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Constitution, Articles of Confederation, and our Founding Fathers Flashcards

Founding Fathers: A healthy Constitution, Compromises of the Constitution, Analyzing the Features of the Articles of Confederation

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317607290Where was the issue of slavery debated?Constitutional Convention
317607291Was the issue of slavery ever really resolved?No
317607292What conflict does the issue of slavery lead to in our country's history?Civil War
317607293What does it mean to ratify something?sign or give formal consent to
317607294What does it mean to adjudicate something?Make a formal judgment about a problem
317607295How old do you have to be to be President of the U.S.?35
317607296Which Founding Father opposed the constitution?Patrick Henry
317607297What is the Virginia Plan?a national government consisting of three branches with checks and balances to prevent the abuse of power
317607298Who made the Virginia plan?James Madison
317607299Who proposed the Virginia plan?Edmund Randolph
317607300When was the Virginia plan proposed?May 29, 1787
317607301What serves as a cheat sheet or in depth explanation of the Constitution?Preamble
317607302What are the compromises of the Constitution?The great compromise, 3/5 compromise, slave trade compromise
317607303What was the great compromise?House of Representatives based on population, Senate with 2 representatives
317607304What was the 3/5 compromise?slaves counted as 3/5 a person
317607305What was the slave trade compromise?Congress could ban the slave trade after 1808
317607306When could congress ban slave trade?1808
317628815Who was the father of the Constitution?James Madison
317628816Slaves were counted as what fraction?3/5
317628817How many representatives does the senate have?2
317628818What is a federalist?A person for the Constitution
317628819What are articles of confederation?a written agreement ratified in 1781 by the thirteen original states. Power was limited
317628820When were the articles of confederation created?1777
317628821When were the articles of confederation ratified?1781
318838340What is an anti-federalist?Someone against the Constitution
318838341What did Patrick Henry pressure the constitutional convention to do?Put in a Bill of Rights
318838342If you were a big state during the Constitutional Convention you tended to want what kind of representation in Congress?Representation based on population
318838343If you were a small state during the Constitutional Convention you tended to want what kind of representation in Congress?Equal number of representatives
318838344If these two founding fathers had not become friends it is possible the Constitution may never have been written. Who are they?Jefferson and Madison
318838345What is representation?speaking on behalf of someone
318838346What is Anarchy?total absence of rule or government, disorder
318838347How was it proven in modern times that Jefferson may have fathered several children by one of his slaves?A unique chromosome, DNA testing
318838348Why did the Articles of Confederation not give Congress the power to tax?Afraid congress would abuse power, as it was during British rule
319764038After the dust from the Revolution settled, what problems were the founding fathers faced with?Needed a government, in debt
319764039What is a statesman?Politician
319764040What was the main cause the articles of confederation failed?Lacked a central government
319764041Under the Articles of Confederation, how many states had to agree to change a law?All of them
319764042The Articles of Confederation could not ________ states.Tax
319764043The Articles could not tax states they could only _________.Ask for money
319764044What was the basic provision of the Virginia plan?Based the constitution not on states but on people as a whole.
319764045The Virginia plan was basically a _______ for the government.blueprint
319764046How did the relation between Jefferson and Madison benefit the United States?Jefferson taught, influenced, and promoted Madison. Continued legacy of founding fathers
319764047How did Madison come prepared for the Constitutional convention?He came 11 days early with the Virginia plan
319764048What was a key point argued at the Constitutional Convention?States rights against the federation government
319764049What was a major argument when considering laws for the new government?Freedom V. Protection
319764050Who rallied against the Constitution?Patrick Henry
319764051Why was Patrick Henry against the constitution?Felt government threatened the right of the people
319764052What did Patrick Henry want included in the new government?Bill Of Rights
319764053What was the basic belief of an Anti-federalist?Freedom as an individual
319764054Was was the basic belief of a Federalist?We can't function without a central government
319764055What was the role of the Federalist Papers in ratifying the Constitution?Outline to Constitution, gives clear basis on every aspect
319764056What were the Federalist Papers?essays written to convince readers to adopt the new constitution
319764057What is the lasting impact of the Founding Fathers?Our life and how we are living it
319764058What is a monarchy?King
319764059What is the crucible of the constitution?Preamble
319764060What is an Oligarchy?Group of military leaders
319764061What is dictatorship?Tyrant
319764062What is a democracy?Everyone is the leader
319764063What is a republic?Elected officials
319764064The USA has what type of government?Republic

