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Life Science
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I. Description of the subject
This learning area is designed to provide a general background for the
understanding of Earth Science and Biology. It presents the history of the
Earth through geologic time. It discusses the Earth’s structure, composition,
and process. Issues, concerns, and problems pertaining to natural hazards
are included. It also deals with the basic principles and processes in the
study of biology. It covers life processes and interactions at the cellular,
organism, population, and ecosystem levels.
II. Objectives
1. To have a better understanding of the origin of the Earth and its species
2. To appreciate the importance of the existence of the living and non-living
things on earth
3. To familiarize the students with the metabolic processes of living organisms
4. To motivate the students to participate in the conservation and protection of
life forms and environment
Chapter 5: BIOENERGETICS 32
5.1 Cell
5.2 Photosynthesis
5.3 Cellular Respiration
Objectives:
1. To state the different hypotheses explaining the origin of the universe
2. To describe the different hypotheses explaining the origin of the solar system
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3. To explain the current advancements/ discoveries on the solar system
4. To recognize the uniqueness of the earth, being the only planet in the solar
system with properties necessary to support life
5. To describe the four subsystem of the earth
6. To identify and describe the layers of the earth
Universe is an all space-time, matter and energy including the solar system, all
stars and galaxies and content of intergalactic space, regarded as a whole. There
are three various theories explaining the origin of the universe;
Steady State Theory. It states that the counting of the galaxies in our Universe is
constant and new galaxies which are forming continuously are filling the empty
spaces which are created by those heavenly bodies which have crossed the
boundary lines of observable Universe. This theory proposes that the overall
structure of the universe is always the same at any point in time and space. This
structure is maintained even when certain events, such as birth of new stars, occur. It
is balanced by the death of old stars.
Big Bang Theory: It proposes that the entire universe was once condensed in a
very small and compact particle called primeval nucleus. It is estimated that about 20
billion years ago, primeval nucleus suddenly exploded in a big bang. The force of this
explosion caused matter to scatter in any direction forming a universe.
SOLAR SYSTEM
Just a part of the vast universe is our solar system. It is located somewhere in
Milky Way Galaxy. It consists of the sun being at the center, minor and major planets and
other celestial bodies like satellites, comets, asteroids and meteoroids.
Study questions:
1. What are the major theories pertaining to the nature of expanding galaxy?
Explain each.
2. Why do some scientists believe that the universe is expanding?
3. What are the major theories about the origin of the solar system? Explain
each.
4. How is space exploration benefits mankind?
Earth is the only planet in the solar system capable of supporting life. Complex
and brilliant combination of gases, composition and structure of earth are some of the
reasons why it can sustain life.
EARTH SUBSYSTEM
Earth is a very complex place. The earth consists of four distinct yet connected
spheres.
All of the processes on Earth are driven by four “spheres”, which we describe
individually, but are really all connected.
GEOSPHERE
The Geosphere describes all of the rocks, minerals and ground that are found
on and in Earth. This includes all of the mountains on the surface, as well as all of the
liquid rock in the mantle below us and the minerals and metals of the outer and inner
cores. The continents, the ocean floor, all of the rocks on the surface, and all of the sand
in the deserts are all considered part of the geosphere. Basically, if it looks like solid
ground, it's part of the 'ground' sphere.
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HYDROSPHERE
Planet Earth has been called the "Blue Planet" due to the abundant water on its
surface Over 70 percent of the surface area of the earth is covered by water. All the
earth’s water, solid or in liquid form, those that are contained in glaciers, rocks, soil and
the air, comprise the earth’s hydrosphere.
SOURCES OF WATER
Ocean. A big portion of earth’s water is found in ocean. The oceans cover more than 70
percent of the Earth's surface and contain 97 percent of the Earth's water. If the ocean's
total salt content were dried, it would cover the continents to a depth of 5 feet.
Together with the atmosphere, oceans regulate global temperatures, shape
weather and climate patterns, and cycle elements through the biosphere.
INLAND WATERS
Household, commercial and agricultural water supply mainly come from
inland bodies of water. Two major inland waters are described below.
1. Rivers
A volume of a fresh flowing water across the surface of the land usually to
the sea. Rivers flow in channels.
2. Lakes
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A reservoir of relatively still water that is surrounded by land. It is formed
from the accumulation of large amounts of water in natural or artificial
depressions on the surface of the land. Other inland waters include
ponds, spring, stream, wetlands, floodplains and reservoirs.
GROUNDWATER
It is the water found underground in the cracks and spaces in soil, sand and rock.
It is stored in and moves slowly through geologic formations of soil, sand and rocks
called aquifers. It results from the accumulation of water penetrating through small
openings called pores in the rocks or soil. This process is known as percolation.
Groundwater supplies drinking water, used for irrigation to grow crops and an
important component in many industrial processes.
Sun heats water causing the water to evaporate. Rising air currents take the
water vapor up in the atmosphere. The vapor rises into the air where cooler
temperatures cause it to condense into clouds.
Air currents move the cloud. Cloud particles collide, grow, and fall out of the sky
as precipitation. Most of the precipitation return to the oceans.
ATMOSPHERE
A very huge envelope of air that
surrounds the earth and pulled by the
gravitational force of the earth is called
atmosphere. The earth’s atmosphere
is primarily composed of 78 percent
nitrogen and 21 percent of oxygen.
Other gases like argon, carbon dioxide,
carbon monoxide, ozone, hydrogen,
helium and other inert gases make up
the remaining 1 percent.
The earth’s atmosphere is made up of different layers as shown in the table
below.
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BIOSPHERE
The biosphere is where all forms of life exist. Since life exist in the air, in water
and on the ground, its boundaries overlap other “sphere” because life can be found
everywhere on earth. The biosphere is sometimes thought of as one large ecosystem —
a complex community of living and nonliving things functioning as a single unit.
Crust
The crust is the outermost part of the earth and is very thin compared to the other
layers. It is a part where the living organisms dwell in. It forms a very thin continuous
layer that extends underneath the ocean and continents.
2 KINDS of CRUST
1. Continental crust is mostly composed of different types of granites. Geologists often
refer to the rocks of the continental crust as “sial” which stands for silicate and
aluminum, the most abundant minerals in continental crust.
Cratons are the oldest and most stable part of the continental lithosphere and
are found deep in the interior of most continents.
2. Oceanic crust is mostly composed of different types of basalts. Rocks of the oceanic
crust are referred to as “sima” which stands for silicate and magnesium, the most
abundant minerals in oceanic crust.
