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Biology 156 – Plant Biology

Biology 156 – Plant Biology. Dr. Fisher. From Baram-Tsabari et al. 2010. From Baram-Tsabari et al. 2010. Learning Goals – By the end of this course, you will:. Appreciate the importance of plants in your daily life. Learning Goals – By the end of this course, you will:.

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Biology 156 – Plant Biology

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  1. Biology 156 – Plant Biology Dr. Fisher

  2. From Baram-Tsabari et al. 2010

  3. From Baram-Tsabari et al. 2010

  4. Learning Goals – By the end of this course, you will: • Appreciate the importance of plants in your daily life

  5. Learning Goals – By the end of this course, you will: • Appreciate the importance of plants in your daily life • Have a better understanding of plant diversity and evolution in general

  6. Learning Goals – By the end of this course, you will: • Appreciate the importance of plants in your daily life • Have a better understanding of plant diversity and evolution in general • Appreciate the connections between plant ecology, biodiversity, and human culture

  7. Learning Goals – By the end of this course, you will: • Appreciate the importance of plants in your daily life • Have a better understanding of plant diversity and evolution in general • Appreciate the connections between plant ecology, biodiversity, and human culture • Gain a deeper understanding of the process of science and evidence based inquiry

  8. Why Care? • You don’t need to be a scientist to think like a scientist • approaching this course scientifically will help your learning! • we need more scientifically literate citizens! • Life as we know it (or anything close) could not exist without plants • being alive requires energy

  9. Learning Outcomes By the end of today, you will be able to: • Explain the basic objectives of science • Describe the typical structure of scientific methods • Evaluate the importance of photosynthesis for the biosphere

  10. What is science?

  11. What is science? • Inquiry – being curious! • Evaluating evidence to answer questions about the natural world • An ongoing process – new evidence is considered and old ideas are revised to include our most current understanding • A very human endeavor – science is a community effort, and requires both collaboration and dissenting opinions for its advancement

  12. Why Understand Science? • “What strikes one immediately upon reading such a statement is the low estimate of the Bible which it entails. Whenever ‘science’ and the Bible are in conflict, it is always the Bible that, in one manner or another, must give way. We are not told that ‘science’ should correct its answers in light of Scripture. Always it is the other way around. Yet this is really surprising, for the answers which scientists have provided have frequently changed with the passing of time. the ‘authoritative’ answers of pre-Copernican scientists are no longer acceptable; nor, for that matter, are many of the views of twenty-five years ago.” -Young, E.J. Days of Genesis. Westminster Theological Journal 25(1):1–34.

  13. Typical Scientific Process • Observation • Question • Formal hypothesis (“If, then...If not, then...”) • Gather data / evidence • Evaluate

  14. The First Recorded Experiment in Plant Biology • Run by Jean Baptista van Helmont in 1684 • Observation – plants grow, but they don’t appear to eat like animals. Where does the matter that makes up plants come from?

  15. With your neighbor: • Formulate a hypothesis to explain this observation • What additional information do you need to test this hypothesis?

  16. Van Helmont’s Experiment 5 years ? 200 lb dried dirt 5 lb baby willow tree

  17. Van Helmont’s Experiment 5 years 200 lb dried dirt 5 lb baby willow tree 199 lb, 12 oz dried dirt 169 lb willow tree

  18. Van Helmont’s Experiment • Van Helmont concluded that the willow tree’s biomass must have come from the water he gave the tree (not the soil) • Was his conclusion correct?

  19. Joseph Priestly’s Experiment – 1770s What did this experiment demonstrate?

  20. Jan Ingenhousz’s Experiment - 1779 What happened in the dark?

  21. What we know today: Photosynthesis • Plants convert electromagnetic energy from sunlight into chemical energy (chemical bonds in ATP) • They use this chemical energy to build sugars from carbon dioxide (in the air) and water

  22. Photosynthesis & the Carbon Cycle

  23. Why we owe our existence to photosynthesis • We require energy to live • We are carbon-based life forms • We cannot assimilate carbon from the air, nor can we capture energy from sunlight ....So, we need to EAT things to break down for our energy and carbon

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