CCHS Biology FINAL Study Guide Flashcards

Bio. Study Guide

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179768263Evolutiona change in an organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms
179768264Fossilsthe preserved remains or evidence of ancient organisms
179768265Fossils are found in ___________ rockSedimentary
179768266Fossil RecordInformation about past life, including structure of organisms, what they ate, what ate them, in what environment they lived in, and the order in which they lived
179768267Lugols reacts with...Starch
179768268Benedicts reacts withGlucose
179768269Homologous Structuresstructures that have different mature forms in different organisms, but developed from the same embryonic tissues
179768270Vestigial OrgansOrgans that serve no useful function in an organism
179768271EmbryoAn organism in its early stages of development
179768272Extra Credit: What 80's "hair" band is named after a mammal that cannot hear well?Def Leppard
179768273LamarckJean-Baptiste Lamarck was a scientist who hypothesized on the inheritance of acquired characteristics. His ideas are flawed, but we still cred him with the honor of the first man to propose a theory as to how organisms change over time.
179768274Acquired CharacteristicsCharacteristics of an organism which were acquired over the course of their lifetime; not inherited
179871300Lamarck's TheoryAcquired characteristics are part of Lamarck's (incorrect) theory regarding evolution, called Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics.
179871301Charles DarwinCharles Darwin is a naturalist who wrote several theories regarding evolution, eventually compiling them into a book called "Origin of Species." Part of his knowledge was compiled after a trip aboard the HMS Beagle, on which he made various stops, including the Galapagos.
1798713024 main Steps of Natural Selection1. All populations have genetic diversity. 2. The environment presents challenges. 3. Individuals which have beneficial variations are more likely to survive and pass on these beneficial traits to their offspring. 4. Successful reproduction.
179871303Charles LyellLyell is the author of "Principles of Geology," a book which stresses that scientists must explain past events as processes that can be observed. It stresses that the process which occur on earth today are the exact same as they were thousands, even millions of years ago.
179871304James HuttonHutton published a detailed hypothesis about the geological forces which shaped Earth. He proved that layers of rock formed very slowly, taking millions of years to reach their present condition. He also stated that rocks are moved up, towards Earth's surface, by forces beneath Earth's surface.
179871305Impact of Hutton and LyellCharles Darwin was influenced by both of these mens' publications. From Hutton, Darwin learned that the Earth is much older than just a few thousand years. This, Darwin thought, would give Earth's species more time to evolve and change. From Lyell, Darwin learned that if the Earth could change over time, as it had been ever since time had begun, then that meant that the environment was changing. This would force the species to change as well, in order to adapt to their ever-evolving surroundings. Also, Darwin learned that these processes take much longer than just a few thousand years. Both Hutton and Lyell emphasized the fact that the Earth was millions of years old, not just a few thousand.
179871306Reproductive isolationthe separation of species or populations, so that they cannot interbreed and produce fertile offspring
179871307Adaptive radiationthe process by which a single species, or a small group of species, evolves into several different forms that live in different ways; rapid growth in the diversity of a group of organisms
179871308Convergent evolutionthe process by which unrelated organisms independently evolve similarities when adapting to similar environments
179871309How old Earth is4.6 billion years old
179871310Extra Credit: Who are the godfathers of "punk" rock music?I do not know; Possible Answer: Iggy Pop
179871311Difference between Prokaryote / EukaryoteProkaryote: cells are smaller and simpler, all bacteria, no nuclei Eukaryote: larger and more complex, are plants, animals, fungi, and protists, have nuclei
179871312Precambrian Era90% of Earth's history during this time; simple anaerobic forms of life evolve, followed by photosynthetic forms which added oxygen to Earth's atmosphere; aerobic life forms evolved; eukaryotes appeared; life existed ONLY in the sea
179871313Paleozoic EraDiversity of marine life; many kinds of invertebrates
179871314Mesozoic EraAbout 180 million years; increased dominance of dinosaurs; appearance of flowering plants; dinosaur extinction
179871315Cenozoic EraMammals evolve adaptations that allow life on land, water, and air
179871316At the end of each era, a(n) __________ occursExtinction
179871317Types of animals that are primatesGorillas, apes, monkeys, chimpanzees
179871318Artificial selection vs. Natural selectionArtificial selection is selection by humans. Nature still provides the variation, but humans choose which of those variations are most beneficial. On the other hand, natural selection is an instance where nature provides variation AND the selection. Here, humans aren't involved. Instead, the organisms with the most beneficial variations are the ones who survive and reproduce.
179871319Extra Credit: What type of animal is Aslan? Who does he symbolize in the religious sector?A lion; Jesus Christ
179871320Nucleic acida macromolecule containing hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus
179871321A nucleotide is made of essentially 3 things:1. A 5-carbon sugar 2. A phosphate group 3. A nitrogenous base
1798713224 Nitrogen BasesAdenine, Cytosine, Thymine, and Guanine
179871323Double helixthe shape of the DNA in a human cell, first discovered by Watson and Crick
179871324Complementary nitrogen basesAdenine-Thymine Cytosine-Guanine
179871325DNA ReplicationDNA replicates through a process called base pairing. Each DNA strand of the double helix can be used as a template to make the other strand. The DNA molecule separates into two strands, and each strand serves as a model for the new strand. Enzymes "unzip," or separate, the double helix. Then, DNA Polymerase, the principle enzyme involved in DNA replication, joins the individual nucleotides together to produce a new DNA molecule, a polymer. DNA Polymerase also checks each new DNA strand, making sure that each base pair is matched correctly with its partner. The reason as to why each DNA molecule replicates is simple: survival. This is the method by which the DNA is able to survive!
179871326RNAa nucleic acid which contains the sugar ribose, and which stores the genetic material of an organism
179871327RNA vs. DNARNA contains the sugar ribose, but DNA contains the sugar deoxyribose. RNA is usually single-stranded, but DNA is generally double-stranded. lastly, RNA contains uracil, unlike DNA, which contains thymine instead.
179871328tRNA (transfer RNA)RNA molecule that transfers each amino acids to the ribosome, as specified by coded messages from the mRNA
179871329mRNA (messenger RNA)RNA molecule that carries copies of the instructions for assembling amino acids into proteins
179871330Location of the tRNA in the cellRibosome
179871331Location of the mRNA in the cellNucleus
179871332Transcriptionthe process in which part of the nucleotide sequence of DNA is copied into a complementary sequence of RNA; creates RNA molecules, used in protein production
179871333Tripletthe complementary three base sequence on the DNA; encodes for one amino acid
179871334Codonthe triplet sequence in the messenger RNA
179871335Anticodonthe corresponding triplet sequence on the transfer RNA
179871336TranslationAlso known as protein synthesis, the cell uses the information from the mRNA to produce proteins. The mRNA receives this info in the nucleus, the attaches to the ribosome. Then, the tRNA binds the anticodons to the respective codons. Transfer RNA continue to match their anticodons with the mRNA codons, forming a long chain of amino acids triplets. After the ribosome reaches a "Stop" codon, the polypeptide is completed.
179871337Two main functions of DNA1. Contains the genetic information of the cell 2. Contains the information for protein synthesi
179871338Mitosisthe process by which the cell nucleus divides in part of eukaryotic cell division
179871339Importance of mitosisThis is the method by which a cell replicates. This is their means of survival.
179871340Symbiosisa relationship in which two species live closely together
179871341Temporal isolationa form of reproductive isolation in which two populations reproduce at different times
179871342Behavioral isolationa form of reproductive isolation in which two populations have differences in courtship rituals or other types of behavior that prevent them from interbreeding
179871343Carl LinnaeusLinnaeus developed a classification system for organisms. It consists of a hierarchical system: (smallest to largest): species, genus, family, order, class, phylum, kingdom.
179871344Binomial nomenclaturea system developed by Carl Linnaeus, in which each species is given a two-part scientific name. First word = capitalized ; Second word = lowercased ; Both words = italics
179871345Taxonomythe discipline of classifying organisms and assigning each organism a universally accepted name
1798713466 Kingdoms of Living Organisms1. Eubacteria - unicellular prokaryotes; cell walls of peptidoglycan 2. Archaebacteria - unicellular prokaryotes; cell walls not made of peptidoglycan 3. Protists - any eukaryote not a plant, animal, fungi 4. Fungi - heterotrophs; many obtain energy and nutrients from dead, organic matter 5. Plants- multicellular photosynthetic autotrophs; cell walls of cellulose 6. Animals- multicellular eukaryotic heterotrophs; cells do not have cell walls
179871347Ecologya scientific study of interactions among organisms, and between organisms and their environment
1798713486 Ecological Levels of Organization(largest to smallest) 1. Biosphere- the world, where all life exists 2. Biome- ecosystems with similar climates and dominant communities 3. Ecosystem- a collection of all organisms living in a particular place, together 4. Community- different populations that live together in a defined area 5. Population- individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area 6. Individual- a single member of a species
179871349Produceran organism that captures energy from sunlight or chemicals and uses it to produce food from inorganic compounds; also called an autotroph
179871350Autotrophs methods of obtaining energy1. Photosynthesis- autotrophs using light energy to power chemical reactions that convert carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and energy-rich carbohydrates such as sugars and starches 2. Chemosynthesis- autotrophs using chemical energy to produce carbohydrates
179871351Consumeran organism that relies on other organisms for its energy and food supply; also called a heterotroph
1798713525 Consumer types of heterotrophs1. Herbivores-obtain energy by eating only plants 2. Carnivores- obtain energy by eating only animals 3.Omnivores- obtain energy by eating both plants and animals 4. Detritivores- obtain energy by feeding on plant and animal remains and other dead matter 5. Decomposers- obtain energy by breaking down organic matter
179871353Multicellular Organization1. Cell- basic unit of all forms of life 2. Tissue- a group of similar cells that perform a specific function 3. Organ- many groups of tissues working together 4. Organ system- a group of organs that work together to perform a specific function
179871354Food chain vs. food webA food chain is simply a series of steps in which organisms transfer energy by eating and being eaten. A food web is much like a map; it is a collection of all the food chains in an ecosystem linked together. It shows feeding patterns and relationships.
179871355Trophic levelsteps in a food chain or a food web
179871356Energy transferred between trophic levelsOnly 10% of the energy in one trophic level is available and transferred to organisms at the next trophic level.
179871357Climate vs. weatherWeather is just day-to-day conditions in Earth's atmosphere, while climate is year-to-year average. Weather refers to a particular time and place, but climate refers to a region.
179871358Greenhouse effecta natural situation in which heat is retained in Earth's atmosphere by carbon dioxide, methane, water vapor, and other gases.
1798713593 Climate Zones1. Polar Zones- cold areas where the sun's rays strike Earth at a very low angle. 2. Temperate Zones- between the polar zones and the trophics 3. Trophic Zone- near the equator
179871360Biotic vs. Abiotic factorsBiotic factors are influences on organisms in an ecosystem. Abiotic factors are nonliving. Biotic factors are living organisms, while abiotic factors are not alive, like wind, temperature, etc.
179871361Nitchthe full range of physical and biological conditions in which an organism lives; the way in which the organism uses those conditions.
179871362Example of a nitchFrog- in a hollow log, damp, predators, = snakes, birds, wolves, eats = insects, rats; near pond water, hunt at night
179871363Competitiona battle for limited resources
179871364Predationinteraction in which one organism captures and feeds on another organism
1798713653 Types of symbiosis1. Mutualism- both species benefit from the relationship 2. Commensalism- one member benefits, other is neither helped nor harmed from the relationship 3. Parasitism- one organism lives on or inside another organism and harms it
179871366Ecological successiona gradual change in living communities that follows a disturbance
179871367Primary successionsuccession on land where no life exists
179871368Secondary Successionsuccession on land where there is already developed life
179871369Biurets reagent reacts withProtein
1798713703 Factors that determine population size1. The number of births 2. The number of deaths 3. The number of individuals who enter or leave a population
179871371Exponential growthorganisms reproducing at a constant rate; occurs when resources are nearly unlimited
179871372Logistic growthwhen a population's growth slows or stops following a period of exponential growth
179871373Limiting factora factor that causes the growth of a population to decrease
179871374Density-dependent limiting factorsa limiting factor that depends on population size
179923720Density-independent limiting factorsa limiting factor that affects all populations in similar ways, regardless of population size
179923721Examples of Density-dependent limiting factorsdisease, competition
179923722Examples of Density-independent limiting factorsbad weather, drought
179923723Renewable resourceresource that can regenerate quickly and that is replaceable
179923724Nonrenewable resourcea resource that cannot be replenished by natural processes
179923725Functions of circulatory systemTransport oxygen, nutrients, and wastes, move blood through the body
1799237263 Major parts of the circulatory system1. Heart 2. A series of blood vessels 3. The blood that flows through them
179923727ArteriesCarry blood from the heart
179923728VeinsCarry blood to the heart
179923729CapillariesDistribute blood to the organs
179923730Blood flowStarting at the right atrium, blood flows through the open tricuspid valve and into the right ventricle. From there, it goes through the open pulmonary valve and branches off to both of the pulmonary arteries, where it is then taken to the lungs to receive its nutrients. Then, it travels back into the heart through the pulmonary veins, and into the left atrium. Then, blood flows through the mitral valve, through through the aortic valve, and into the aorta, which branches off, distributing blood to both the upper and lower sections of the body. After the blood has circulated through the body, and has lost its nutrients, it flows back up through the superior and inferior vend cava, where it ends up back again in the right atrium.
179933639Double Loop systemPulmonary circulation carries blood between the heart and the lungs. Systematic circulation carries blood between the heart and the rest of the body.
179933640Function of red blood cellsTransport oxygen
179933641Function of white blood cellsguard against infection, fight parasites, and attack bacteria
179933642Function of plateletsaids in the clotting of blood
1799336436 Major nutrients for a healthy body1,. Water 2. Carbohydrates 3. fats 4. Proteins 5. Vitamins 6. Minerals
179933644Respirationthe exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the blood, the air, and tissues
179933645Sexual reproductionthe process by which the cells from two different parents unite to produce the first cell of a new organism
179933646Asexual reproductionthe process by which a single parent reproduces by itself
1799336474 types of teeth1. Incisors- used to bite food; sharp 2. Molars- chew and grind food 3. Cuspids- rip and tear food into smaller pieces 4. Bicuspids- chew and grind food; break down large, hard particles
179933648Extra Credit: Who were the 4 children to reach Narnia?Edmund, Peter, Susan, Lucy
179933649Open circulatory systemblood is pumped by vessels through a simple heart
179933650Closed circulatory systemblood is contained within s network of blood vessels
179933651Hemoglobinan iron-containing protein in red blood vessels that transports oxygen from the lungs to the tissues of the body
179933652Bodies first line of defense against pathogensSkin acts as a barrier; Mucus, sweat, and tears also serve as the first line of defense against pathogens
179933653Chordatea member of the phylum Chordata; animal that has, for at least some stages of its life, a dorsal hollow nerve cord, a notocord, pharyngeal pouches, and a muscular tail.
179933654Examples of ChordatesStarfish, sea urchins, sharks
1799336555 types of pathogens1. Viruses 2. Bacteria 3. Protists 4. Worms 5. Fungi
179933656HIV Virus attacks the ________ cells.Helper T
179933657Function of the Helper T cellsprovide a line of defense against abnormal cells and pathogens
1802428417 Classes of vertebrate animals1. Agnatha 2. Chondrichtheys 3. Osteichtheys 4. Amphibia 5. Reptilia 6. Aves 7. Mammalia
180242842Extra Credit: Who won the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship in 2010-2011?UCONN
180242843Gland that controls body temperatureHypothalamus gland
180242844Homeostasisthe process by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment
180242845Alveolitiny air sacs at the end of a bronchiole in the lungs that provide surface area for gas exchange to occur
180242846Importance of alveoliThey enable mammals to take in large amounts of oxygen required by their metabolism
180242847Exoskeletonan external skeleton made from protein and a carbohydrate called chitin
180242848Axial SkeletonSkull, sternum, ribs, vertebral column
180242849Appendicular skeletonAppendages, etc.
1802428504 types of tissue1. Epithelial 2. Connective 3. Muscle 4. Nervous
180242851Location of epithelial tissuelines both the outside (skin) and the inside cavities and lumen of bodies
180242852Location of nervous tissuenerve cord, spinal cord and brain
180242853Location of muscle tissuethe bones and muscles of the body
180242854Location of connective tissuealmost all of the body
180242855Extra Credit: Who is Veruca Salt?A character in Willy Wonka
1802428562 main ways ATP is producedCell respiration and fermentation
180242857Structure of bonea network of living cells and protein fibers, surrounded by deposits of calcium salts. Bone surrounded by periosteum, a tough connective tissue. Haversion canals run through compact bone, carrying blood vessels and nerves. Spongy bone inside of compact bone. Bone marrow inside bones.
180242858Function of bonessupport for the body, blood vessels transport blood, provides protection
180242859Osteoporosisabnormal loss of bony tissue resulting in fragile porous bones attributable to a lack of calcium
180242860Major skeletal jointsImmovable joints, slightly movable joints, freely movable joints Types: Ball & socket, hinge, pivot, saddle
180242861________ _______ provides lubrication between bonesSynovial fluid
180242862Ligamenta strip of tough connective tissue that holds bones together at a joint
180242863Tendontough connective tissue that joins skeletal muscles
180242864Voluntary musclesMuscles that are under your conscious control
180242865Involuntary musclesMuscles that are not under your conscious control
180242866Extra Credit: 2 Van Halen singersDavid Lee Roth and Sammy Hagar
180242867Antagonist pair of musclesa muscle that opposes the action of another
180242868Cardiac muscleMuscle found in the heart
180242869Smooth musclemuscle found in the walls of hollow structures, such as the stomach, blood vessels, and the intestines, that move food through the digestive tract, control blood flow through the circulatory system, and control the size of pupils during various amounts if light exposure.
1802428703 layers of skin1. Epidermis- protects skin from damage, shields against the sun's ultraviolet rays 2. Dermis- contains blood vessels, nerves, glands, hair follicles, etc. helps maintain homeostasis, sweat glands help control body temperature and to excrete waste 3. Hypodermis- layer of fat, connective tissue that helps insulate the body
180242871Dermis & Body TemperatureWhen the blood needs to conserve heat, the blood vessels in the dermis narrow. When the blood needs to release heat, the blood vessels widen.
180242872Main animal characteristicsMulticellular, eukaryotic, heterotrophic, cells lack a nucleus
180242873Digestive systembody system the breaks down food and absorbs nutrients
180242874Reactantsthe elements or compounds that enter into a chemical reaction
180242875Productsthe elements or compounds produced by a chemical reaction
180242876Diffusionprocess by which molecules tend to move from an area where they are more concentrated to an area where they are less concentrated
180242877Osmosisdiffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
180242878Geneticsthe branch of biology that studies heredity and variation in organisms
180242879"Father of Genetics"Gregor Mendel
180242880Hybridan organism that is the offspring of genetically dissimilar parents or stock
180242881True-breed organismcarry same set of alleles and genes at every possible location
180242882Genotypegenetic makeup of an organism
180242883Example of a genotypeGreen, wrinkled pea plants
180242884Phenotypephysical characteristics of an organism
180242885Homozygous genotypeA genotype in which both alleles are identical
180242886Heterozygous genotypeA genotype with two different alleles
180242887Test-crossthe crossing of an individual of unknown genotype with a homozygous recessive individual to determine the unknown genotype
180242888Autosomeany chromosome that is not a sex chromosome
180242889Sex chromosomeone of the pair of chromosomes that determine the sex of an individual
180242890Codominancesituation in which both alleles of a gene contribute to the phenotype of the organism
180242891Incomplete dominanceone allele is not completely dominant over the other allele
180242892Multiple allelesthree or more forms of a gene that code for a single trait
180242893Sex-linked traitstraits that are inherited with sex chromosomes
180242894KaryotypeA picture of all the chromosomes in a cell arranged in pairs