The Mantle
It is the mostly-solid bulk of Earth’s interior. The mantle lies between
Earth’s dense, super heated core and its thin outer layer, the crust. It is made up of
silicates, magnesium oxide, iron, aluminum, calcium, sodium, and potassium. The
mantle is divided into two layers: the upper mantle and the lower mantle.
Mantle Plumes
A mantle plume is an upwelling of superheated rock from the mantle. Mantle
plumes are the likely cause of “hot spots,” volcanic regions not created by plate
tectonics.
The Core
It is the dense center and hottest part of earth. The core is made almost entirely
of iron and nickel.
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The Gutenberg discontinuity is the boundary between the core and the mantle.
The core is made of two layers:
a) Outer Core - borders the mantle. Bullen discontinuity is the hottest part of the
core.
b) Inner Core- is a hot, dense ball of iron. The temperature of the inner core is
far above the melting point of iron.
Bullen discontinuity is the boundary separating these two layers.
CHAPTER TEST:
Read each questions carefully. Write the letter of the correct answer in the blank.
__1. In what sphere of the earth are the rocks and minerals found?
a. Atmosphere c. Hydrosphere
b. Biosphere d. Geosphere
__2 What parts of the earth make up the hydrosphere?
a. Glaciers c. seawater and inland water
b. Groundwater d. All of the above
__3. What part of Earth's spheres is composed of a mixture of gases?
a. Atmosphere c. Geosphere
b. Biosphere d. Hydrosphere
__4. Why only few lives exist below bathypelagic zone?
a. No sunlight penetrates on this zone
b. Water is very cold
c. Water pressure is very high
d. All of these
__5. When is the accumulated pile of snow become glaciers?
a. When it undergo cementation and compaction
b. Upon reaching a certain mass and acted upon by gravity
c. When it piled up in huge amount and solidify
d. When the temperature dropped very low
__6. Earth’s atmosphere is consists mostly of what gas?
a. CO2 b. He c. N2 d. O2
__7. In the troposphere, as the altitude rise, what happen to the temperature?
a. decreases b. increases c. constant d. extremely hot
__8. In what layer of the atmosphere, many satellites orbit?
a. exosphere b. troposphere c. mesosphere d. stratosphere
__9. What is the largest part of the earth?
a. Biosphere b. Geosphere c. Atmosphere d. Hydrosphere
__10. What is the importance of magnetic field?
a. It protects the earth from the solar wind.
b. It keeps our planet in orbit.
c. It protects us from harmful UV rays.
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d. It gives us many minerals.
Objectives:
1. To identify common rock-forming minerals using their physical and
chemical properties
2. To classify rocks into igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic
Rocks
Rock or stone is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of one or more minerals.
The Earth's outer solid layer, the lithosphere, is made of rock.
The types and abundance of minerals in a rock are deter-mined by the manner in
which the rock was formed. Many rocks contain silica (SiO2); a compound of silicon and
oxygen that forms 74.3% of the Earth's crust. This material forms crystals with other
compounds in the rock.
3. Sedimentary:
Sedimentary rocks are either detrital or chemical.
a. Detrital rocks are formed by the compaction of separate particles, or
sediments, into a rock.
b. Chemical sedimentary rocks form from minerals that have been
dissolved in water and precipitate out, forming a solid rock.
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Geologists describe sedimentary rocks according to the size and shape of the
particles in them or their mineral Oxygen (O) 46.6%
composition (in the case of chemical Silicon (Si) 27.7%
sedimentary rocks).
Aluminum (Al) 8.1%
Rock Cycle Iron (Fe) 5.0%
The rocks of earth's crust are Calcium (Ca) 3.6%
constantly being recycled and changed Sodium (Na) 2.8%
into new forms through geologic
processes. This continual transformation
Potassium (K) 2.6%
of rocks from one type to another is called Magnesium (Mg) 2.1%
the rock cycle.
Rock Cycle
How rock type can be changed?
Rock can be changed through the processes of weathering, heating, melting,
cooling, and compaction. Any one rock type can be changed into a different rock type as
its chemical composition and physical characteristics are transformed.
The minerals and metals found in rocks have been essential to human
civilization.
Minerals
Minerals are the fundamental components of rocks.
They are naturally occurring inorganic substances with a specific chemical
composition and an orderly repeating atomic structure that defines a crystal
structure.
Silicate minerals are the most abundant components of rocks on the Earth's
surface, making up over 90% by mass of the Earth's crust.
The common non-silicate minerals, which constitute less than 10% of the
Earth's crust, include carbonates, oxides, sulfides, phosphates and salts. A
few elements may occur in pure form. These include gold, silver, copper,
bismuth, arsenic, lead, tellurium and carbon.
Although 92 naturally occurring elements exist in nature, only eight of these are
common in the rocks of the Earth's crust. Together, these eight elements make up
more than 98% of the crust (Table 1).
Study Questions:
1. What are the physical properties of minerals ?
2. How are rocks classified ?
3. Describe how the following 12
rocks are formed.
a. igneous rock
b. sedimentary rock
c. metamorphic rock
Lesson 2.2 : EXOGENIC PROCESSES
Mountains, valleys and plains seem to change little, if at all, when left to nature, but
they do change continuously. The features of the Earth’s surface temporary forms in a
long sequence of change that began when the planet originated billions of years ago,
and is continuing today. The process that shaped the crust in the past are shaping it
now. By understanding them, it is possible to imagine, in a general way, how the land
looked in the distant past and how it may look in the distant future.
Landforms are limitless in variety. Some have been shaped primarily by:
streams of water,
glacial ice,
waves and currents and
movements of the Earth‘s crust or
volcanic eruptions.
These are landscapes typical of deserts and others characteristic of humid
regions. The arctic makes its special mark on rock scenery, as do the tropics. Because
geological conditions from locality to locality are never quite the same, every landscape
is unique. Rock at or near the surface of the continents breaks up and decomposes
because of exposure. The processes involved are called weathering.
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Weathering
Weathering is the decomposition and disintegration of rocks and minerals at the
Earth’s surface.
Erosion
Erosion is the removal of weathered rocks and minerals by moving water, wind,
glaciers and gravity.
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The asthenosphere, the primary source of magma formation, is such a layer in the
upper mantle. Convection currents may arise in the asthenosphere and they are
hypothesized to be lithosphere.
In the zones of the volcanic belts of the island arcs and continental margins, the
principal magma chambers are associated with super deep dip faults, slanting
beneath the continents from the ocean side to depths of about 700 km.
