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Explore the characteristics of living things, including cells, reproduction, growth, energy acquisition, and response to the environment.
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#1 Living things are made up of cells • Cell – small self contained unit • Can perform all the functions of life
Unicellular – organism made of one cell • Multicellular – organism made of many cells
Cells are only found in living material or material that was once alive
#2 Living things Reproduce • Produce organisms like themselves
Sexual reproduction – 2 cells formed from different individuals unite to form an organism
#3 – Living things grow and develop • Are capable of growth at one stage of their life cycle at least • Development – cycle of growth
Aging – comes at the end of development • Organism becomes less efficient at the process of life
#4 – Living things obtain and use energy • Energy from their environment or surroundings • Energy to grow, develop, and reproduce
Anabolism – putting together or synthesizing complex substances from simpler substances
Plants – photosynthesis • Animals – take in energy food
Catabolism – final breakdown of complex substances into simpler substances resulting in the release of energy
#5 – Living Things respond to their environment • Slow – changes in metabolic processes • Rapid – changes in behavior
Stimulus – anything that causes an organism to react • Irritability – the ability of living things to react to stimuli
Living things respond to stimuli in a way that improves their chances for survival
Homeostasis • Organisms ability to maintain constant or stable conditions that are necessary for life • Process by which organisms respond to different stimuli • Homeo – same • Stasis – stopping/standing
Biology – the study of life • Biologist – person who studies living things
Branches of Biology • Many divisions • Molecular biologist • Cell biologist • Zoologist (animals) • Botanist (plants) • Paleontologists • Ecologists • Global Ecologists
Questions at the …. • Molecular level • Cellular level • Multicellular level • Population level • Global level
To study small organisms microscopes • Produces a larger image
Compound Light Microscope • Most common • Can observe living organisms • Light passes through the organism • Two types of lenses – Objectives – 2 • Ocular (eyepiece)
Total Magnification = • Ocular x Objective
Limit of Resolution • Beyond this point objects become blurry and detail is lost – will always exist • Increase magnification – more and more detail until you reach the limit of resolution
Staining • Colors some parts of the cell to make them clearly visible
Types of Microscopes • Compound light microscope • Electron microscope
Electron Microscope • Can see smaller things than the compound • Uses electromagnets to bend electrons • Two types – SEM and TEM
TEM (Transmission) • How it works – shine a beam of electrons at a sample and magnify the image onto a florescent screen (TV)
SEM – Scanning • How it works – beam of electrons scans back and forth across the surface of a specimen • Electrons bounce off the specimen are picked up by detectors and a 3-D image is formed
Limitations of Electron Microscopes • Specimens must be in a vacuum (no air) • Thin slices • Stained, dried out or dead
Centrifugation • Cell fractionation – cells blended in a blender • Broken bits spun 20,000x a minute