Biology exam review 2.1 Kingdom King Phylum Philip Class Came Order Over Genus Germany Species South Domain Bacteria Archea Eukarya Kingdom Eubacteria Archeabacteria Protista‚ Fungi‚ Plantae‚ Animalia. # of cells Prokaryote Prokaryote Eukaryote Cell structure Cell walls made of peptidolglycan (coat of sugars) Cell walls without peptidoglycan Fungi-cell walls with chitin. Protista-cell walls of cellulose in some‚ and in others chloroplasts. Plantae-cell walls
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1. Justify the validity of your model include any limitations of your model. My model is valid because I used reliable sources of information‚ as referenced in my bibliography‚ to find information on what DNA replication looks like. The sources showed me what a strand of DNA looks like as well as giving me an explanation of what occurs during DNA replication. As my model is colour coded it makes it clearer as to what is occurring during each step in DNA replication as well as what each element
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Introduction: * Genetics are composed of five main areas: DNA replication‚ meiosis‚ reproduction‚ adaptation and evolution. The body is composed of 46 chromosomes (23 from your mother and 23 of your father). The genes are in your cells in the nucleus and some in the mitochondria. The genes are a small part of a long molecule called DNA. DNA is a double stranded molecule (sugar‚ phosphate and four different bases: Adenine‚ Thymine‚ Cytosine and Guanine). The bases in the DNA are
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through a process‚ which was later named recombination. There is one step prior to recombination‚ which is a cross-over event. This event was when‚ “a homologous chromosome wraps itself around another and then exchange genetic information during meiosis” (Larsen 2017‚ pg 54). From this event recombination takes place‚ “the exchange of genetic material between homologous chromosomes‚ resulting from a cross-over event (Larsen 2017‚ pg
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What is Life Life is defined as a characteristic that distinguishes that have signaling and self sustaining processes from those that don’t. If an organism can perform certain functions such as movement‚ respiration‚ sensitivity‚ growth‚ reproduction‚ excretion‚ and nutrition‚ it is classified as a living organism. Life began from the basic building block of all living things‚ called cells. All organisms derived from single celled organisms. Cells are the basic building blocks of life and are
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DNA is the most important for life One of the most complex and mysterious aspects of contemporary science is the constitution of life. While it goes without saying there are an enormous amount of components that collaborate to achieve the most effective and efficient components of life‚ it’s also clear that some of these molecular components contribute to the actual function of living system more than others. This essay argues the DNA is the most important molecule for life. Deoxyribonucleic
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Asexual Reproduction in Animals Group 3 Nina Bansil Kenneth Calabia Josef Franz Cruz I. Introduction Asexual reproduction is reproduction which does not involve meiosis‚ ploidy reduction‚ or fertilization. Only one parent is involved in asexual reproduction. A more stringent definition is agamogenesis which refers to reproduction without the fusion of gametes. Asexual reproduction is the primary form of reproduction for single-celled organisms such as the archaea‚ bacteria‚ and protists
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Chapter 1: Intro Independent Variable - variable you deliberately change during an experiment Theory - explanation based on a large number of experiments Hypothesis - educated prediction of cause and effect - what you test in an experiment Control - a zero or set form of the independent variable Dependent - variable you measure because you think it could change 7 characteristics: order‚ regulation‚ growth and development‚ energy processing‚ response to the environment‚ reproduction‚ evolutionary
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effects of each of the following: a. b. c. d. 2. Substrate concentration pH shifts Temperature shifts Competitive inhibition Describe in detail the process of meiosis as it occurs in an organism with a diploid chromosome number of 4 (2n = 4). Include labeled diagrams in your discussion. Indicate when and how each of the following occurs in meiosis. a. b. Crossing over Nondisjunction 3. In humans‚ discuss the transport of gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) by the blood and the exchange of these gases
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Lab 4 Introduction to the Microscope Biological Processes Lab 5 The Chemistry of Life Lab 6 Diffusion Lab 7 Osmosis Lab 8 Enzymes Lab 9 Cellular Respiration Cellular Fundamentals Lab 10 Cell Structure and Function Lab 11 Mitosis Lab 12 Meiosis Lab 13 DNA and RNA Lab 14 Mendelian Genetics Lab 15 Population Genetics Kingdoms of Life
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