Under the influence of the heat flow or under the direct influence of the heat carried
by rising abyssal magma , magma chambers form in the crust itself . Reaching the
near surface parts, the magma is intruded into them in the form of variously shaped
intrusive bodies or is extruded onto the surface , forming volcanoes.
Gravitational differentiation has led to the stratification of the earth into geospheres
of varying density.
Is also manifested in the form of tectonic movements , which, in turn, lead to the
tectonic deformation of crustal and upper mantle rocks.
Crustal Deformation
I. Deformation of rocks in Earth's crust takes many forms;
A. Changes in volume, shape, and position can occur alone or in combination.
1. Stress = applied force = cause of the deformation
a. Types of stress include:
1) Tensional-stretching, increased volume
2) Compressional - squeezing, decreased volume
3) Shear - change in shape
2. Strain = resulting deformation
B. Causes of deformation
1. Confining pressure - due to the load of overlying rocks
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2. Stresses applied at plate boundaries - usually not uniform instead this is a
directed pressure
C. Types of deformation (affected by confining pressure and temperature)
1. Deformation by flow
a. Elastic-recoverable, small amounts of strain, doesn’t happen to rocks
b. Plastic-permanent; rocks flow as movement occurs along small structural
defects.
2. Brittle deformation - rupture - rock moves in opposite directions on either side of a
break.
II. Strike and dip are used to describe the orientation of planar features.
A. Outcrop - site where rocks are exposed at the surface
B. Dip - the angle of inclination of the bedding surface down off the horizontal
C. Strike - the trend or direction of the strata or the bearing of any horizontal
line on the plane perpendicular to the direction of dip.
III. Features of plastic deformation - Folds
A. Folds-wavelike undulations caused by bending of rocks usually produced
by horizontal compressive stresses – occurs at great depths inside the Earth
under great temperatures and pressures
B. Terminology
1. Axial plane - a plane through a rock fold that includes the axis-divides
the fold as symmetrically as possible.
2. Axis-the ridge or place of sharpest folding.
3. Limb- 1 of 2 parts of the fold-on either side of axis.
4. Plunge-angle that fold axis makes with the horizontal
C. Types of folds
1. Anticline- arching or upwarping of rock layers
2. Syncline- downwarping of rock layers
3 .Monocline- double flexure of rock layers
4. Dome -non-linear, anticlinal fold-beds dip away from central area in all
directions
5.Basin - non - linear, synclinal fold-beds dip towards central area from all
directions.
D. Description of folds
1. Symmetrical-dips of opposite limbs of fold are approximately equal
2. Overturned-asymmetrical fold with one limb tilted beyond vertical
3. Recumbent-overturned fold with a horizontal axis
4. Plunging-axis of fold penetrates into ground
IV. Features of brittle deformation - Faults and Joints
A. Joints- breaks in rock mass with no appreciable relative movement of rocks on
opposite sides of break.
Sheet jointing causes formation of exfoliation domes and cooling results
in columnar joints in basalt.
B. Faults- breaks in rock mass where appreciable movement of rocks on opposite
sides of the break has occurred. Faults are classified on the basis of the
relative movement of blocks on either side of the fault.
1. Terminology
a. Hanging wall -block of rock immediately above fault surface
b. Footwall-block of rock immediately below fault surface
2. Dip-slip faults-movement of the two blocks is up and down the dip of
the fault-primarily vertical
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a. Normal fault- footwall moves up with respect to hanging wall
(associated with tensional stress)
Graben and horst-features characterized by down-dropped
and uplifted blocks of rock, respectively, bordered by pairs of
normal faults.
b. Reverse and thrust- footwall moves down with respect to
hanging wall (associated with compressional stress and usually
lots of folding)
3. Strike-slip and transform faults-movement of the two blocks on either
side of the break is along the strike and dominantly horizontal
(associated with shear stress)
a. Right lateral and left lateral
b. Transform fault -special kind of strike-slip fault, found along plate
boundaries, which accommodates motion between crustal plates.
The SAN ANDREAS FAULT is a right lateral strike-slip transform
fault.
C. Deformation of Earth's Crust occurs abruptly or gradually
1. Abrupt movements are associated with earthquakes.
2. Gradual movements = creep = semi-continuous movement.
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3. A syncline is a fold where the rock layers are warped downward (Figure 3 and 4).
Both anticlines and synclines are the result of compressional stress.
Figure 3
Figure 4
More complex fold types can develop in situations where lateral
pressures become greater. The greater pressure results in anticlines and
synclines that are inclined and asymmetrical.
The following illustration shows two
anticline folds which are inclined. Also note how
the beds on either side of the fold center are
asymmetrical. shows two anticline folds which are
inclined. Also note how the beds on either side of
the fold center are asymmetrical. Figure 5
4. A recumbent fold develops if the center of the fold
moves from being once vertical to a horizontal
position. Recumbent folds are commonly found in
the core of mountain ranges and indicate that
compression and/or shear forces were stronger in
one direction. Extreme stress and pressure can
sometimes cause the rocks to shear along a plane of
Figure 6
weakness creating a fault. We call the combination of a
fault and a fold in a rock an over thrust fault.
Faults form in rocks when the stresses
overcome the internal strength of the rock
resulting in a fracture. A fault can be defined as
the displacement of once connected blocks of
rock along a fault plane. This can occur in any
direction with the blocks moving away from each
other.
Faults occur from both tensional and
compressional forces. This shows the location of
some of the major faults located on the Earth. Location of some of the major
faults on the Earth.
Note that many of these faults are in mountainous regions.
There are different kinds of faults. These faults are named according to the type
of stress that acts on the rock and by the nature of the movement of the rock blocks
either side of the fault plane.
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2. Reverse faults develop when compressional forces exist. Compression
causes one block to be pushed up and over the other block.
Reverse faults
3. A graben fault is produced when tensional
stresses result in the subsidence of a block of
rock. On a large scale these features are known
graben fault
as Rift Valleys.
EARTH QUAKES
An earthquake is a sudden vibration or trembling in the Earth.
Earthquake motion is caused by the quick release of stored potential energy into
the kinetic energy of motion.
Most earthquakes are produced along: faults,
tectonic plate boundary zones, or
along the mid-oceanic ridges
At these areas, large masses of rock that are moving past each other can
become locked due to friction.
Friction is overcome when the accumulating stress has enough force to cause a
sudden slippage of the rock masses.