Biology Midterm 2012 CCHS Flashcards

This is science.

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2896884581. What are the 8 major characteristics of living things? Briefly, describe each one.R: reproduce A: adapt (over generations) R: respond (to the environment) E: energy H: homeostasis O: organized into cells G: grow G: genetic material (DNA)
2896884592. What are the 8 levels at which life can be studied?Molecule: made of groups of atoms Cell: smallest unit of life Groups of cells: organ systems, organs, tissues Organism: individual living things Population: individual species living in the same area Community: population of different species living in the same area Ecosystem: community and non-living surroundings Biosphere: contains all ecosystems
2896884603. a. What is the difference between unicellular and multicellular organisms? b. Is this the same as prokaryotic and eukaryotic? Why or why not?Unicellular organisms only have one cell and multi-cellular organisms have more than one. No, prokaryotic cells do not have a nucleus and eukaryotic cells do have a nucleus.
289688462c. Which kingdoms of organisms are prokaryotes? Which kingdoms of organisms are eukaryotes?Prokaryotes: Eubacteria and Archaebacteria Eukaryotes: Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia
2896884634. What is homeostasis? How is it maintained? How do humans maintain constant body temperature?Homeostasis is the ability to maintain stable internal conditions when the environment changes. Homeostasis is maintained by sweating or shivering if one is too hot or too cold
2896884645. What is a hypothesis? What is a scientific theory?A hypothesis is an educated guess about how something works and a scientific theory is a hypothesis supported by testing and facts.
2896884656. What is a controlled experiment?An experiment in which all variables are controlled and stable except the one being tested.
2896884667. In a controlled experiment, what is a/an Independent (manipulated) variable? Dependent (responding) variable? Control group? Experimental group?Independent variable: the variable being tested Dependent variable: usually the thing you are measuring Control group: the group used to compare to the experimental group Experimental group: the group testing the variable
2940504888. What are the charges or protons, neutrons, and electrons. Where are they located in the atom?Protons have a positive charge, neutrons have a neutral charge and electrons have a negative charge. Protons and neutrons are located in the nucleus and electrons are outside of the nucleus.
2940504899. How does one element differ from another?Elements differ because of their number of protons in the nucleus which specifies their atomic number.
29405049010. What determines the atomic number of an element?The number of protons in the nucleus.
29405049111. What is an isotope?An isotope is an atom that varies in number of neutrons.
29405049212. What are the six most common elements in living things? Name elements and give symbols.C: carbon H: hydrogen N: nitrogen O: oxygen P: phosphorous S: sulfur
29405049313. What are electron shells, and why are they important when talking about atoms bonding together?Electron shells are rings around the nucleus that contain electrons. If the shell is full the atom is stable and if the shell is incomplete it can bond with other atoms. The first shell holds 2 and the second holds 8 electrons.
29405049414. What is the difference between ionic and covalent bonding? Be able to explain/diagram both.Ionic Bonding: One or more electrons are donated or received between atoms. Covalent bonding: One or more pairs of electrons are shared between atoms.
29405049515. Why is water a polar molecule? What does it mean for a molecule to be polar or non-polar?Water is a polar molecule because the oxygen atom pulls on the hydrogen atoms electrons and causes them to have a slightly positive charge while the oxygen atom has a slightly negative charge.
29405049616. What is hydrogen bonding? How does hydrogen bonding differ from ionic and covalent bonding?Hydrogen bonding is between water atoms because of their slightly charged state.
29405049717. What is an acid? What is a base? What is the pH scale?Is something with a pH of 2 more or less acidic than something with the pH of 6? Why?Acid: Makes a solution more acidic Base: Makes a solution more basic pH scale: A measurement of how acidic or basic a water based solution is. 0 is acidic because there are more hydrogen ions and 14 is basic because there are more hydroxide ions.
29405049818. What is a compound? How do organic and inorganic compounds differ?A compound is a substance formed by the chemical combination of two or more elements in definite proportions.
29405049919. What does the word "macromolecule" mean? How does this word relate to the word "polymer"?Macromolecules are made from hundreds/thousands of smaller molecules. Monomers join together to form polymers so Macromolecules are a type of polymer.
29405050020. What does the word "monomer" or "subunit" mean? What does "polymer" mean?Monomer is the smaller unit that bunch together to form polymers.
29405050121. What are the four types of organic macromolecules in living things?Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and nucleic acids
29405050222. What are the basic functions of each of these four types of organic macromolecules?Carbohydrates: provide energy, Lipids: Store energy, Proteins: Many, Nucleic Acids: store and use genetic info
29405050323. What are the monomer subunits of each type of organic macromolecules?Carbohydrates:mono, di, and polysaccharides Lipids: No monomer Proteins: Amino acids Nucleic acids: Nucleotides
29405050424. Name some examples of each type of the four organic macromolecules. What are their functions?Carbohydrates:sugars; provide energy, lipids: fats; protect and insulate, proteins: insulin regulates blood sugar, nucleic acids: dna and rna
29405050525. What elements make up each type of molecule? Which molecules are polar? Which are nonpolar?Carbohydrates: C, H and O (Polar) ; Lipids: C, H and some O (Non-polar); Proteins: C,H,N,O,S (Polar) ; Nucleic Acids: C,H,N,O,P (Polar)
29405050626. What is a chemical reaction?A chemical reaction is when two molecules collide, break bonds and form new bonds. Reactants are started and products are what come out of a reaction.
29405050727. What is the energy of activation for a chemical reaction?Activation energy is the energy it takes to create a chemical reaction.
29405050828. Do enzymes speed up chemical reactions by raising or lowering the energy of activation for reactions? How do they do this?They speed up chemical reactions by reducing the amount of activation energy. They do this by bidning with the substrate and converting reactants to products then releasing the substrate.
29405050929. What is an enzyme? How do enzymes differ from catalysts in general?An enzyme is a biological catalyst that speeds up chemical reactions.
29405051030. What type of molecule are enzymes?It is a protein
29405051131. What is a substrate?A substrate is the reactants tat the enzyme acts on.
29405051232. What is an enzyme's active site? Why are an enzyme and substrate like a lock and key?An active site is where the enzyme holds the substrate. Enzymes are specific to ONE chemical reaction and only one substrate will fit in the active site.
29405051333. What does it mean for an enzyme to become denatured? What types of conditions cause denaturing?Denaturing is when an enzyme changes shape so it can no longer be used. It can be caused by heat or a change in pH level.
29405051434. Why do we need carbohydrates in our diet? fats? proteins? water? vitamins? minerals?Need nutrients for energy, raw materials, growth, repair and maintenance.
29405051535. What are the roles of the following structures of the human digestive system? mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine. villi, pancreas, liver, gall bladder, large intestineMouth: Mechanical digestion and Chemical digestion begin Esophagus: Food travels by peristalsis (wave like muscular contractions) to get to stomach Stomach: Digestion Small intestine: Digestion continues Villi: Increase surface area Pancreas: Produces enzymes and base Liver: Produces bile Gall bladder: Stores bile Large intestine: Nutrients are reabsorbed
29405051636. What is different between chemical and mechanical digestion?Chemical: Enzymes break down food Mechanical: Physically breaks things into smaller pieces
29405051737. Why are different enzymes needed to break down different types of molecules?Enzymes are specialized and only match up with one substrate.
29473504338. What are three functions of the excretory system?1. Get rid of wastes produced by the body 2. Maintain stable blood volume and pH level 3. Maintain stable levels of salts, water and nutrients
29473504439. What is the role of skin, the lungs, and the liver in the excretory system?Skin: Sweats and excretes excess water and salts Lungs: Excrete carbon dioxide Liver: Converts wastes into useful compounds
29473504540. What is the function of the kidneys in the excretory system? How do kidneys help to regulate salt and water balance in the body?Kidneys remove waste, maintain blood pH, and regulate the water content of the blood.
29473504642. Compare and contrast a prokaryotic and eukaryotic cell, listing at least 3 similarities and 3 differences.Prokaryotic: Do not have a nucleus, are unicellular, don't contain many organelles that euk. cells do Eukaryotic: Have a nucleus, are uni- or multi-cellular, have many organelles
29473504743. Compare and contrast an animal and a plant cell. Which structures are only in animal cells? In plants?Animal: Have centriole Plant: Have cell wall, chloroplasts, central vacuole
29473504844. What is cell theory?Cell theory: 1. Cell is basic unit of life 2. All life forms are made from cells 3. Cells arise from similar cells
29473504945. What is so important about cell membranes, both the plasma membrane and the internal membranes?They are selectively permeable meaning that they decide what enters/exits.
29473505046. What is the main molecule in membranes? What other type of molecules are embedded within membranes, and why are they important?The main molecule in membranes are phospholipids, there are also proteins that help transport molecules.
29473505147. What is meant by selective permeability when speaking of membranes?Some things are allowed in and others are not, some things need a transport protein and others do not.
29473505248. What is different between passive and active transport?Passive transport is when substances move from high to low concentration and active transport is from low to high.
29473505349. What is diffusion?Non-polar molecules move through the cell membrane on their own from high to low concentration.
29473505450. What is osmosis?When water uses a transport protein to get into the cell.
29473505551. What is a concentration gradient? What does it mean to move down/with or up/against a concentration gradient?The concentration gradient is where something is high concentration and where something is low concentration. Moving down the concentration gradient is from high to low.
29473505652. What is a hypotonic solution, and in which direction will water flow if a cell is in a solution that is hypotonic in relation to the concentration inside the cell? Hypertonic? Isotonic?Hypotonic: When a solution has a higher concentration of water than solute. Hypertonic: When a solution has higher concentration of solute than water. Isotonic: When the concentration of solute and water is the same on either side of the membrane.
29473505753. Why is water balance important for living things?Water balance is important because some cells can swell and burst with too much water or shrivel without enough.
29473505854. What are transport proteins? How do they function for passive transport? Active transport?Transport proteins are proteins that transport materials across the membrane. For passive transport the protein creates a polar environment to allow the solute through and for active transport ATP must power the protein to push the solute through.
