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Animal and Plant Systems and Ecology. Mary Susan Mardon. Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells. Prokaryotic Cells lack a membrane bound nucleus. Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells . Eukaryotic Cells have a membrane bound nucleus. Cytoskeleton. Flagellum . Mitochondria. Centrioles. Nucleus.
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Animal and Plant Systems and Ecology Mary Susan Mardon
Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells • Prokaryotic Cells lack a membrane bound nucleus.
Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells • Eukaryotic Cells have a membrane bound nucleus. Cytoskeleton Flagellum Mitochondria Centrioles Nucleus Cell Membrane Cilia Lysosome Ribosomes Golgi Apparatus
Plant Cell • Plant Cells have Cell Walls • Have Plastids (three types) • Chloroplast • Leukoplast • Chromoplast • Have large vacuoles • Lack Centrioles, Cilia, Flagella • Rectangular
Animal Cell • Have Centrioles, Flagella, and Cilia • Lack Cell Wall • Round
Specialized Animal Cells • Three types of Blood Cells • Red Blood Cells • White Blood Cells • Thrombocytes (platelets)
Specialized Animal Cells • Muscle Tissue • Skeletal-voluntary • Smooth-involuntary • Cardiac-involuntary
Structure of a Muscle Cell Sarcolemma Myofibrils A Band I Band Z Band Mitochondria Nucleus
Specialized Animal Cells • Epithelial Cells • Simple Squamous • Simple Cuboidal • Simple Columnar
Specialized Animal Cells • Bone Tissue • Cartilage
Specialized Plant Systems • Plant Root Zone
Vascular Plants • Have three different types of cells • Epidermal • Ground • Vascular
Epidermal Cell Epidermal Cell
Ground Tissue • Sclerenchyma: thick, rigid cell walls makes it tough and strong. • Collenchyma: have strong, flexible cell walls that help support larger plants.
Ground Tissue • Parenchyma: are large similar cells that can be used to store nutrients
Vascular tissue Phloem—vascular cells that transport nutrients within the plant. Xylem—vascular cells that transport water within the plant
Stems • Provides support for the plant • Transports nutrients from the roots to the leaves • Waterproof covering made of epidermal cells and wax (cuticle) • Some woody stems have cells called cork which provide protection and prevent water loss
Leaves • Cuticle—waxy covering on the leaf • Trichomes—specialized hairs on the outside of the cuticle • Guard cells-form openings for the stoma • Stoma—regulate gas exchange with the environment
Plant Systems • Vascular plants have specialized tissues used for transport • Flowering plants, ferns, trees, shrubs, conifers • Generally very large in size • Nonvascular plants lack transport tissues • Mosses, liverworts, hornworts, green algae • Most rely on osmosis and diffusion to transport nutrients and water
Plant Systems continued… • Phloem Tissue • Carry nutrients made by the plant from the leaves to the stems or roots • Phloem tissue is composed of parenchyma cells, sieve tube cells, and companion cells
Flowers • Contain the reproductive parts of the plant • Pollen is the male gamete is produced on the stamen the male reproductive organ • Ovary is the female gamete and located at the bottom of the style (meiosis) • Pistil is the female reproductive organ • Anther produces the pollen (meiosis) • Pollen grains stick to the stigma (top of pistil)
Flowers continued… • Pollen grain grows a pollen tube down through the style to the ovary where fertilization occurs in the ovule • Self-pollination occurs when pollen of a flower is transferred to the stigma of the same flower • Cross-pollination occurs when pollen of one flower is deposited on other flowers (wind, insects, birds)
Plants and Light • White light made up of all the colors of light • ROY G. BIV • Reflected light bounce off the leaf’s surface and color is perceived
Plants and Light Continued… • Plants contain two main pigments • Chlorophyll a absorption peaks at 665 and 465 nm • Chlorophyll b absorption peaks at 450 to 500 and 600-650 nm 3. Wavelengths 500-600 nm are not absorbed by either pigment---reflecting green
Plants and Light Continued… • Chromoplasts contain yellow, red, orange , blue pigment • Chromoplasts are found in flowers and fruits,
Photosynthesis and Respiration • Photosynthesis is the chemical process plants use to trap energy. • Two stages • Light-dependent reaction occurs in the stroma of the chloroplast • Light-independent reaction (carbon fixation) uses ATP carbon and NADPH to form glucose
Photosynthesis and Respiration Continued… • External factors which affect the chemical reaction include • temperature • light intensity • pH
Cell Respiration • Cell respiration is the process of breaking down molecules of glucose to release energy. • Two types of respiration • aerobic—oxygen is required • anaerobic—other gases are utilized • Three phases of cellular respiration • Glycolysis • Krebs cycle • Electron transport chain
Biological Classification • Taxonomy is the classification of an organism based on factors such as structure, behavior, lifestyle, genetic make-up, nutritional needs, and methods of obtaining food.
History of Taxonomy • Aristotle (384-322 BC) used two categories to classify plants and animals • Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) a Swedish botanist developed a system called binomial nomenclature to classify organisms • Genus species-----Homo sapien • Binomial name is written in Latin
Taxonomic Categories • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species
Kingdoms • Animalia • Plantae • Fungi • Protista • Eubacteria • Archaea bacteria
Influence of Biotic and Abiotic Factors • Biotic factors include all living organisms • Flowers, insects, mammals, sponges • Organisms must obtain and store energy from abiotic factors • Abiotic factors include all non-living components • Water, soil, temperature, light • Determine the size of an ecosystem
Population Growth Patterns • Population is a group of organisms of the same species living in the same geographic area • Population dynamics include characteristics of populations such as growth rate, density, and distribution of a population • Growth rate of a population is the change in population size per unit time.