The magnitude of the shock wave released into the surrounding rocks is
controlled by:
the quantity of stress built up because of friction,
the distance the rock moved when the slippage occurred, and
ability of the rock to transmit the energy contained in the seismic waves.
Stratified Rock
The stratified rocks form more than nine-tenths of the earth's surface, and if the
entire series of them were present at any one place, they would have a maximum
thickness of about thirty miles, but no such place is known.
The regions of greatest sedimentary accumulation are the shallower parts of the
oceans, while those regions which have remained as dry land, through long
ages, may not only have had no important additions to their surfaces, but have
lost immense thicknesses of rock through denudation.
The great oceanic abysses are also areas of excessively slow sedimentation,
and thus the thickness of the stratified rocks varies much from point to point, a
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variation which has been increased by the irregularities of upheaval and
depression and of different rates of denudation.
Even with this irregularity in the formation and removal of the stratified rocks, it
would be exceedingly difficult to investigate the entire series of them, if they had
all retained the original horizontal positions in which they were first laid down.
In many places, however, the rocks have been steeply tilted and then truncated
by erosion, so that their edges form the surface of the ground, and thus great
thicknesses of them may be examined without descending below the surface.
In studying the sedimentary deposits of the present day we learned that by the
sorting power of water and wind, heterogeneous material is arranged into more
or less homogeneous beds, separated from one another by distinct planes of
division, and the same thing is true of the sedimentary rocks stratification of all
ages. This division into more or less parallel layers is called, and the extent to
which the division is carried varies according to circumstances.
A stratum is the collection of layers of the same mineral substance, which occur
together and may consist of one or many layers.
The passage from one stratum to another is generally abrupt and indicates a
change in the circumstances of deposition, either in the depth of water, or in the
character of the material brought to a given spot, or both. So long as conditions
remain the same, the same kind of material will accumulate over a given area,
and thus immense thicknesses of similar material may be formed.
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1. At the bottom of the section is a coal seam, the consolidated and carbonized
vegetable matter which accumulated in an ancient fresh-water swamp.
2. Next came a subsidence of the swamp, allowing water to flow in, in which
were laid down mixed sands and gravels.
3. The accumulations eventually shoaled the water and enabled a second peat
swamp to establish itself; this is registered in the second coal bed, the
thinness of which indicates that the second swamp did not last so long as the
first.
5. Next, the water was shoaled by an upheaval, and argillaceous sands were
laid down, which now form the flaggy sandstones overlying the shale.
6. The twenty-five feet of sandstone, aided by continued slow rise, silted up the
water and allowed a third peat bog to grow, the result of which is the third
coal seam, while a repetition of the subsidence once more brought in the
water, in which were laid down the seventy feet of gravel at the top of the
section.
In this fashion the succession of strata records the changes which were in
progress while those strata were forming. Whether the beds, other than the coal
seams, were laid down in fresh water, or in salt, by a lake, a flooded river, or the
sea, may be determined from the fossils contained in those beds.
Similar changes in the strata may be occasioned by the steady lowering of a land
surface through denudation.
This diminishes the velocity of the streams, which, in its turn, changes the
character of the materials which the rivers bring to the sea.
We have no trustworthy means of judging how long a time was required for the
formation of any given stratum or series of strata, but it is clear that different
kinds of beds accumulate at very different rates.
The coarser materials, like conglomerates and sand-stones, were piled up much
more rapidly than the shales and limestones; so that equal thicknesses of
different kinds of strata imply great differences in the time required to form them.
Comparing like strata with like, the thickness of a group of rocks is a rough
measure of the time involved in their formation, and that very thick masses imply
a very long lapse of time, but it cannot be inferred that the number of years or
centuries or millennia required.
Obviously the lowest stratum is the oldest and the one at the top the
newest.
This may be put as a general principle, that, unless strata have lost their
original position through disturbance or dislocation, their order of
superposition is their order of relative age.
It is for this reason that in geological sections the strata are numbered
and read from below upward.
Change in the character of the strata takes place not only vertically, but also
horizontally, since no stratum is universal, even for a single continent.
The study of the processes of sedimentation which, showed that the character of
the bottom in the ocean or in lakes is subject to frequent changes, varying with
the depth of water and other factors.
The same is true of the ancient sea and lake bottoms, now represented by the
stratified rocks of the land.
Strata may persist with great evenness and uniform thickness over vast areas,
and in such cases the bedding planes remain sensibly parallel.
But sooner or later, the beds, whenever they can be traced far enough, are found
to thin out to edges and to dovetail in with beds of a different character.
When the strata are of constant thickness for considerable distances, and the
bedding planes remain parallel, the stratification is said to be regular.
In many cases these changes take place rapidly from point to point, and then the
strata are plainly of lenticular shape, thickest in the middle, thinning quickly to
the edges.
Here the bedding planes are distinctly not parallel, and the stratification is
irregular.
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tenaciously clung to this small blue planet for the last three billion years. Scientists are
finding new cues as to how life first began on earth in some really interesting places -
the deep ocean.
CHAPTER TEST :
Identification. Write the correct answer in the blank.
Objectives:
1. To identify different geological processes and hydrometeorological phenomena
2. To describe the various hazards that may happen in the events of earthquakes,
volcanic eruptions, landslides and hydrometeorological phenomena
3. To describe how coastal processes result in coastal erosion, submersion and
saltwater intrusion
Throughout the history of this planet, natural hazards have had great impact.
From the prehistoric to biblical hazards to the tragic events of recent times, humanity has
been afflicted by natural disasters.
EARTHQUAKE
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An earthquake is caused by a sudden release of strain in the earth's interior. The
sudden release of strain occurs because the strength of the straining material is
exceeded by the strain that has accumulated within that material.
Effects of an Earthquake
The destruction caused by an earthquake depends largely on its magnitude and
duration. The destructive effects of an earthquake can be classified into primary and
secondary effects. Primary effects are the immediate damage caused by the quake,
such as collapsing buildings, roads and bridges, which may kill many people.
Myanmar 6.9 magnitude earthquake (April Nepal 7.8 magnitude earthquake (April
2016) 2015)
Secondary Effects are the after-effects of the earthquake, such as fires, tsunami,
landslides and diseases.
Fire. Earthquakes destroy gas pipes and electric cables, causing fires to spread.
Landslides. Earthquakes often cause landslides, especially in steep river valleys
and areas of weak rocks.
Disease and famine. Fresh water supplies are often cut off causing typhoid and
cholera. Lack of shelter and food causes much suffering.