29473505955. How are light microscopes used to study cells? If you looked at a cell under higher magnification, would the specimen appear larger or smaller? Would the distance in the field of view be larger or smaller?It uses light and lenses to magnify the image, the cell would appear larger and the field of view would be smaller.
29473506056. What is the function of the circulatory system?To circulate substances made in some parts of the body to other parts that need them.
29473506157. What is different between pulmonary and systemic circulation? Describe the pathway of circulation (including names of major blood vessels) into and out of the heart.Pulmonary circulation is the right side of the heart with de-oxygenated blood, systematic is the left side with oxygenated blood. LORD: (Left Oxygenated, Right Deoxygenated), AboVe: (atria above vertricles) A before V: (Enters through arteries and leaves through ventricles) Arteries Away, Veins Towards. Right side: Enters through Superior/Inferior vena cava, enters right atrium then ventricle, leaves through pulmorary artery towards lungs Left side: Enters through Pulmonary veins, enters left atrium then ventricle, leaves through the aorta.
29473506258. How many chambers are in a mammalian heart?Two chambers.
29473506359. What is different about the structure and function of arteries, veins, and capillaries?Arteries: Thickest most muscular walls Veins: Have valves to prevent back flow b/c of low blood pressure Capillaries: Very thin walls
29473506460. What is the function of the following components of blood? plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, plateletsPlasma: Water that makes blood a solution Red Blood Cells: Carry oxygen White Blood Cells: Fight disease Platelets: Help blood clot
29473506561. What is the function of the respiratory system? How does this function relate to cellular respiration?The exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the blood, air and tissues. Cellular respiration's function is to break down carbohydrates into energy but that can only occur if there is oxygen.
29473506662. What are the functions of the following structures of the human respiratory system? Mouth, Pharynx, Trachea, Epiglottis, Larynx, Bronchi, Alveoli, Lungs, Diaphragm muscleMouth: Where substances enter the body Pharynx: Back of mouth Trachea: Brings air to lungs (wind pipe) Epiglottis: Folds over to protect trachea from liquid or food Larynx: Voice box/vocal chords Bronchi: Smaller branches of the bronchus Alveoli: Surrounded by capillaries so oxygen can rapidly diffuse Lungs: Where gas exchange occurs Diaphragm muscle: Contracts when you inhale
29473506763. What molecule transports oxygen in the blood?Hemoglobin transports oxygen in red blood cells.
29473506864. What are five functions of the skeleton?1. Support body 2. Move body 3. Protect internal organs 4. Make blood cells 5. Store minerals
29473506965. What is cartilage?It is very flexible connective tissue that is between bones so they can move without grinding against eachother.
29473507066. Where do blood cells form?In red bone marrow.
29473507167. What is different between a ball-and-socket, hinge, and pivot joint?Ball & Socket: Bones can turn in several directions Hinge: Back and forth movement Pivot: Two bones rotate around eachother
29473507268. What are the functions of tendons and ligaments?Tendons: connect bone to muscle Ligaments: connect bone to bone
29473507369. What are the three types of muscle? Where are these types of muscle found in the body?Skeletal: All over the body, connected to bones Cardiac: The muscle around the heart Smooth: Internal organs
29473507470. How do muscles move parts of the body?Opposite muscles contract and relax at opposite times to pull and release ligaments.
29473507571. What are autotrophs? What are heterotrophs?Autotrophs make their own food and heterotrophs eat food for energy.
29473507672. What is ATP?ATP is a high energy molecule that powers chemical reactions. It is made in mitochondria and through glycolysis.
29473507773. How is stored energy in ATP released to power chemical reactions in the cell?The third phosphate of ATP breaks off during a chemical reaction.
29473507874. Where does the sugar that heterotrophs break down in cellular respiration come from? Where does the sugar that autotrophs break down come from?The sugar that heterotrophs get comes from food and the sugar that autotrophs get is from water and CO2.
29473507975. What is the chloroplast?A chloroplast is the organelle in plants that takes sunlight and carbon dioxide and makes glucose and oxygen.
29473508076. What is the overall equation for photosynthesis? How does this relate to the equation for cellular respiration?6CO₂ + 6H₂O = C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ Cellular Respiration is the opposite: C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ = 6CO₂ + 6H₂O + ATP
29473508177. What are pigments? Why are plants green? Or, what wavelengths of light are absorbed by chlorophyll and used for photosynthesis? What wavelengths of light are reflected and transmitted (not absorbed or used)?Pigments reflect certain colors and absorb others, Chloropyll absorbs all colors and reflects green.
29473508278. What is the name of the molecule that absorbs light in the chloroplast?Chlorophyll is the molecule that absorbs light in chloroplasts.
29473508379. How will you avoid confusing the terms chlorophyll and chloroplast?Im not stupid.
29473508480. What is the overall equation for cellular respiration? For photosynthesis? How are they related?Cellular Resperation: 6O2 + C6H12O6 = 6CO2 + 6H2O + ATP Photosynthesis: 6CO2 + 6H2O = 6O2 + C6H12O6 The reactants and products are switched in these reactions.
29473508581. What is the relationship between breathing and cellular respiration?If you aren't taking in oxygen by breathing cellular respiration cannot occur so ATP is not made.
29473508682. What is the difference between aerobic respiration and anaerobic respiration (also called anaerobic glycolysis or glycolysis and fermentation)?Aerobic respiration occurs in the mitochondria and anaerobic respiration occurs in the cytoplasm and can only make small amounts of ATP.
29473508783. Why does glycolysis and lactic acid fermentation sometimes take place instead of aerobic respiration in muscle cells?When there is a lack of oxygen to muscle cells, the cells will make ATP anaerobically in the cytoplasm.
29473508884. What is produced by lactic acid fermentation? By alcoholic fermentation?Lactic acid is a product of lactic acid fermentation and carbon dioxide & alcohol from alcoholic fermentation.
29473508985. What is cell division?Cell division is when a cell divides to create daughter cells.
29473509086. Why are cells small?1) If a cell gets too big it doesnt have enough DNA to provide info for all of the cell. 2) The cell must have a large surface area relative to volume to get nutrients in and wastes out.
29473509187. What are chromosomes? How do chromosomes relate to chromatin? What are histones?Chromosomes contain DNA. Chromatin wraps around proteins called histones to create chromosomes.
29473509288. What are sister chromatids? Why are they formed? When they are pulled apart, is each a full chromosome, or a half of a chromosome?Sister chromatids are two identical chromosomes that are connected at a centromere. They are created for cell division and are each a full chromosome when they are pulled apart.
29473509389. What is the cell cycle? What are the phases of the cell cycle? What occurs during each?G1: Regular cell life, the cell preforms its job and grows S: Chromosomes are duplicated G2: The cell prepares for division M: Cell division
29473509490. How does cancer relate to the cell cycle?A cancer cell ignores cell cycle regulators and continues to divide infinitely.
29473509591. What is mitosis?The division of a cell, making two daughter cells to repair injured tissue, to grow or to replace worn out cells.
29473509692. What are all the phases of mitosis? What happens to the chromosomes in each phase?PMAT-C: Prophase: Chromosomes become visible Metaphase: Chromosomes line up in center of cell and connect to spindle Anaphase: Chromosomes are pulled apart into seperate chromosomes Telophase: Chromosomes lose distinct shpes and spread out in seperate nuclei Cytokinesis: The cell divides completely
29473509793. What is cytokinesis? How is cytokinesis different in plant cells compared to animal cells?Cytokinesis: The division of cytoplasm at the end of cell division Plant Cells: When cytoplasm divides a cell plate forms, plant cells need to form a new cell wall Animal Cells: When cytoplasm divides a cleavage furrow forms
29473509894. What are gametes? What is fertilization? What is a zygote? What are somatic cells?Gamete: A sex cell (sperm or egg) Fertilization: When a sperm meets an egg and the chromosomes combine in one cell Zygote: A fertilized egg Somatic cells: Regular muscle cells
29473509995. What is meant when a cell is haploid? diploid? What is the haploid number of chromosomes in a human sperm or egg cell? What is the diploid number of chromosomes in a human body (somatic) cell?Haploid: Has one full set of chromosomes Diploid: Has two sets of chromosomes Human gamete has 23 chromosomes and a human somatic cell has 46.
29473510096. What are homologous chromosomes? What are autosomes? What are sex chromosomes?Homologous chromosomes are matching, one from mom and one from dad. Autosomes are regular chromosomes and sex chromosomes (X and Y) determine the sex of an organism
29473510197. What is meiosis? What type of cells does meiosis create? Are these haploid or diploid? Why?Meiosis is the division of cells to form gametes (sex cells) that are haploid because two gametes come together to produce a diploid cell that becomes a fetus.
29473510298. Compare and contrast all meiosis with mitosis. What are the main differences, and what happens as a result of those differences?DNA is replicated once before process begins: Meiosis: The cell divides twice Tetrads form 4 daughter cells Different from orig. cell: 1/2 the # of chromosomes Sexual reproduction Mitosis: The cell divides once Tetrads do not form 2 daughter cells Identical to the orig. cell Growth, repair & asexual reproduction
29473510399. What is nondisjunction? How does Down's Syndrome result from nondisjunction?Nondisjunction is the failure of chromosomes to separate correctly during cell division. This can cause extra or missing homologous chromosomes in an offspring's DNA which can cause disorder.
294735104100. What is a karyotype?A photo showing matched pairs of homologous chromosomes from an organism.
295074819ChromatinDNA bound to protein to maintain its shape
295074820RibosomesMake proteins
295074821NucleusBrain of the cell, stores genetic info, membranous
295074822Nuclear EnvelopeDouble membrane containing pores to control what enters/exits
295074823NucleolusWhere Ribosomes begin to be made, looks like a dark spot in the nucleus
295074824Rough ERMakes proteins for membranes and proteins to be secreted from cell
295074825Smooth ERMakes lipids
295074826Golgi ApparatusAttaches proteins to things and directs them around the cell
295074827LysosomesBreak down things for reuse
295074828VacuoleSac-like structures that store nutrients
295074829Transport VesicleMembranous sacs used to transport substances around the cell
295074830Central VacuoleLarge sac in center of plants, stores water to support structure of cell
295074831Cell WallSupports & protects cell
295074832ChloroplastsUse energy from the sun, CO₂ and H₂O to make carbohydrates
295074833MitochondriaUse energy from carbohydrates to make ATP
295074834CytoskeletanSupports cell & guides movement of substances in cell
295074835CentrioleHelp coordinate cell division in animals
295074836CytoplasmWatery substance that is inside the cell
295074837Cell MembraneRegulates substances that leave/enter the cell

