30 cm
2 32 cm 31 cm
3 35 cm 32 cm
4 37 cm 33 cm
5 39 cm 35 cm
6 43 cm 37 cm
7 47 cm 39 cm
7. What type of graph should Susan use to show her data? Line or bar graph
8. Draw a graph to represent Susan’s data here:
9. What is the mean height of plants with fertilizer? 37.5 cm
______ELECTRON_______________
_____________
10. What is the mean height of the plants without fertilizer? 33.8 cm
11. What is the range of height for plants with fertilizer? 17 cm
12. What is the difference between a hypothesis, theory, and law in science? A hypothesis is a prediction you make
before completing an experiment. A theory is explanation of some aspect of the natural world that is
acquired through the scientific method and repeatedly tested and confirmed through observation and
experimentation. A law is a theory that has been tested and is believed to be true.
13. What is the dependent variable in the experiment above? Heart rate (beats/min)
14. What is the independent variable in the experiment above? Oxygen Uptake (L/min)
15. What is the effect on heartrate as more oxygen is consumed? The heart rate increases
16. What correlation is seen between oxygen uptake and heart rate? (positive, negative, or none) positive
Biochemistry
17. What is biology the study of? The study of life
18. Label the atom below.
19. Describe what is unique about the density of water in its solid form compared to its liquid form. Water is one of
the only elements that is less dense in its solid form that its liquid form.
20. Define and provide an example of adhesion. Water’s ability to stick to other polar substances ex: water
“climbing up” a paper towel
This particle has a positive
charge.
__PROTON___________
_______NEUTRON
___________NUCLEUS______________
_
21. Define and provide an example of cohesion. Cohesion: Water’s ability to stick to itself ex: rain
22. Water has many unique properties. List them below (there should be 6).
a. High Specific Heat
b. Density
c. Polarity
d. Cohesion – surface tension
e. Adhesion – capillary action
f. Universal Solvent
23. Draw and label the charges on a water molecule. Hydrogens are + and oxygen are -
24. Define polarity. A property of a bond where one element pulls the electrons towards itself causing different
charges or poles at opposite ends (+ or -)
25. What two bonds are found in a water molecule? Hydrogen and covalent bonds
26. Define hydrophilic and hydrophobic.
a. Hydrophilic – a polar molecule that dissolves in water
b. Hydrophobic - a non-polar molecule that dos not dissolve in water
27. Complete the biomolecule chart below:
Biomolecule Elements Building Blocks (monomer)
Function Example
CARBOHYDRATES C, H, O Monosaccharide Quick Energy Glucose
LIPIDS C, H, O Glycerol Head and Fatty Acid Tails
LONG TERM ENERGY
Oils and Fats
Protein CHON AMINO ACIDS Structure CARTILAGE, BONES, ENZYME
NUCLEIC ACID C,H,O,N,P NUCLEIC ACID GENETIC STORAGE DNA, RNA
28. You must be able to identify the following biomolecules:
Nucleotide
Carbohydrates
29. Define the following:
a. Activation Energy – The minimum energy required for a chemical reaction to occur.
b. Substrate – The substance that binds to the active site
c. Enzyme – a special type of protein that acts like a catalyst to speed up reactions. Ends in -ase
d. Active site – The pocket-like structure on the enzyme where the substrate binds
30. Label the following (use the following terms: energy, activation energy with enzyme, activation energy without
enzyme, reactants, products, energy released)
A. Activation energy without enzyme
B. Activation energy with enzyme
C. Energy released
Fatty Acids/lipids
Phospholipid
D
E
D. Reactants
E. Products
31. Label the following: enzyme, substrate, active site, products:
Cell Theory/Discovery
32. State the 3 components of the cell theory.
a. All organisms are composed of 1 or more cells
b. The cell is the basic functional unit of organisms
c. All cells come from preexisting cells
33. Explain the following scientist’s contributions to the cell theory:
a. Robert Hooke
i. Observed a cork, coined the term “cell”
b. Anton Van Leeuenhoek
i. Observed first living organism (protest)
c. Theodor Schwann
i. Discovered animals and plants were composed of cells
Cells
34. Compare and contrast Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic cells. Give an example of each.
Eukaryotic Cell example: Plants/Animals Prokaryotic Cell Example: Bacteria (E.Coli)
Enzyme
Substrate
Active Site
Products
35. Compare and contrast Plant and Animal cells.
36. What is the function of flagella in a prokaryotic and eukaryotic cell?
Flagella- Motility/Movement
37. Complete the cell organelle chart below.
Organelle Function Plant Animal Both
Cell Membrane Barrier in animal cell and maintains homeostasis, by allowing or not allowing materials in or out of a cell.
X
Cell Wall Hard rigid barrier in plants and bacteria cells that provide support and protection
X
Cytoplasm Gel like fluid between nucleus and plasma membrane that provides an environment for organelles
X
Mitochondria “powerhouse” of the cell, where cellular respiration occurs and sugar is converted to energy (heat)
X
Lysosomes Organelle containing digestive enzymes that break down old and warn out cells and waste
X
Vacuoles Large fluid-filled sac that stores sugars and other molecules in a plant cell (absent or very small in animal cells)
X
Golgi Bodies Responsible for sorting, modifying, and packaging proteins into transport vesicles
X
Chloroplasts Turns light into chemical energy in plant cells X
Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum
Responsible for the production and metabolism of fats and steroid hormones. It is considered “smooth” because it is not studded with ribosomes
X
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
Involved in some protein production, protein folding, quality control and dispatch. It is considered “rough” because it is studded with ribosomes
X
Ribosomes Produces Proteins (attached or free floating) X
Nucleus Contains cell’s genetic material and controls the cells function X
Centrosome Helps with cell division by pushing and pulling organelles especially chromosomes
X
Chromatin/Chromosome Genetic material inside the nucleus that provides instructions for the cells function
X
38. Label the Plant and animal cell below.
Transport (Osmosis/Diffusion)
39. Define hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic.
Hypertonic: When the concentration of solutes in one solution is higher than the other solution
Hypotonic: When the concentration of solutes in one solution is lower than the other solution
Isotonic: When the concentration of solutes in one solution is equal to the other solution
40. The diagram shows cells with different types of solutions surrounding them. In each diagram, indicate
whether the solution outside the cell is hypertonic, hypotonic or isotonic and which direction the water
molecules will move across the membrane (show with arrows).
Hypotonic Solution: Water will move in the cell
Isotonic Solution: They are at equilibrium but solutions will still be moving in and out of the cell at a similar rate
Hypertonic Solution: Water will move out of the cell
41. What is meant by the cell membrane being selectively permeable?
Selectively Permeable: Some molecules are allowed to pass through the plasma membrane at any time, other
molecules are only allowed at certain times or in limited amounts and some molecules are never allowed.
42. Label each type of cell transport below and explain the difference in each type of transport, then state whether
or not it requires energy.
Simple Diffusion: Movement of particles from high concentration to low concentration and does not require
energy
Facilitated Diffusion: Movement of molecules from high to low concentration using a protein channel and does
require energy
Osmosis: Movement of water from a high concentration to a low concentration and does not require energy
Active transport: Movement of molecules from high concentration to low concentration. This is unnatural and
requires energy
43. What is the difference between endocytosis and exocytosis?
Endocytosis: the process of capturing a substance or particle from outside the cell by engulfing it with the cell
membrane- it goes IN the cell
Exocytosis: the process of vesicles fusing with the plasma membrane and releasing their contents outside of
the cell- it EXITS the cell