Soil liquefaction. When soil with high water content, are violently shaken they
lose their mechanical strength and behave like a fluid and so buildings can
literally sink.
Tsunami. Earthquake can cause huge underwater waves called tsunami. Rock
slipping along a fault under the ocean causes it.
On March 11, 2011, a magnitude-9 earthquake shook northeastern Japan, unleashing a savage tsunami
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LANDSLIDE
Landslide, also called landslip is the movement of rock, debris or earth down a
slope. They result from the failure of the materials which make up the hill slope and are
driven by the force of gravity.
Landslides can be triggered by natural causes or by human activity. They range
from a single boulder in a rock fall or topple to tens of millions of cubic meters of material
in a debris flow.
Landslides cause property damage, injury and death and adversely affect a
variety of resources.
Human activity, such as agriculture and construction, can increase the risk of a
landslide. Irrigation, deforestation, mining and water leakage are some of the common
activities that weaken the slope.
In January 2012, a landslide hit mining site in Compostela Valley in a remote
area of the southern Philippines. The mountainside of the village collapsed when most
residents were asleep, sweeping away about 50 houses, shanties and other buildings.
(See fig.below)
Davao City, Philippines (January 5,2012) A landslide occurred in Pantukan, Compostela Valley.
VOLCANIC ERUPTION
Volcanic eruption begins when pressure on the magma chamber forces magma
up through the conduit and out of the volcano’s vent. It varies considerably. Eruptions
may be violent, mild or quiet. Magma composition, magma temperature, and the amount
of dissolved gases in the magma are the primary factors that determine whether a
volcano erupts violently or quietly.
Volcanic eruptions can cause serious impacts on living things, the economy as
well as in the environment. It is both beneficial and destructive.
Review Question:
What hazards may happen in the event of earthquake, landslide, and
volcanic eruption ?
Hydrometeorological Hazards
It is a process or phenomenon of atmospheric, hydro-logical or oceanographic
nature that may cause loss of life, injury or other health impacts, property damage,
loss of livelihoods and services, social and economic disruption, or environmental
damage. Hydrometeorological hazards are driven by hydrological processes. It is a
long accepted fact that the Pacific is one of the most natural disaster prone regions
in the world. Aside from the threat of geological hazards, the Pacific region is subject
to a wide range of hydrometeorological hazards. These includes: tropical cyclones,
severe storms, storm surges, floods/ flash floods, droughts, fires/ wild fires,
and cold waves.
FLOOD
A flood occurs when water overflows or inundates land that's normally dry. Most
common is when rivers or streams overflow their banks. Floods are among the most
frequent and costly hydrological hazard. Ongoing flooding can intensify to flash flooding
in cases where intense rainfall results in a rapid surge of rising flood waters.
Effects of flooding
Floods can have devastating consequences and can have effects on the econo -
my, environment and people.
Economic
During floods (especially flash floods), roads, bridges, farms, houses and
automobiles are destroyed. All these come at a heavy cost to people and the
government.
Environment
The environment also suffers when floods happen. Chemicals and other
hazardous substances end up in the water and eventually contaminate the water
bodies that floods end up in. Additionally, flooding causes kills animals, and
others insects are introduced to affected areas, distorting the natural balance of
the ecosystem.
People and Animals
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Many people and animals have died in flash floods. Many more are injured and
others made homeless. Water supply and electricity are disrupted and people
struggle and suffer as a result. In addition to this, flooding brings a lot of diseases
and infections including military fever, pneumonic plague, leptospirosis and
dysentery. Sometimes insects and snakes make their ways to the area and
cause a lot of havoc.
TROPICAL CYCLONE
Tropical cyclones are warm-core low pressure systems associated with a spiral
inflow of mass at the bottom level and spiral outflow at the top level. They always form
over oceans where sea surface temperature, also air temperatures are greater than
26°C. The air accumulates large amounts of sensible and latent heat as it spirals
towards the center.
The Philippines is prone to tropical cyclones due to its geographical location.
1. Strong Winds
The strong wind associated to tropical cyclones is hazardous to
properties, people, plants and animals.
2. Heavy Rainfall
Strong and heavy rains could cause floods especially in low-lying areas.
Flash floods are also associated to tropical cyclones. Flash floods are sudden
occurrences and cannot be predicted.
3. Storm Surge.
A storm surge is a term used for big waves and high tides that occur
during tropical cyclones.
4. Tornado.
It is a violent storm that strike as a powerful rotating mixture of wind and
thunderstorm clouds, extending to the ground from the cloud in a funnel shape.
DROUGHT
Drought is characterized by below-average precipitation in a given region,
resulting in prolonged shortages in its water supply. The strong likelihood of reduced
rainfall during an El Niño event increases the risk of drought in the Philippines.
IMPACTS OF DROUGHT
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Drought often results in mass displacements of population. It leads to water and
food shortages and is likely to have a long-term environmental, economic and health
impact on the population.
Droughts lower the quality of soil resulting to low crop yield.
Bodies of water dry out and water animals will die.
The health and quality of freshwater biomes become affected.
Hunger and malnutrition
Farmers need to spend more money for the irrigation.
Less or no rains means drier conditions and more bush fire. Farms are
destroyed.
Review questions:
1. What are some of the hazards associated to hydrometeorological
phenomena and how can you minimize the damages that they cause?
2. Hazard map is being used now to monitor natural hazard. How does it
help in mitigating the effects of natural hazard?
Coastal Processes
The shoreline is affected by waves (produced by wind at sea) and tides
(produced by the gravitational effect of the moon and sun).
Waves
Waves are caused by wind. Wave height in
the open ocean is determined by three
factors.
Wind speed. The greater the wind
speed, the larger the waves.
Wind duration. The greater the
duration of the wind (or storm) the
larger the waves.
Fetch. The greater the fetch (area
over which the wind is blowing - size of storm) the larger the waves.
TIDES
Tides result from the gravitational attraction of the sun and the Moon on the
oceans.
The four ways that waves and tides erode the coast are described below:
Hydraulic action. Air becomes trapped in joints and cracks in the cliff face.
When a wave breaks, the trapped air is compressed which weakens the cliff and
causes erosion.
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Abrasion. Bits of rock and sand in waves are flung against the cliff face. Over
time they grind down cliff surfaces like sandpaper.
Attrition. Waves smash rocks and pebbles on the shore into each other, and
they break and become smaller and smoother.
Solution. Weak acids contained in sea water will dissolve some types of rock
such as chalk or limestone.