Photosynthesis & Cellular Respiration Flashcards

Chap. 7 and 8

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457994081NADPHenergy transporter used in Calvin Cycle
457994082NADP+holds two high energy electrons along with a hydrogen ion, which converts into NADPH
457994083ATP(adenosine triphosphate) main energy source that cells use for most of their work
457994084ADPSimilar structure to ATP but has only 2 phosphate groups. Partly charged
457994085stromaThe fluid of the chloroplast surrounding the thylakoid membrane; involved in the synthesis of organic molecules from carbon dioxide and water.
457994086thylakoidsaclike photosynthetic membrane found in chloroplasts
457994087granumstacks of thylakoids
457994088Calvin Cyclereactions of photosynthesis in which energy from ATP and NADPH is used to build high-energy compounds such as sugars
457994089light reactionThe steps in photosynthesis that occur on the thylakoid membranes of the chloroplast and that convert solar energy to the chemical energy of ATP and NADPH, evolving oxygen in the process.
457994090glucoseSugar, Manufactured during photosynthesis, Main source of energy for plants and animals, Metabolized during cellular respiration
457994091mitochondriacellular organelles where cellular respiration occurs
457994092chloroplastorganelle found in cells of plants and some other organisms that captures the energy from sunlight and converts it into chemical energy
457994093pigmenta colored chemical compound that absorbs light, producing color
457994094fermentationA catabolic process that makes a limited amount of ATP from glucose without an electron transport chain and that produces a characteristic end product, such as ethyl alcohol or lactic acid.
457994095Glycolysisfirst step in releasing the energy of glucose, in which a molecule of glucose is broken into two molecules of pyruvic acid
457994096lactic acidwaste product produced by Fermentation; causes muscles to be sore
457994097alcoholWhen yeast goes through anaerobic respiration, what comes out as a biproduct?
457994098aerobicprocess that requires oxygen
457994099anaerobicprocess that does not require oxygen.
457994100stomaa minute epidermal pore in a leaf or stem through which gases and water vapor can pass
457994101dynamic equilibriumA condition that is stable within certain levels
457994102respirationthe metabolic processes whereby certain organisms obtain energy from organic molecules
457994103glucoseC6H12O6
457994104reactanta chemical substance that is present at the start of a chemical reaction
457994105producta chemical substance formed as a result of a chemical reaction
457994106independent variablethe experimental factor that is manipulated; the variable whose effect is being studied
457994107homeostasisprocess by which organisms maintain a relatively stable internal environment
457994108dependent variablethe outcome factor; the variable that may change in response to manipulations of the independent variable
457994109photosynthesis6CO2 + 6H2O + light --> C6H12O6 + 6O2
457994110cellular respirationC6H12O6 +6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy

Biology Chapter 8 Flashcards

Biology Chapter 8 Words

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229783194AutotrophOrganisms such as plants which make their own food.
229783195HeterotrophsOrganisms such as animals that cannot use the sun's energy directly. They obtain energy from the foods they consume.
229783196Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP)A principal chemical compound that cells use to store and release energy.
229783197PhotosynthesisA process where plants use the energy of sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into high-energy carbohydrates-- sugars and starches -- and oxygen, a waste product.
229783198PigmentLight-absorbing molecules that plants use to gather the sun's energy.
229783199ChlorophyllThe plants' principal pigment. Two main types of chlorophyll: chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b.
229783200ThylakoidsSaclike photosynthetic membranes that are in chloroplasts.
229783201PhotosystemsProteins in the thylakoid membrane organize chlorophyll and other pigments into clusters, which are known as these.
229783202StromaThe place where the Calvin cycle takes place, which is the region outside the thylakoid membranes.
229783203NADP+ (Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate)A carrier molecule that is a compound known as this. It accepts and holds 2 high-energy electrons along with a hydrogen ion (H+) which converts the NADP+ into NADPH
229783204Light-dependent reactionsThese reactions require light. They use energy from light to produce ATP and NADPH.
229783205ATP synthaseThe cell membrane contains this protein that spans the membrane and allows H+ ions to pass through it.
229783206Calvin CycleWhen plants use the energy that ATP and NADPH contain to build high-energy compounds that can be stored for a long time.

