Biology Summaries: CO Methane
Biology Summaries: CO Methane
Biology Summaries: CO Methane
Summary of Ecosystem
Food chains and food webs show how energy flows through an
ecosystem. The level at which an organism feeds in a food chain is
its trophic level.
The energy losses in food chains limit the length of the chain, so
few food chains have more than five trophic levels.
The carbon cycle shows how CO2 from the air is used in
photosynthesis to make organic compounds in plants, which are
then eaten by animals. Decomposers obtain their carbon by
feeding on dead plants or animals, or on their waste materials.
Respiration by all organisms returns CO2 to the air.
Summary of
inheritance
Chromosomes are
long thread of DNA made
up of strings of genes. In a diploid cell, each of a pair of homologous
chromosomes carries the same genes in the same position. A diploid cell
therefore has 2 copies of each gene.
Things to remember:
Gametes have only one set of chromosomes, and so they have only
one copy of each gene.
Key definitions
Chromosome
Allele
Gene
Haploid
nucleus
Diploid
nucleus
Genotype
Phenotype
Homozygous
Heterozygous
Dominant
Recessive
Summary of Reproduction
Asexual reproduction
It involves cell division by mitosis, producing a group of genetically
identical individuals called a clone. Bacteria, fungi and potatoes can
reproduce asexually.
Sexual reproduction
Sexual reproduction involves the production of genetically different
gametes by meiosis. A male gamete fertilises a female gamete,
producing a zygote which is genetically different from its parents.
In humans
The male gametes are sperms, they are made in the testes.
During sexual intercourse, semen containing sperms passes out to
the penis and into a womans vagina.
The female gametes are eggs and are made in the ovaries. After
sexual intercourse, sperm swim through the cervix and uterus into
the oviducts, where they may meet an egg. One sperm may
fertilise the egg to produce a zygote.
The zygote travels to the uterus and implants into the lining,
growing into an embryo attached t the uterus wall via an umbilical
cord and placenta. The placenta brings the growing embryo blood
very close to the mothers blood, so thats nutrients and waist
products can diffuse between them.
After birth, a young mammal is fed on milk from its mother. This
provides it with exactly the correct balance of nutrients, as well as
antibodies which protect it from infectious diseases.
In plants
The flowers are the reproductive organs. Male gametes are make
inside pollen grains, produced by anthers. Female gametes are
make inside ovules produced by ovaries.
Mammals excrete CO2 from the lungs and urea from their kidneys.
The receptors in the eye are rod and cone cells, found in the
retina. Rods respond to dim light and cones to bright light. Cones
give colour vision.
The cornea and lens focus light rays onto the fovea, the part of the
eye where cone cells are most densely packed.
Muscles can pull when they contracts, but they cannot push. A pair
of muscles is therefore needed to pull in different directions, e.g. at
the elbow joint. They are antagonistic muscles.
Auxins are mostly made in the tips of the shoots and roots, and can
diffuse to other parts of the shoots or roots. It collects in the shady
side of the shoot, making the side grow faster so the shoot bends
towards the light. Auxins are used as selective weed killers.
Summary of Respiration
Muscles respire aerobically when they are working so fast that they
cannot be supplied with O2 quickly enough. The lactic acid that is
made is transported to the liver, and later is broken down by
Some of these tubes are lined with goblet cells which make mucus,
and ciliated cells. The mucus traps dirt, bacteria and other particles
and the cilia sweep the mucus up and away from the lungs.
Mammals
have a double
Blood enters the atria of the heart, flows through open vales into the
ventricles, and is then forced out into the arteries during systole.
The ventricles have thicker walls than the atria, and the left
ventricle has a thicker wall than the right ventricle, to allow them to
produce a greater force when the muscles contract, necessary so
that they can push the blood further.
Arteries are thick-walled, elastic vessels that carry pulsing, highpressure blood away from the heart. They split into capillaries,
which are tiny vessels with walls only one cell thick. Capillaries take
blood close to every cell to the body, so that the cells are supplied
with oxygen and nutrients and have their waste products removed.
Capillaries join up to form veins. Veins are thin-walled vessels with
valves, which carry low-pressure blood back to the heart.
Blood contains red cells, white cells and platelets floating in plasma.
Plasma transports many different substances in solution. Red cells
contain the iron-containing protein haemoglobin, which transports
oxygen. White cells fight against bacteria and viruses. Platelets help
the blood to clot.
Fluid leaks out of capillaries to fill the spaces between all the body
cells, where it is called tissue fluid. It is collected into lymph vessels
which carry it back to the bloodstream.
In plants, xylem vessels transport water and mineral ions from the roots
upwards to the leaves. Phloem tubes transport sucrose and other
organic nutrients, from the leaves where they are made to all parts of the
plant. This is called translocation.
Xylem vessels are made of dead, empty cells with strong lignin in
their walls. As well as transporting water, they help to support the
plant.
Water enters root hairs by osmosis, and then moves across the
cortex of the root into the xylem.
A
balanced
diet
contains
suitable proportions of each group of nutrients carbohydrates, fats,
proteins, minerals, vitamins, water and fibre and the correct amount of
energy.
Eating food containing more energy than you can use up causes
weight increase, which can lead to obesity. Children who do not get
enough food may suffer from energy protein malnutrition, in which
they do not grow properly and have little energy.
Bile also flows into the duodenum. It contains bile salts, which
emulsify fats, making it easier for lipase to digest them.
The lining of the small intestine is covered with villi, giving it a very
large surface area, which helps to speed up absorption. Cells on the
surface of the villi make enzymes, which complete the digestion of
food. The villi contain blood capillaries to absorb glucose, amino
acids, water, vitamins
and minerals, and
lacteals to absorb fatty
acids and glycerol.
The colon absorbs more water from the food. In the rectum, the
undigested food is formed into faeces, which are eventually egested
through the anus.
When testing a leaf for starch, it must first be boiled to break down
cell membranes and allow iodine solution to make contact with any
starch inside the cells. Hot alcohol will remove chlorophyll from the
leaf, making it easier to see any colour changes.
If either light or carbon dioxide are in short supply, they limit the
rate of photosynthesis and are said to be limiting factors. The rate
of photosynthesis is also affected by temperature.
Summary of Enzymes
Enzymes are specialized protein molecules facilitating most of the
bodys metabolic processes such as, supplying energy, digesting
foods, purifying your blood, ridding the body of waste products. Enzymes
are vital to our health and change the rate at which chemical
reactions happen, but without any external energy source added or by
being changed themselves.
Things to remember:
Summary of Cells
Structure
Cells are the smallest units of living things. They are too small to
be seen with the naked eye, so we need to use microscopes to
see their structures.