CHAPTER TEST
Objectives:
1. To help instructors manage the presentation of biological information with
the goal of producing scientifically literate students
2. To help each student to acquire information according to his or her own
learning style
3. To help students relate this information to their own lives so as to understand
its importance and relevance
What is life?
Before we can address this question, we must first consider what qualifies
something as “living.” What is life? This is a difficult question to answer, largely because
life itself is not a simple concept. If you try to write a definition of “life,” you will find that it
is not an easy task, because of the loose manner in which the term is used. Imagine a
situation in which two astronauts encounter a large, amorphous blob on the surface of a
planet. How would they determine whether it is alive?
Movement. One of the first things the astronauts might do is observe the blob to see if it
moves. Most animals move about, but movement from one place to another in itself is
not diagnostic of life. Most plants and even some animals do not move about, while
numerous non-living objects, such as clouds, do move. The criterion of movement is
thus neither Necessary (possessed by all life) nor sufficient (possessed only by life.
Sensitivity. The astronauts might prod the blob to see if it responds. Almost all living
things respond to stimuli. Plants grow toward light, and animals retreat from fire. Not all
stimuli produce responses, however. Imagine kicking a redwood tree or singing to a
hibernating bear. This criterion, although superior to the first, is still inadequate to define
life.
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Death. The astronauts might attempt to kill the blob. All living things die, while inanimate
objects do not. Death is not easily distinguished from disorder, however; a car that
breaks down has not died because it was never alive. Death is simply the loss of life, so
this is a circular definition at best. Unless one can detect life, death is a meaningless
concept, and hence a very inadequate criterion for defining life.
Complexity. Finally, the astronauts might cut up the blob, to see if it is complexly
organized. All living things are complex. Even the simplest bacteria contain a bewildering
array of molecules, organized into many complex structures. However a computer is
also complex, but not alive. Complexity is a necessary criterion of life, but it is not
sufficient in itself to identify living things because many complex things are not alive. To
determine whether the blob is alive, the astronauts would have to learn more about it.
Probably the best thing they could do would be to examine it more carefully and
determine whether it resembles the organisms we are familiar with, and if so, how.
Sensitivity. All organisms respond to stimuli—though not always to the same stimuli in
the same ways.
Growth. All living things assimilate energy and use it to grow, a process called
metabolism. Plants, algae, and some bacteria use sunlight to create covalent carbon
bonds from CO2 and H2O through photosynthesis. This transfer of the energy in covalent
bonds is essential to all life on earth.
Reproduction. All living things reproduce, passing on traits from one generation to the
next. Although some organisms live for a very long time, no organism lives forever, as far
as we know. Because all organisms die, ongoing life is impossible without reproduction.
Regulation. All organisms have regulatory mechanisms that coordinate internal
processes.
Homeostasis. All living things maintain relatively constant internal conditions, different
from their environment.
Study Question :
If sensitivity is one of the fundamental properties of life , give three examples
of plants and explain how each demonstrate its sensitivity to stimuli.
Special Creation.
The theory of special creation, that a divine God created life is at the core of most
major religions. The oldest hypothesis about life’s origins, it is also the most widely
accepted. Far more Americans, for example, believe that God created life on earth than
believe in the other two hypotheses. Many take a more extreme position, accepting the
biblical account of life’s creation as factually correct. This viewpoint forms the basis for
the very unscientific “scientific creationism”.
Extraterrestrial Origin.
The theory of panspermia proposes that meteors or cosmic dust may have
carried significant amounts of complex organic molecules to earth, kicking off the
evolution of life. Hundreds of thousands of meteorites and comets are known to have
slammed into the early earth, and recent findings suggest that at least some may have
carried organic materials. Nor is life on other planets ruled out. For example, the
discovery of liquid water under the surface of Jupiter’s ice-shrouded moon Europa and
suggestions of fossils in rocks from Mars lend some credence to this idea. The
hypothesis that an early source of carbonaceous material is extraterrestrial is testable,
although it has not yet been proven. Indeed, NASA is planning to land on Europa, drill
through the surface, and send a probe down to see if there is life.
Spontaneous Origin.
Most scientists tentatively accept the theory of spontaneous origin, that life
evolved from inanimate matter. In this view, the force leading to life was selection. As
changes in molecules increased their stability and caused them to persist longer, these
molecules could initiate more and more complex associations, culminating in the
evolution of cells.
Study Question :
Among the theories of the origin of life, which theory do you think is the most
credible one? Explain your answer.
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One of the most important theories in biology is evolution. Ever since its
formulation in the mid-1800s by two English naturalists, Charles Darwin and Alfred
Russel Wallace, the theory of evolution has been supported by fossil finds, geological
studies, radioactive dating of rocks, genetics, molecular biology, biochemistry, and
breeding experiments.
Evolution is the unifying theory that explains the origin of diverse forms of life as
a result of changes in their genetic make-up. The theory of evolution states modern
organisms descended, with modification, from pre-existing life-forms. In the word of
biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky, “Nothing in biology makes sense, except in the light of
evolution.” Why don’t snakes have legs? Why are there dinosaur fossils but no living
dinosaurs? Why are monkeys so like us, not only in appearance, but also in the
structure of their genes and proteins? The answers to those questions, and thousands
more, lie in the process of evolution. Evolution is so vital to our understanding and
appreciations of biology that we must review its important principle before going further.
CHAPTER TEST
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
_______________1. According to this theory, modern organisms have descended from
pre-existing organisms and underwent modification through the
passing of years.
_______________2. the property of life to produce offspring
_______________3. the theory that states that all life forms on earth are created by a
divine being
_______________4. the theory that claims that all living things have originated from
non-living things
_______________5. According to this theory, life on earth has started from cosmic dust.
_______________6. It refers to the sum of all chemical reactions that occur in living
organisms.
_______________7. remains of dead plants and animals
_______________8. the theory that states that life forms on earth were transported from
other planets by the aliens
_______________9. the two scientist who made a study of evolution of organisms
_______________10.
CHAPTER 5: BIOENERGETICS
Objectives:
1. To understand how cell carry out functions in performing life activities
2. To explain how photosynthetic organisms use light energy to form energy-rich
compound
3. To describe how organisms obtain and utilize energy
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DISCOVERY OF THE CELL
The invention of the microscope help scientists to study what a living organisms
composed of. Even today the study of cells reveals more detail, and its secrets, which
are in fact the secrets of life itself, are revealed with ever increasing clarity.
