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Chapter 1. Exploring Life. Overview: Biology’s Most Exciting Era Biology is the scientific study of life Biologists are moving closer to understanding : How a single cell develops into an organism How plants convert sunlight to chemical energy How the human mind works
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Chapter 1 Exploring Life
Overview: Biology’s Most Exciting Era • Biology is the scientific study of life • Biologists are moving closer to understanding: • How a single cell develops into an organism • How plants convert sunlight to chemical energy • How the human mind works • How living things interact in communities • How life’s diversity evolved from the first microbes
Life’s basic characteristic is a high degree of order • Each level of biological organization has emergent properties Video: Seahorse Camouflage
Concept 1.1: Biologists explore life from the microscopic to the global scale • The study of life extends from molecules and cells to the entire living planet • Biological organization is based on a hierarchy of structural levels
A Hierarchy of Biological Organization • Biosphere: all environments on Earth • Ecosystem: all living and nonliving things in a particular area • Community: all organisms in an ecosystem • Population: all individuals of a species in a particular area • Organism: an individual living thing
A Hierarchy of Biological Organization (continued) • Organ and organ systems: specialized body parts made up of tissues • Tissue: a group of similar cells • Cell: life’s fundamental unit of structure and function • Organelle: a structural component of a cell • Molecule: a chemical structure consisting of atoms
The biosphere Organelles 1 µm Cell Ecosystems Cells Atoms Molecules 10 µm Communities Tissues 50 µm Populations Organs and organ systems Organisms
A Closer Look at Ecosystems • Each organism interacts with its environment • Both organism and environment affect each other
Ecosystem Dynamics • The dynamics of an ecosystem include two major processes: • Cycling of nutrients, in which materials acquired by plants eventually return to the soil • The flow of energy from sunlight to producers to consumers
Energy Conversion • Activities of life require work • Work depends on sources of energy • Energy exchange between an organism and environment often involves energy transformations • In transformations, some energy is lost as heat • Energy flows through an ecosystem, usually entering as light and exiting as heat
LE 1-4 Sunlight Ecosystem Producers (plants and other photosynthetic organisms) Heat Chemical energy Consumers (including animals) Heat
A Closer Look at Cells • The cell is the lowest level of organization that can perform all activities of life • The ability of cells to divide is the basis of all reproduction, growth, and repair of multicellular organisms
LE 1-5 25 µm
The Cell’s Heritable Information • Cells contain DNA, the heritable information that directs the cell’s activities • DNA is the substance of genes • Genes are the units of inheritance that transmit information from parents to offspring
LE 1-6 Sperm cell Nuclei containing DNA Fertilized egg with DNA from both parents Embryo’s cells With copies of inherited DNA Egg cell Offspring with traits inherited from both parents
Each DNA molecule is made up of two long chains arranged in a double helix • Each link of a chain is one of four kinds of chemical building blocks called nucleotides
LE 1-7 Nucleus DNA Nucleotide Cell DNA double helix Single strand of DNA
Two Main Forms of Cells • Characteristics shared by all cells: • Enclosed by a membrane • Use DNA as genetic information • Two main forms of cells: • Eukaryotic: divided into organelles; DNA in nucleus • Prokaryotic: lack organelles; DNA not separated in a nucleus
LE 1-8 PROKARYOTIC CELL EUKARYOTIC CELL DNA (no nucleus) Membrane Membrane Cytoplasm Organelles Nucleus (contains DNA) 1 µm
Concept 1.2: Biological systems are much more than the sum of their parts • A system is a combination of components that form a more complex organization • Cells, organisms, and ecosystems are some examples of biological systems
The Emergent Properties of Systems • Emergent properties result from arrangements and interactions within systems • New properties emerge with each step upward in the hierarchy of biological order
The Power and Limitations of Reductionism • Reductionism is reducing complex systems to simpler components that are easier to study • The studies of DNA structure and the Human Genome Project are examples of reductionism
Systems Biology • Systems biology seeks to create models of the dynamic behavior of whole biological systems • An example is a systems map of interactions between proteins in a fruit fly cell • Such models may predict how a change in one part of a system will affect the rest of the system
LE 1-10 Outer membrane and cell surface CELL Cytoplasm Nucleus
Systems biology uses three key research developments: • High-throughput technology: methods to generate large data sets rapidly • Bioinformatics: using computers and software to process and integrate large data sets • Interdisciplinary research teams
Feedback Regulation in Biological Systems • Regulatory systems ensure a dynamic balance in living systems • Chemical processes are catalyzed (accelerated) by enzymes • Many biological processes are self-regulating: the product regulates the process itself
In negative feedback, the accumulation of a product slows down the process itself • In positive feedback (less common), the product speeds up its own production Animation: Negative Feedback Animation: Positive Feedback
LE 1-11 A A Negative feedback Enzyme 1 Enzyme 1 B B Enzyme 2 C C Enzyme 3 D D D D D D D D D D D
LE 1-12 W W Enzyme 4 Enzyme 4 X X Positive feedback Enzyme 5 Enzyme 5 Y Y Enzyme 6 Enzyme 6 Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z
Concept 1.3: Biologists explore life across its great diversity of species • Biologists have named about 1.8 million species • Estimates of total species range from 10 million to over 200 million
Grouping Species: The Basic Idea • Taxonomy is the branch of biology that names and classifies species into a hierarchical order • Kingdoms and domains are the broadest units of classification
LE 1-14 Family Phylum Order Kingdom Domain Species Genus Class Ursus americanus (American black bear) Ursus Ursidae Carnivora Mammalia Chordata Animalia Eukarya
The Three Domains of Life • At the highest level, life is classified into three domains: • Bacteria (prokaryotes) • Archaea (prokaryotes) • Eukarya (eukaryotes)Eukaryotes include protists and the kingdoms Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia
LE 1-15 Protists Kingdom Plantae Bacteria 4 µm 100 µm Archaea Kingdom Animalia Kingdom Fungi 0.5 µm
Unity in the Diversity of Life • Underlying life’s diversity is a striking unity, especially at lower levels of organization • In eukaryotes, unity is evident in details of cell structure
LE 1-16a 5 µm 15 µm Cilia of Paramecium Cilia of windpipe cells
LE 1-16b 0.1 µm Cross section of cilium, as viewed with an electron microscope Cilia of windpipe cells Cilia of Paramecium
Concept 1.4: Evolution accounts for life’s unity and diversity • The history of life is a saga of a changing Earth billions of years old
The evolutionary view of life came into sharp focus in 1859, when Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection • “Darwinism” became almost synonymous with the concept of evolution
The Origin of Species articulated two main points: • Descent with modification (the view that contemporary species arose from a succession of ancestors) • Natural selection (a proposed mechanism for descent with modification) • Some examples of descent with modification are unity and diversity in the orchid family
Natural Selection • Darwin inferred natural selection by connecting two observations: • Observation: Individual variation in heritable traits • Observation: Overpopulation and competition • Inference: Unequal reproductive success • Inference: Evolutionary adaptation
LE 1-20 Population of organisms Overproduction and competition Hereditary variations Differences in reproductive success Evolution of adaptations in the population
Natural selection can “edit” a population’s heritable variations • An example is the effect of birds preying on a beetle population