AP Biology Chapter 11 (Cell communication Flashcards

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495955330transduce... (whats the path called?)external signals are changed into a form that brings about a response (signal transduction pathway)
495955331What are the cell junctions that allow nearby cells to communicate?gap junctions in animals; plasmodesmata in plants
495955332messenger molecules (ie local regulators)...and what is this calledsecreted by signaling cell travel short distance to a receiving cell; local signaling
495955333How does the animal nervous system communicate?with electrical and chemical signals between a nerve cell and its target cell
495955334Hormones serve as...long distance signals in plants and animals
495955335What are the 3 stages of cell signaling?reception, transduction, response
495955336What is reception?receives signal by target cell; specifically binds to a certain cell type (target cells); chemical signal (ligand) binds to a receptor; most of the receptors are cell membrane proteins because most signals are too big to diffuse through membrane
495955337What is transduction?receptor protein's shape is changed by the binding of the chemical signal; binding causes changes to occur in the cell that will bring about a response
495955338Responsea specific cellular response is triggered
495955339G protein coupled receptors...(what are they, not how they work)plasma membrane proteins with receptors on them; receives epinephrine, hormones, neurotransmitters
495955340How do G-Protein coupled receptors work?chemical signal binds to G protein coupled receptor, receptor changes shape and binds to a G-protein inside of plasma membrane; G protein will give off its GDP and accept GTP and is activated; moves along inside of plasma membrane and binds to another membrane protein (enzyme) to activate it; this causes cell response
495955341How is a G-Protein coupled receptor turned off?G protein acts as a GTPase and removes the P (Though hydrolysis), GTP to GDP
495955342Tyrosine-kinase receptors (what are they (kinase) not how)plasma membrane receptors used by growth factors; kinase is an enzyme that transfers a phosphate group from one molecule to another (in this, transfer P from ATP to tyrosine on the tail)
495955343How do tyrosine-kinase receptors work?2 ligands bind to 2 tyrosine-kinase receptors; causes 2 receptors to bind together and form a dimer; activates the tail and they phosphorylate each other; other proteins bind to the phosphorylated tails and cause a cellular response; 1 dimer can activate 10 or more different proteins simultaneously; if they bind without a chemical signal, may cause cancer
495955344Ion channel receptors...plasma membrane receptors, signal between nerve cells, have a gate that can open or close a channel; when ligand binds, the channel opens or closes, allowing flow or stopping flow of ions
495955345intracellular receptorsinside cell in cytosol or in nucleus; steroid and thyroid hormones, nitric oxide all use intracellular receptors; testosterone: binds to receptor and activates it; activated receptor enters nucleus, binds to DNa and acts as a transcription factor which makes DA make RNA and proteins
495955346signal transduction pathwaysusually multistep pathways involving lots of P switching or moving of molecules that act as messengers; lots of protein-protein interactions
495955347protein phosphorylationphosphorylation cascade; phosphorylation can usually increase or decrease the activity of a protein; protein phosphatases remove phosphates (dephosphorylates) to turn off signal
495955348second messengers: cyclic AMP (cAMP)signal molecule (first messenger) binds to a cell membrane receptor, activates G protein which activates adenylyl cyclase which converts ATP to cAMP; cAMP activates other proteins to cause response; photodiesterase returns cAMP to AMP
495955349second messengers: calcium ions and inositol triphosphate:signal molecules bind to either a G-linked protein receptor or a tyrosine-kinase receptor; produces IP3 which acts as second messenger; binds to ligand-gated calcium channel on the ER and opens it to release Ca ions which act as the second messenger and cause a response; calcium ions are actively pumped back onto the mitochondria, ER and outside the cell
495955350scaffolding proteins:large relay proteins to which several other relay proteins are attached
495955351apoptosisprogrammed cell death; cellular agents chop DNA, organelles, other cytoplasmic stuff; cell shrinks and becomes lobed (blebbing); cell's parts are packaged into vesicles and digested by scavenger cells; cleans up cells, helps in embryonic development, develop nervous system, immune system
495955352What creature where studies on apoptosis taken?caenorhabditis elegans (nematode)
495955353What kind of signals are transduced when apoptosis occurs?external- death sinaling ligand binds to receptor; internal- from nucleus in response to DNA damage, from ER in response to numerous misfolded proteins

Art History Chapter 3 Flashcards

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470327465Figure 3-3 Palette of King Narmer (left, back; right, front), from Hierakonpolis, Egypt, Predynastic, ca. 3000-2920 BCE. Slate, 2' 1" high. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. (Predynastic)
470327466Figure 3-4 Section (top), plan (center),and restored view (bottom) of typical Egyptian mastaba tombs. (Predynastic)
470327467Figure 3.5 IMHOTEP, Stepped Pyramid and mortuary precinct of Djoser, Saqqara, Egypt, Third Dynasty, ca. 2630-2611 BCE. (Predynastic)
470327468Figure 3-6 Plan (top) and restored view (bottom) of the mortuary precinct of Djoser, Saqqara, Egypt, Third Dynasty, ca. 2630-2611 BCE. (Predynastic)
470327469Figure 3-7 Detail of the facade of the North Palace of the mortuary precinct of Djoser, Saqqara, Egypt, Third Dynasty, ca. 2630-2611 BCE. (Predynastic)
470327470Figure 3-8 Great Pyramids, Gizeh, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty. From bottom: Pyramids of Menkaure, ca. 2490-2472 BCE; Khafre, ca. 2520-2494 BCE; and Khufu, ca. 2551-2528 BCE. (Old Kingdom)
470327471Figure 3-9 Section of the Pyramid of Khufu, Gizeh, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty, ca. 2551-2528 BCE. (Old Kingdom)
470327472Figure 3-10 Model of the Fourth Dynasty pyramid complex, Gizeh, Egypt. Harvard University Semitic Museum, Cambridge. 1) Pyramid of Menkaure, 2) Pyramid of Khafre, 3) mortuary temple of Khafre, 4) causeway, 5) Great Sphinx, 6) valley temple of Khafre, 7) Pyramid of Khufu, 8) pyramids of the royal family and mastabas of nobles. (Old Kingdom)
470327473Figure 3-11 Great Sphinx (with Pyramid of Khafre in the background at left), Gizeh, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty, ca. 2520-2494 BCE. Sandstone, 65' X 240'. (Old Kingdom)
470327474Figure 3-12 Khafre enthroned, from Gizeh, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty, ca. 2520-2494 BCE. Diorite, 5' 6" high. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. (Old Kingdom)
470327475Figure 3-13 Menkaure and Khamerernebty(?), from Gizeh, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty, ca. 2490-2472 BCE. Graywacke, 4' 6 1/2" high. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. (Old Kingdom)
470327476Figure 3-14 Seated scribe, from Saqqara, Egypt, Fourth Dynasty, ca. 2500 BCE. Painted limestone, 1' 9" high. Louvre, Paris. (Old Kindgom)
470327477Figure 3-15 Ti watching a hippopotamus hunt, relief in the mastaba of Ti, Saqqara, Egypt, Fifth Dynasty, ca. 2450-2350 BCE. Painted limestone, 4' high. (Old Kingdom)
470327478Figure 3-16 Goats treading seed and cattle fording a canal, reliefs in the mastaba of Ti, Saqqara, Egypt, Fifth Dynasty, ca. 2450 - 2350 BCE. Painted limestone. (Middle Kingdom)
470327479Figure 3-17 Fragmentary head of Senuret III, 12th Dynasty, ca. 1860 BCE. Red quartzite, 6 ½" high. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. (Middle Kingdom)
470327480Figure 3-18 Rock-cut tombs BH 3-5, Beni Hasan, Egypt, 12th Dynasty, ca. 1950 - 1900 BCE. (Middle Kingdom)
470327481Figure 3-19 Interior hall of the rock-cut tomb of Amenemhet (tomb BH 2), Beni Hasan, Egypt, 12th Dynasty, ca. 1950-1900 BCE. (Middle Kingdom)
470327482Figure 3-20 Mortuary temple of Hatshepsut (with the Middle Kingdom mortuary temple of Mentuhotep II at left), Deir el-Bahri, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1473-1458 BCE. (New Kingdom)
470327483Figure 3-21 Hatshepsut with offering jars, from the upper court of her mortuary temple, Deir el-Bahri, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1473-1458 BCE. Red granite, 8' 6" high. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. (New Kingdom)
470327484Figure 3-22 Temple of Ramses II, Abu Simbel, Egypt, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1290-1224 BCE. Sandstone, colossi 65' high. (New Kingdom)
470327485Figure 3-23 Interior of the temple of Ramses II, Abu Simbel, Egypt, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1290-1224 BCE. Sandstone, pillar statues 32' high. (New Kingdom)
470327486Figure 3-25 Hypostyle hall, temple of Amen-Re, Karnak, Egypt, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1290-1224 BCE. (New Kingdom)
470327487Figure 3-26 Model of the hypostyle hall, temple of Amen-Re, Karnak, Egypt, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1290 - 1224 BCE. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. (New Kingdom)
470327488Figure 3-27 Senmut with Princess Nefrua, from Thebes, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1470-1460 BCE. Granite, 3' 1/2" high. Ägyptisches Museum, Berlin. (New Kingdom)
470327489Figure 3-30 Akhenaton, from the temple of Aton, Karnak, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1353-1335 BCE. Sandstone, 13' high. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. (new Kingdom)
470327490Figure 3-31 THUTMOSE, Nefertiti, from Amarna, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1353-1335 BCE. Painted limestone, approx. 1' 8" high. Ägyptisches Museum, Berlin. (New Kingdom)
470327491Figure 3-32 Tiye, from Ghurab, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1353-1335 BCE. Wood, with gold, silver, alabaster, and lapis lazuli, 3 3/4" high. Ägyptisches Museum, Berlin. (New Kingdom)
470327492Figure 3-33 Akhenaton, Nefertiti, and three daughters, from Amarna, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1353-1335 BCE. Limestone, 1' 1/4" high. Ägyptisches Museum, Berlin. (New Kingdom)
470327493Figure 3-34 Innermost coffin of Tutankhamen, from his tomb at Thebes, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1323 BCE. Gold with inlay of enamel and semiprecious stones, 6' 1" long. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. (New Kingdom)
470327494Figure 3-1 Death mask of Tutankhamen, from the innermost coffin in his tomb at Thebes, Egypt, 18th Dynasty, ca. 1323 BCE. Gold with inlay of semiprecious stones, 1' 9 1/4" high. Egyptian Museum, Cairo. (New Kingdom)
470327495Figure 3-36 Last judgment of Hu-Nefer, from his tomb at Thebes, Egypt, 19th Dynasty, ca. 1290-1280 BCE. Painted papyrus scroll, 1' 6" high. British Museum, London. (New Kingdom)

