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AP Biology

Index of all the AP Biology FR questions from 2001 to 2010

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AP Biology Free Response Questions Index See the complete questions and scoring rubrics here: http://www.collegeboard.com/student/testing/ap/biology/samp.html 2010 Form A: 1. Homeostasis of blood glucose levels 2. Enzymatic reaction 3. Genetic cross and Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium 4. Ecological succession 2010 Form B: 1. Chromatography and Photosynthesis 2. Point mutation and allele frequency 3. Ecological role of bacteria and GMO bacteria 4. Biotic and abiotic variables, designing a controlled experiment 2009 Form A: 1. Behavioral response and physiological effect in fish to temperature 2. ATP, GTP, chemiosmosis to produce ATP, energy pyramid 3. Phylogeny, genetic variations in cytochrome c

Biology II Campbell 7th edition outline chapter 2

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Chapter 2 The Chemical Context of Life Lecture Outline Overview: Chemical Foundations of Biology Living organisms and the world they live in are subject to the basic laws of physics and chemistry. Biology is a multidisciplinary science, drawing on insights from other sciences. Life can be organized into a hierarchy of structural levels. At each successive level, additional emergent properties appear. Concept 2.1 Matter consists of chemical elements in pure form and in combinations called compounds Organisms are composed of matter. Matter is anything that takes up space and has mass. Matter is made up of elements. An element is a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical reactions. There are 92 naturally occurring elements.

Unit 1 Study Guide

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AP Biology Study Guide Unit 1 Things you should know: Structure, bonds and electronegativity of water 2 types of bonds and properties of each Hydrogen bond Hrodrophobic/Hydrophilic buffer isomers Specific Heat, heat of vaporization of water monomers/polymers (examples) Adhesiveness and cohesiveness Buffers pH equations, and how to use them Evaporative cooling Capillary action What makes Carbon so special Functional groups and their distinguishing characteristics Carbohydrates Hydrolysis and Condensation Why are simple sugars hydrophillic What contains alpha and what contains beta linkage 4 levels of protein organization and what accounts for each level What makes up the difference between Amino acids Amphipathic Saturated and Unsaturated fats Structure of a neutral fat

11 themes of AP Bio

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ELEVEN THEMES THAT UNIFY BIOLOGY AP Biology DHSHS 2011 ALL LIFE IS CONNECTED All life is connected Biology is a diverse subject To make learning biology more accessible, all of the information can be classified into 11 broad themes 11 themes: The cell Heritable information Emergent properties of biological systems Regulation Interaction with the Environment Energy and life Unity and diversity Evolution Structure and function Scientific inquiry Science, technology and society PAGE 27 of your text book All life is connected-The CELL Cells are every organisms basic units of structure and function The two main types are prokaryotic cells (bacteria and archaea) and eukaryotic cells (protists, plants, fungi and animals) All life is connected-Heritable Information

AP Biology PPT

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Text automatically extracted from attachment below. Please download attachment to view properly formatted document.
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Chapter 2 The Chemical Context of Life Based on the periodic table shown here, which elements will most likely form an ionic bond? Na and Cl Li and F C and O N and O Si and Cl Based on the periodic table shown here, which elements will most likely form a polar covalent bond? Na and Cl C and O N and O Si and Cl H and H Based on the periodic table shown here, which elements will most likely form a covalent bond? Na and Cl C and O N and O Si and Cl H and H What do elements with atomic numbers 6, 14, and 22 have in common? same number of electrons same atomic mass

Hardy Weinberg Equation Help

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Hardy-Weinberg problem set Hardy-Weinberg Theorem states that if a population is NOT evolving then the frequencies of the alleles in the population will remain stable across generations - it is in equilibrium. We can use the Hardy-Weinberg equation to make predictions about the relative frequency of the different alleles (as well as the associated genotypes), even if there is population growth, as long as the five conditions we discussed in class hold true. Think about what those five conditions are......... no mutations, no natural selection, no gene flow, large population size, random mating Alternatively, Hardy-Weinberg equation can be a means to determine if a population is indeed evolving - that the allele frequencies are changing and therefore NOT at

How to Define Life[Biology intro]

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Living Things Are Organized Organization of living systems begins with atoms, which make up basic building blocks called elements. The cell is the basic structural and functional unit of all living things. Different cells combine to make up tissues (e.g., myocardial tissue). Tissues combine to make up an organ (e.g., the heart). Specific organs work together as a system (e.g., the heart, arteries, veins, etc.). Multicellular organisms (each an "individual" within a particular species) contain organ systems (e.g., cardiovascular, digestive, respiratory, etc.). A species in a particular area (e.g., gray squirrels in a forest) constitutes a population.

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