1 / 15

AP Biology 8/28

AP Biology 8/28. Make sure you have your lab book and it is prepped for lab Keep your lab desk clear Will a protein with acidic functional groups dissolve in water? In oil?

bernad
Download Presentation

AP Biology 8/28

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AP Biology 8/28 • Make sure you have your lab book and it is prepped for lab • Keep your lab desk clear • Will a protein with acidic functional groups dissolve in water? In oil? • Proteins have carboxyl (COOH) groups on one end and an amine (NH2) group on the other end. If the two ends of the protein are on the outside of the protein, will it dissolve in water?

  2. Lab 12: Animal Behavior

  3. Lab 12: Animal Behavior Description set up an experiment to study behavior in an organism Betta fish agonistic behavior Drosophila mating behavior Pillbug movement

  4. Lab 12: Animal Behavior Concepts taxis vs. kinesis experimental design control vs. experimental Hypothesis which factors affect pill bug behavior. choice chamber ideas temperature humidity light intensity salinity other factors

  5. Essential Knowledge • 2.D.1 All biological systems from cells and organisms to populations, communities and ecosystems are affected by complex biotic and abiotic interactions involving exchange of matter and free energy. • 2.E.3 Timing and coordination of behavior are regulated by various mechanisms and are important in natural selection. • 4.A.6 Interactions among living organisms and with their environment result in the movement of matter and energy. • 4.B.3 Interactions between and within populations influence patterns of species distribution and abundance.

  6. Science Practices • Science Practice 2: The student can use mathematics appropriately. • Science Practice 3: The student can engage in scientific questioning to extend thinking or to guide investigations within the context of the AP course. • Science Practice 4: The student can plan and implement data collection strategies appropriate to a particular scientific question. • Science Practice 5: The student can perform data analysis and evaluation of evidence.

  7. Lab 12: Animal Behavior Hypothesis development Poor:I think pillbugs will move toward the wet side of a choice chamber. Better:If pillbugs prefer a moist environment, then when they are randomly placed on both sides of a wet/dry choice chamber and allowed to move about freely for 10 minutes, most will be found on the wet side.

  8. Lab 12: Animal Behavior Experimental design sample size

  9. Results? • Briefly explain your group’s results to the class.

  10. Essential Knowledge • 2.D.1 All biological systems from cells and organisms to populations, communities and ecosystems are affected by complex biotic and abiotic interactions involving exchange of matter and free energy. • 2.E.3 Timing and coordination of behavior are regulated by various mechanisms and are important in natural selection. • 4.A.6 Interactions among living organisms and with their environment result in the movement of matter and energy. • 4.B.3 Interactions between and within populations influence patterns of species distribution and abundance.

  11. Science Practices • Science Practice 2: The student can use mathematics appropriately. • Science Practice 3: The student can engage in scientific questioning to extend thinking or to guide investigations within the context of the AP course. • Science Practice 4: The student can plan and implement data collection strategies appropriate to a particular scientific question. • Science Practice 5: The student can perform data analysis and evaluation of evidence.

  12. Lab 12: Animal Behavior Experimental design

  13. Lab 12: Animal Behavior

  14. Lab 12: Animal Behavior ESSAY 1997 A scientist working with Bursatella leachii, a sea slug that lives in an intertidal habitat in the coastal waters of Puerto Rico, gathered the following information about the distribution of the sea slugs within a ten-meter square plot over a 10-day period. a. For the data above, provide information on each of the following: Summarize the pattern. Identify three physiological or environmental variables that could cause the slugs to vary their distance from each other. Explain how each variable could bring about the observed pattern of distribution. b. Choose one of the variables that you identified and design a controlled experiment to test your hypothetical explanation. Describe results that would support or refute your hypothesis.

  15. Lab 12: Animal Behavior ESSAY 2002 The activities of organisms change at regular time intervals. These changes are called biological rhythms. The graph depicts the activity cycle over a 48-hour period for a fictional group of mammals called pointy-eared bombats, found on an isolated island in the temperate zone. Describe the cycle of activity for the bombats. Discuss how three of the following factors might affect the physiology and/or behavior of the bombats to result in this pattern of activity. temperature food availability presence of predators social behavior Propose a hypothesis regarding the effect of light on the cycle of activity in bombats. Describe a controlled experiment that could be performed to test this hypothesis, and the results you would expect.

More Related