Biology 101: General Human Bio Exam

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General human biology 101 Exam Chapters 1-4
Sasha Joy
Flashcards by Sasha Joy, updated more than 1 year ago
Sasha Joy
Created by Sasha Joy over 4 years ago
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Question Answer
What are six characteristics of living things? Grows/develops Genetic code Reproduces Responds to stimulus Exchanges materials with environment Evolves Made up of cells Homeostasis
Provide an example of growth and development increasing in size or change, metamorphosis
Provide an example of genetic code DNA
Provide an example of reproduction offspring, passing on DNA
Provide an example of response to stimulus movement of plants toward light
Provide an example of exchange of materials with the environment plants and photosynthesis, humans eat plants for energy and excrete waste
Provide an example of evolution popultions change genetically over time
Provide an example of cell single celled organisms, multi-cellular organisms (plants and animals)
Provide an example of homeostasis Thermoregulation
Define Taxonomy The discipline of identifying and grouping organisms
Define systematics The study of the evolutionary relationships between organisms (currently being redefined through the use of DNA)
Describe the relationship between the taxa: domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family genus, species Basic classification categories ordered from most inclusive (most diverse) to least inclusive (least diverse)
What are the three domain classifications of living things? Archaea & Eubacteria (Prokaryotic Cells) Eukaryotic Cells
Archaea live in what type of environment? Extreme environments (hot springs, salt ponds)
Eubacteria live in what types of environments? Most surfaces and environments (gut of animals, soil, ponds etc.)
Ribosomal RNA has been used to assist in what? The classification of Eukaryotic, Eubacteria and Prokaryotic cells
What are features of kingdom Protista? Eukaryotic- True nucleus. Mostly unicellular (protozoan), some multicellular algal forms (kelp). Requires oxygen, reproduce asexually, most have cilia and flagella
What are features of kingdom Fungi? Multicellular, heterotrophic, cell walls composed of Chitin, spore propagation, mycelial branching.
What are features of kingdom Plantae? Multicellular, Autotrophic (photosynthetic), tissue differentiation, cell walls (cellulose), non-motile, meiosis, fertilization, diploid and haploid life phases
What are features of kingdom Animalia? Multicellular, heterotrophic, meiosis, fertilization, tissue differentiation, no cell walls, motile, cilia and flagella with protein tubulin (cytoplasmic protein)
Explain binomial nomenclature. "Two name" system AKA scientific name, genus (Capitalized) species (lower case) and underlined. Pisum sativum.
How many electrons complete the first three rings of an outer shell? First: 2 Second: 8 Third: 8
What are the most common elements of living things? SPONCH Sulfur, Phosphorus, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Carbon, and Hydrogn
What are the four most abundant elements? Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen
What elements make up carbohydrates? CHO
What elements make up proteins? CHONS
What elements make up lipids? CHO and P in membranes
What elements make up Nucleic Acids? CHONP
What is the difference between and atom and an ion? Atom- electrically neutral, protons=electrons Ion- Cation, positive charge, protons>electrons Anion, negative charge, protons<electrons
Explain an Ionic bond A chemical bond which exchanges electrons to have a full opposite charge (NaCl)
Explain covalent bonding Covalent bonds share electrons to complete the outer shell (H2O)
Be aware of polyatomic ions PO43-, NO31-, SO42-
Describe a polar molecule A covalent but unequal sharing of electrons between two atoms causes a slight charge. H2O is an example in which the Oxygen becomes negatively charged while the Hydrogen is positively charged.
Explain a non-polar molecule A non-polar molecule shares electrons equally resulting in no charge.
What is the nature of a hydrogen bond? A hydrogen bond is an electrostatic attraction in which a slightly positively charged hydrogen molecule is attracted to a slightly negatively charged molecule. Individually weak but collectively strong.
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