AP US History ch 9 (SE) Flashcards

Kennedy/Cohen/Bailey; The American Pageant: key tems, people and chronology

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208434098Society of CincinnatiAn elite group of Continental Army who formed an exclusive hereditary order. It was ridiculed by most Americans for its lordly pretensions. Named for George Washington, whose nickname was Cincinnatus, although Washington himself had no involvement in the society.
208434099Disestablishedto separate an official state church from its connection with the government. Following the Revolution, all states ____ the Anglican Church, though some New England states maintained established Congregational Churches well into the 19th century
208434100Virginia Statue for Religions Freedompromoted the separation of the church and state in Virginia. Thomas Jefferson supported for freedom of religion. By 1833 all the other states had separate churches outside of the government.
208434101Civic Virtuethe willingness to work for the good of the nation or community even at great sacrifice.
208434102Articles of Confederationa written agreement ratified in 1781 by the thirteen original states it provided a legal symbol of their union by gave the central government no coercive power over the states or their citizens
208434103Old NorthwestRegion north and west of the Ohio River, included Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, MIchigan, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota
208434104Land OrdinanceAuthorized surveys and the division of public lands in the western part of the country. Specified sizes of lots and acreages. 1785
208434105Northwest OrdinanceEnacted in 1787, it is considered one of the most significant achievements of the Articles of Confederation. It established a system for setting up governments in the western territories so they could eventually join the Union on an equal footing with the original 13 states
208434106Shay's Rebellionconflict in Massachusetts caused many to criticize the Articles of Confederation and admit the weak central government was not working; uprising led by Daniel Shays in an effort to prevent courts from foreclosing on the farms of those who could not pay the taxes
208434107Virginia PlanVirginia delegate James Madison's plan of government, in which states got a number of representatives in Congress based on their population
208434108New Jersey PlanOpposite of the Virginia Plan, it proposed a single-chamber congress in which each state had one vote. This created a conflict with representation between bigger states, who wanted control befitting their population, and smaller states, who didn't want to be bullied by larger states.
208434109Great CompromiseCompromise made by Constitutional Convention in which states would have equal representation in one house of the legislature and representation based on population in the other house
208434110Common Law(civil law) a law established by following earlier judicial decisions
208434111Civil Lawthe legal code of ancient Rome codified under Justinian; the basis for many modern systems of civil law
208434112Three-fifths compromisethe agreement by which the number of each state's representatives in Congress would be based on a count of all the free people plus three-fifths of the slaves
208434113Antifederalistsopponents of a strong central government who campaigned against the ratification of the Constitution in favor of a confederation of independant states
208434114Federalistssupporters of the stronger central govt. who advocated the ratification of the new constitution
208434115The Federalistseries of essays promoting ratification of the Constitution, published anonymously by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison in 1787 and 1788
208434116Lord SheffieldWrote a popular pamphlet in England that said Britain would win back America's trade and that commerce would naturally follow old channels.
208434117Daniel Shaysa leader in a rebellion against the state of Massachusetts due to the amount of discontent of farmers that lost their land due to mortgage foreclosures and tax delinquencies during the war while they were off fighting. The rebellion, though put down by the state militia, signaled the need for a stronger central government.
208434118Patrick Henrya leader of the American Revolution and a famous orator who spoke out against British rule of the American colonies (1736-1799
208434119First Continental Congress calls for abolition of slave trade1774
208434120Philadelphia Quackers found worlds first antislavery society1775
208434121New Jersey constitution temporarily gives women the vote1776
208434122Articles of confederation adopted by second Continental Congress1777
208434123Massachusetts adopts first constitution; drafted in convention and ratified by popular vote1778
208434124Articles of Confederation put into effect1780
208434125Military officers form society of the Cincinnaty1783
208434126Land Ordinance of ____1785
208434127Virginia statue for Religious Freedoms / Shay's Rebellion / Meeting o 5 states to discuss revision of the articles of Confederation1786
208434128Northwest Ordinance / Comstitutional Conventon in Philadelphia1787
208434129Ratification by nine states guarantees a new government under the Constitution1788