Robert Hooke an English scientist was the first to observed cell and in doing so
he named them cells. He examined a slice of cork in a primitive microscope and he saw
tiny boxes, which he thoughts looked like a room and led to him calling them cell.
However what Hooke actually saw was the dead cell walls of plant cells (cork) as
it appeared under the microscope.
TYPE OF CELL
Living things vary in terms of the number of cells they have. Some living things
are multicellular. Others are unicellular. Two types of cells compose living things. In the
case of bacteria and cyanobacteria have prokaryotic cells. These cell lack distinct nuclei
and only have few organelles that are not membrane-bound. In contrast, eukaryotic cells
have distinct nuclei and contained several membrane-bound organelles. Animals, plants,
protists and fungi have eukaryotic cell. (See the illustration below for the comparison of
the two types of cells)
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PARTS AND FUNCTIONS OF A EUKARYOTIC CELL
The structures that make up a Eukaryotic cell are determined by the specific
functions carried out by the cell. Thus, there is no typical eukaryotic cell. Nevertheless,
eukaryotic cells generally have three main components: A cell membrane, a nucleus,
and a variety of other organelles.
THE NUCLEUS
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It is a membrane bound structure that contains
the cell's hereditary information and controls the
cell's growth and reproduction.
It is the command center of a eukaryotic cell and
is commonly the most prominent organelle in a
cell.
THE CYTOPLASM
Everything within the cell membrane which is not the
nucleus is known as the cytoplasm.
Organelles carry out specific functions within the cell. In Eukaryotic cells, most
organelles are surrounded by a membrane , but in prokaryotic cells
there are no membrane-bound organelles.
Study Questions:
1. What are the 3 main parts of the cell? Describe each.
2. Why is cell membrane called “permeable membrane”?
3 . What does it mean by hydrophilic and hydrophobic?
4. What is the main function of the nucleus?
5. Why do animals could not withstand long exposure under the sun without
water while plants can?
ORGANELLES FUNCTION
1. Cell wall Provides mechanical support and maintains cell shape in
plant cell. It prevents water loss in plants and protect from
over expansion by too much water.(Animals have no cell
wall)
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2. mitochondrion Provides energy for the cell in the form of ATP
3. vacuole Stores water, food and waste for the cells
4. Golgi Apparatus Sorts, packages and secretes cellular products
5. lysosomes The “suicide bag”. They digest excess or worn out
organelles, food particles, and engulfed viruses or
bacteria.
6. centrioles Formation of the spindle fiber during cell division
7. endoplasmic reticulum Translocation of materials within the cell and in and out of
the nucleus
8. chloroplastids Gives green color of plants
9. nuclear membrane Separates the nuclear contents from the contents of
cytoplasm
10. Nucleoplasm Synthesis of RNA and production of ribosomes
11. Ribosomes They use the RNA synthesized by the nucleolus in
making specific amino acid.
12. Cytoskeleton The cytoskeleton is responsible for cell shape, motility of
the cell as a whole, and motility of organelles within a
cell
13. Microbodies They contain enzymes that are essential in neutralizing
toxic materials that are product of cellular metabolism
Photoautotrophs. Aside from plants, these organisms use light energy to drive the synthesis of organic molecules from carbon
dioxide and (in most cases) water. They feed themselves and the entire living world. On land, plants are the predominant producers
of food. In aquatic environments, photoautotrophs include unicellular and multicellular algae, such as this kelp (a); some non-algal
unicellular eukaryotes, such as Euglena (b); the prokaryotes called cyanobacteria (c); and other photosynthetic prokaryotes, such as
these purple sulfur bacteria (d), which produce sulfur.
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On the other hands, heterotrophs obtain organic material by the second major
mode of nutrition. Unable to make their own food, they live on compounds produced by
other organisms, the autotrophs.
Chloroplasts: The sites of photosynthesis in plants. All green parts of a plant, including
green stems and unripened fruit, have chloroplasts, but the leaves are the major sites of
photosynthesis in most plants . There are about half a million chloroplasts in a chunk of
leaf with a top surface area of 1 mm 2. Chloroplasts are found mainly in the cells of the
mesophyll, the tissue in the interior of the leaf. Carbon dioxide enters the leaf, and
oxygen exits, by way of microscopic pores called stomata (singular, stoma; from the
Greek, meaning “mouth”). Water absorbed by the roots is delivered to the leaves in
veins. Leaves also use veins to export sugar to roots and other non-photosynthetic parts
of the plant.(singular, stoma; from the Greek, meaning “mouth”). Water absorbed by the
roots is delivered to the leaves in veins. Leaves also use veins to export sugar to roots
and other non-photosynthetic parts of the plant.
A chloroplast has an envelope of two membranes surrounding a dense fluid called the
stroma. Suspended within the stroma is a third membrane system, made up of sacs
called thylakoids, which segregates the stroma from the thylakoid space inside these
sacs. In some places, thylakoid sacs are stacked in columns called grana (singular,
granum).
Chlorophyll, the green pigment that gives leaves their color, resides in the thylakoid
membranes of the chloroplast.
It is the light energy absorbed by chlorophyll that drives the synthesis of organic
molecules in the chloroplast. Now that we have looked at the sites of photosynthesis in
plants, we are ready to look more closely
at the process of photosynthesis.
Photosynthesis in Leaf
leaf cross section Mesophyll cell chloroplast
Phase 1: Carbon fixation. The Calvin cycle incorporates each CO 2 molecule, one at a
time, by attaching it to a five-carbon sugar named ribulose bisphosphate(RuBP). The
enzyme that catalyzes this first step is RuBP carboxylase-oxygenase, or (rubisco) -
the most abundant protein in chloroplasts and is also thought to be the most abundant
protein on Earth. The product of the reaction is a six-carbon intermediate that is short-
lived because it is so energetically unstable that it immediately splits in half, forming two
molecules of 3-phosphoglycerate (for each CO2 fixed).
Study Questions:
1. What is photosynthesis? Where does it take place?
2. What is the by-product of photosynthesis?
3. What is the by-product of light dependent reactions? Calvin cycle?
4. What is the relationship between light dependent reactions and the Calvin
cycle?
5. What happen to the ATP and NADPH as it enters the Calvin cycle?
6. What do you call the 3-carbon sugar that is produced directly in Calvin Cycle?
Cellular processes are made possible by means of energy. Where does this
energy come from?
Whereas only photosynthetic cells can make sugar using photosynthesis .