AP Biology Chapter 15 Flashcards

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245216135Chromosomes and genes share all of the following characteristics except thatthey both pair up with their homologues during prophase of mitosis
245216136The improvement of microscopy techniques in the late 1800s set the stage for the emergence of modern genetics becauseit allowed biologists to study meiosis and mitosis, revealing the parallels between the behaviors of genes and chromosomes
245216137When Thomas Hunt Morgan crossed his red-eyed F1 generation flies to each other, the F2 generation included both red- and white-eyed flies. Remarkably, all the white-eyed flies were male. What was the explanation for this result?The involved gene was on the X chromosome.
245216138Which of the following statements is (are) true?Only B and C are correct.
245216139How would one explain a testcross involving F1 dihybrid flies in which more parental-type offspring than recombinant-type offspring are produced?The two genes are linked.
245216140New combinations of linked genes are due to which of the following?crossing over
245216141What does a frequency of recombination of 50% indicate?The two genes likely are located on different chromosomes.
245216142The reason that linked genes are inherited together is thatthey are located on the same chromosome.
245216143What is the mechanism for the production of genetic recombinants?crossing over and independent assortment
245216144There is good evidence for linkage whengenes do not segregate independently during meiosis.
245216145Which of the following is true regarding linkage maps? Theyare a genetic map based on recombination frequencies.
245216146The frequency of crossing over between any two linked genes isproportional to the distance between them
245216147Sturtevant provided genetic evidence for the existence of four pairs of chromosomes in Drosophila by showing thatDrosophila genes cluster into four distinct groups of linked genes
245216148Map units on a linkage map cannot be relied upon to calculate physical distances on a chromosome becausethe frequency of crossing over varies along the length of the chromosome
245216149A map of a chromosome that includes the positions of genes relative to visible chromosomal features, such as stained bands, is called acytogenetic map.
245216150Males are more often affected by sex-linked traits than females becausemales are hemizygous for the X chromosome
245216151What is the chromosomal system for determining sex in mammals?X-Y
245216152What is the chromosomal system for sex determination in grasshoppers and certain other insects?X-0
245216153What is the chromosomal system for sex determination in birds?Z-W
245216154What is the chromosomal system of sex determination in most species of ants and bees?haploid-diploid
245216155SRY isa gene present on the Y chromosome that triggers male development
245216156In cats, black fur color is caused by an X-linked allele; the other allele at this locus causes orange color. The heterozygote is tortoiseshell. What kinds of offspring would you expect from the cross of a black female and an orange male?tortoiseshell female; black male
245216157Red-green color blindness is a sex-linked recessive trait in humans. Two people with normal color vision have a color-blind son. What are the genotypes of the parents?XCXc and XCY
245216158In the following list, which term is least related to the others?autosome
245216159Cinnabar eyes is a sex-linked recessive characteristic in fruit flies. If a female having cinnabar eyes is crossed with a wild-type male, what percentage of the F1 males will have cinnabar eyes?100%
245216160Most calico cats are female becausea male inherits only one of the two X-linked genes controlling hair color
245216161A recessive allele on the X chromosome is responsible for red-green color blindness in humans. A woman with normal vision whose father is color-blind marries a color-blind male. What is the probability that a son of this couple will be color-blind?1/2
245216162In birds, sex is determined by a ZW chromosome scheme. Males are ZZ and females are ZW. A lethal recessive allele that causes death of the embryo is sometimes present on the Z chromosome in pigeons. What would be the sex ratio in the offspring of a cross between a male that is heterozygous for the lethal allele and a normal female?2:1 male to female
245216163A man who carries an X-linked allele will pass it on toall of his daughters.
245216164An achondroplastic male dwarf with normal vision marries a color-blind woman of normal height. The man's father was six-feet tall, and both the woman's parents were of average height. Achondroplastic dwarfism is autosomal dominant, and red-green color blindness is X-linked recessive. How many of their daughters might be expected to be color-blind dwarfs?none
245216165An achondroplastic male dwarf with normal vision marries a color-blind woman of normal height. The man's father was six-feet tall, and both the woman's parents were of average height. Achondroplastic dwarfism is autosomal dominant, and red-green color blindness is X-linked recessive. How many of their sons would be color-blind and of normal height?half
245216166An achondroplastic male dwarf with normal vision marries a color-blind woman of normal height. The man's father was six-feet tall, and both the woman's parents were of average height. Achondroplastic dwarfism is autosomal dominant, and red-green color blindness is X-linked recessive. They have a daughter who is a dwarf with normal color vision. What is the probability that she is heterozygous for both genes?1.00
245216167Male calico cats could be the result ofnondisjunction, leading to the male calico having two X chromosomes
245216168A Barr body is normally found in the nucleus of which kind of human cell?somatic cells of a female only
245216169Which of these syndromes afflicts mostly males?Duchenne muscular dystrophy
245216170If a human interphase nucleus of a person contains three Barr bodies, it can be assumed that the personhas four X chromosomes.
245216171If nondisjunction occurs in meiosis II during gametogenesis, what will be the result at the completion of meiosis?One gamete will be n + 1, one will be n - 1, and two will be n.
245216172If a pair of homologous chromosomes fails to separate during anaphase of meiosis I, what will be the chromosome number of the four resulting gametes with respect to the normal haploid number (n)?n + 1; n + 1; n - 1; n - 1
245216173A cell that has 2n + 1 chromosomes isboth A and C
245216174If a chromosome lacks certain genes, what has most likely occurred?a deletion
245216175One possible result of chromosomal breakage is for a fragment to join a nonhomologous chromosome. This is called a (an)translocation
245216176In the following list, which term is least related to the others?triploid
245216177A nonreciprocal crossover causes which of the following products?A and B
245216178One possible result of chromosomal breakage can be that a fragment reattaches to the original chromosome in a reverse orientation. This is calledinversion
245216179A human individual is phenotypically female, but her interphase somatic nuclei do not show the presence of Barr bodies. Which of the following statements concerning her is probably true?She has Turner syndrome.
245216180In humans, male-pattern baldness is controlled by a gene that occurs in two allelic forms. Allele Hn determines nonbaldness, and allele Hb determines pattern baldness. In males, because of the presence of testosterone, allele Hb is dominant over Hn. If a man and woman both with genotype HnHb have a son, what is the chance that he will eventually be bald?75%
245216181Of the following human trisomies, the one that generally has the most severe impact on the health of the individual istrisomy 21
245216182What do all human males inherit from their mother?A and B only
245216183Which of the following statements is true regarding genomic imprinting?It explains cases in which the gender of the parent from whom an allele is inherited affects the expression of that allele
245216184Which of the following statements about mitochondria is false?Like nuclear genes, mitochondrial genes usually follow Mendelian patterns of inheritance
245216185You conduct a dihybrid cross and then testcross the F1 generation. A ________ ratio would make you suspect that the genes are linked.7:7:1:1
245216186The recombination frequency between gene A and gene B is 8.4%, the recombination frequency between gene A and gene C is 6.8%, and the recombination frequency between gene B and gene C is 15.2%. Which is the correct arrangement of these genes?CAB
245216187Hypophosphatemia (vitamin D-resistant rickets) is inherited as a X-linked dominant disorder. An unaffected woman mates with a male with hypophosphatemia. What is the expected phenotypic ratio of their offspring?1 daughter with hypophosphatemia:1 normal son
245216188The sex chromosome complements of both normal human and normal MendAlien males isXY
245216189Mutant tetraploid plantsare unable to breed with a diploid plant.
245216190A man with hemophilia (a recessive, sex-linked condition) has a daughter of normal phenotype. She marries a man who is normal for the trait. What is the probability that a daughter of this mating will be a hemophiliac? That a son will be a hemophiliac? If the couple has four sons, what is the probability that all four will be born with hemophilia?0; 1/2, 1/16
245216191Pseudohypertrophic muscular dystrophy is an inherited disorder that causes gradual deterioration of the muscles. It is seen almost exclusively in boys born to apparently normal parents and usually results in death in the early teens. Is this disorder caused by a dominant or a recessive allele? Is its inheritance sex-linked or autosomal? How do you know? Explain why this disorder is almost never seen in girlsRecessive. If the disorder were dominant, it would affect at least one parent of a child born with the disorder. The disorder's inheritance is sex-linked because it is seen almost only in boys. For a girl to have the disorder, she would have to inherit the recessive alleles from both parents. This would be very rare since males with the recessive allele on their X chromosome die in their early teens.
245216192Red-green color blindness is caused by a sex-linked recessive allele. A color-blind man marries a woman with normal vision whose father was color-blind. What is the probability that they will have a color-blind daughter? What is the probability that their first son will be color-blind?1/4 for each daughter (1/2 chance that child will be female × 1/2 chance of a homozygous recessive genotype); 1/2 for first son.
245216193A wild-type fruit fly (heterozygous for gray body color and normal wings) is mated with a black fly with vestigial wings. The offspring have the following phenotypic distribution: wild type, 778; black-vestigial, 785; black-normal, 158; gray-vestigial, 162. What is the recombination frequency between these genes for body color and wing size?17%
245216194In another cross, a wild-type fruit fly (heterozygous for gray body color and red eyes) is mated with a black fruit fly with purple eyes. The offspring are as follows: wild type, 721; black-purple, 751; gray-purple, 49; black-red, 45. What is the recombination frequency between these genes for body color and eye color? Using information from problem 4, what fruit flies (genotypes and phenotypes) would you mate to determine the sequence of the body-color, wing-size, and eye-color genes on the chromosome?6%. Wild type (heterozygous for normal wings and red eyes) × recessive homozygote with vestigial wings and purple eyes
245216195What pattern of inheritance would lead a geneticist to suspect that an inherited disorder of cell metabolism is due to a defective mitochondrial gene?The disorder would always be inherited from the mother
245216196Women born with an extra X chromosome (XXX) are healthy and phenotypically indistinguishable from normal XX women. What is a likely explanation for this finding? How could you test this explanation?The inactivation of two X chromosomes in XXX women would leave them with one genetically active X, as in women with the normal number of chromosomes. Microscopy should reveal two Barr bodies in XXX women.
245216197Determine the sequence of genes along a chromosome based on the following recombination frequencies: A-B, 8 map units; A-C, 28 map units; A-D, 25 map units; B-C, 20 map units; B-D, 33 map units.D-A-B-C
245216198Assume that genes A and B are linked and are 50 map units apart. An animal heterozygous at both loci is crossed with one that is homozygous recessive at both loci. What percentage of the offspring will show phenotypes resulting from crossovers? If you did not know that genes A and B were linked, how would you interpret the results of this cross?50% of the offspring would show phenotypes that resulted from crossovers. These results would be the same as those from a cross where A and B were not linked. Further crosses involving other genes on the same chromosome would reveal the linkage and map distances.
245216199Fifty percent of the offspring would show phenotypes that resulted from crossovers. These results would be the same as those from a cross where A and B were not linked. Further crosses involving other genes on the same chromosome would reveal the linkage and map distances.Between T and A, 12%; between A and S, 5%

Ap Bio Chapter 15 Flashcards

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283169123Stromatoliteslayered rocks that form when certain prokaryotes bind thin films of sediment together
283169124polymerslarge compound formed from combinations of many monomers
283169125Protocellsdroplets with membranes that maintained an internal chemistry different from that of their surroundings
283169126Self-Replicating RNAfirst genetic material was probably RNA, have ribozymes that catalyze many diff. reactions, RNA can code for and replicate=dual role
283169127RibozymesAn enzymatic RNA molecule that catalyzes reactions during RNA splicing.
283169128Macroevolutionthe hypothesis that processes similar to those at work in microevolution can, over eons of time, transform an organism into a completely different kind of organism
283169129Radiometric Datinga method of determining the absolute age of an object by comparing the relative percentages of a radioactive (parent) isotope and a stable (daughter) isotope
283169130Geologic RecordThe division of Earth's history into time periods, grouped into three eons—Archaean, Proterozoic, and Phanerozoic—and further subdivided into eras, periods, and epochs.
283169131Continental Driftthe hypothesis that states that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations
283169132Plate Tectonicsthe theory that pieces of Earth's lithosphere are in constant motion, driven by convection currents in the mantle
283169133Pangaea(plate tectonics) a hypothetical continent including all the landmass of the earth prior to the Triassic period when it split into Laurasia and Gondwanaland
283169134Evo-devoEvolutionary developmental biology; a field of biology that compares developmental processes of different multicellular organisms to understand how these processes have evolved and how changes can modify existing organismal features or lead to new ones.
283169135PaedomorphosisThe retention in an adult organism of the juvenile features of its evolutionary ancestors.
283169136Phylogeny(biology) the sequence of events involved in the evolutionary development of a species or taxonomic group of organisms
283169137Analogydrawing a comparison in order to show a similarity in some respect
283169138Systematicsthe classification of living organisms in terms of their natural relationships; it includes describing, naming, and classifying the organisms
283169139Taxonomypractice of classifying plants and animals according to their presumed natural relationships
283169140BinomialThe two-part latinized name of a species, consisting of genus and specific epithet.
283169141Genus(biology) taxonomic group containing one or more species
283169142Family(biology) a taxonomic group containing one or more genera
283169143OrdersIn classification, the taxonomic category above family.
283169144ClassesIn classification, the taxonomic category above order.
283169145Phylathe second largest taxonomic category in the animal kingdom
283169146KingdomsThe major groups into which living thing are classified. Animal, Plant, Fungi, Protists, Bacteria, Archaea. There is currently much debate about the validity of the traditional classification groups in light of new evidence of evolutionary relationships.
283169147Domainsa taxonomic category above the kingdom level; the three domains of life are Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya
283169148TaxonA named taxonomic unit at any given level of classification.
283169149Phylogenetic Treesa branching diagram that represents a hypothesis about the evolutionary history of a group of organisms
283169150Cladisticsa system of biological taxonomy based on the quantitative analysis of comparative data and used to reconstruct cladograms summarizing the (assumed) phylogenetic relations and evolutionary history of groups of organisms
283169151Cladesa group of species that includes an ancestral species and all its descendants.
283169152MonophyleticPertaining to a taxon derived from a single ancestral species that gave rise to no species in any other taxa.
283169153Shared Ancestral CharacterA character, shared by members of a particular clade, that originated in an ancestor that is not a member of that clade.
283169154Shared Derived Characteran evolutionary novelty unique to a particular clade
283169155OutgroupA species or group of species that is closely related to the group of species being studied, but clearly not as closely related as any study-group members are to each other.
283169156IngroupIn a cladistic study of evolutionary relationships among taxa of organisms, the group of taxa that is actually being analyzed.
283169157Parsimonyextreme stinginess
283169158Molecular ClockModel that uses DNA comparisons to estimate the length of time that two species have been evolving independently
283169159Three Domain SystemA system of taxonomic classification based on three basic groups: Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya
283169160Horizontal Gene TransferThe transfer of genes from one genome to another through mechanisms such as transposable elements, plasmid exchange, viral activity, and perhaps fusions of different organisms.

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