All cells need to be able to break down sugars they take in from their environment and
turn it into energy to be used in cellular work. You have learned that ATP is the short
term energy currency of the cell that is generated by the mitochondria. The conversion of
long- term energy storage such as glucose into ATP is called respiration.
During cellular respiration, sugar is broken down to CO 2 and H2O, and in the
process, ATP is made that can then be used for cellular work.
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STAGES OF CELLULAR RESPIRATION
1. Glycolysis. Glycolysis is known as “splitting of sugar”.
One Glucose (C6H12O6) is broken down to 2
molecules of pyruvic acid, results in the production
of 2 ATPs for every glucose. It is an anaerobic
process - proceeds whether or not O2 is present.
Aerobic conditions produce pyruvate and anaerobic
conditions produce lactate as the end products of
glycolysis. At the end, the process yields a 2 pyruvate
molecule and 2ATP.
2. Krebs Cycle (Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle). Recall that
the pyruvate is the end product of glycolysis. Pyruvate
is transported to the mitochondrial matrix, where it is
broken down via Krebs Cycle. The pyruvate diffuses
down its concentration gradient into the mitochondria
until it reaches the mitochondrial matrix, where it is
used in cellular respiration. In the matrix, pyruvate
reacts with coenzyme A(CoA) forming CO2 and acetyl
CoA. When acetyl CoA enters the Krebs Cycle, CoA is released. One set of the
reactions in the cycle produces 3 NADH, 1 FADH 2, 2 CO2 and 1 ATP for each
acetyl CoA. Because each glucose molecule yields 2 pyruvates, the total energy
harvest per glucose molecule in the matrix is 2 ATP, 8 NADH and FADH2.
Anaerobic Respiration
Have you experienced muscle cramp? How does it happen? In aerobic
respiration, glucose is converted to ATP in a presence of oxygen. If you are climbing a
very steep hill. You start breathing harder to get oxygen. After a while, your breathing
rate and your heart rate reach their maximum. Yet even this maximum isn’t delivering
enough oxygen to your system. At that point, you switch over to anaerobic respiration.
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Anaerobic means without oxygen. In humans, what you’ll do is take glucose, and,
in many steps, break it down to two molecules of a three carbon molecule called lactic
acid. Lactic acid causes the muscle cramps.
Study Questions:
1. What is the end product of glycolysis?
2. What is the product of glycolysis that takes place in anaerobic condition?
3. Where does Krebs cycle take place? What is the end product of this stage?
4. How many ATP is produced in aerobic respiration?
5. What is the effect if pyruvic acid cannot proceed to Krebs cycle?
CHAPTER TEST:
Read each question carefully. Write the letter of the correct answer in the blank.
___1. Who discovered the cell?
a. Anton Van Leeuwenhoek c. Robert Brown
b. Christian de Duve d. Robert Hooke
___2. To what structure are digestive enzymes or hydrolytic enzymes associated?
a. Golgi apparatus c. ribosomes
b. Lysosomes d. smooth ER
___3. In a cell, where does protein synthesis take place?
a. Lysosomes c. nucleus
b. Mitochondria d. ribosomes
___4. What gives plant cell a box-like shape?
a. Cell wall c. nucleus
b. Chloroplasts d. vacuole
___5. Where does photosynthesis take place in plant cell?
a. Chloroplasts c. mitochondria
b. ER d. ribosomes
___6. What process takes place in the stroma?
a. Calvin cycle c. Light dependent reactions
b. ETS d. Kreb cycle
___7. Which of the following processes is not a part of Calvin Cycle?
a. Carbon fixation c. Glycolysis
b. Carbon reduction d. Regeneration of RuBP
___8. What generates most of the ATP in cellular respiration?
45
a. ETS b. Calvin Cycle c. Glycolysis d. Kreb cycle
___9. What is the net amount of ATP produce during cellular respiration?
a. 2 ATP b. 30 ATP c. 36 ATP d. 38 ATP
___10. How does photosynthesis and cellular respiration differ in terms ATP production?
a. Photosynthesis produces ATP with energy from light while cellular respiration
produces ATP with energy from glucose
b. Photosynthesis produces ATP with energy from glucose while cellular
respiration produces ATP with energy from light
c. Photosynthesis produces more ATP than cellular respiration
d. Photosynthesis produces ATP and water while cellular respiration produces
glucose only
Asexual reproduction
The type of reproduction where cells from only one parent are used, is called
asexual. Only genetically-identical organisms are produced by this type of reproduction.
Evolutionary asexual reproduction came before sexual reproduction.
Sporulation
Some types of mold reproduce through sporulation. They produce reproductive
cells - spores - that are stored in special spore cases until they are ready to be released.
After they are released they will develop into new, individual organisms. Bread mold
reproduces by sporulation.
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Budding
During budding, a new organism starts growing from the parent's body. At first it
looks like a bud. This bud later develops into a mature organism. Sometimes it stays
attached to the parent's body and sometimes it breaks off. Hydras reproduce by
budding.
Gemmules are special structures that are found in sea sponges. A parent sponge
releases gemmules that later develop into mature sponges.
Regeneration
In the process of regeneration, detached pieces of the parent's body can develop
into a new organism if this body part contains enough genetic information. Some flat
worms and starfish can reproduce by regeneration.
Sexual reproduction
During sexual reproduction, two gametes from both parents fuse, forming a
zygote. A zygote is also referred to as a fertilized egg. All gametes are haploid cells,
meaning they have only one set of chromosomes (1n). So, when gametes fuse, they
form a diploid organism: 1n+1n=2n.
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Types of fertilization
There are two main types of fertilization.
1. Internal fertilization
During internal fertilization, eggs are fertilized inside the female's body. Animals,
like reptiles and birds, lay eggs after fertilization. New offspring develop outside the
female's body. All eggs are covered by a protective shell. Mammal females, except
monotremes, develop a new embryo inside their body. This extra protection increases an
organism's chances of survival.
2. External fertilization
During external fertilization, the egg is fertilized outside the female's body. Male
and female gametes are released into these species' surroundings where they fuse,
forming a zygote. This type of fertilization usually occurs in water. Amphibians and fish
are examples of animals that reproduce in this way.
Hermaphrodites
Hermaphrodites are animals that have both female and male reproductive
organs.
Earthworms and leeches are hermaphrodites, but as they produce eggs and
sperm at different times, they need a mate to reproduce. Flatworms are hermaphrodites
that can self-fertilize.
Parthenogenesis
In some animal species, eggs can develop without fertilization in a process called
parthenogenesis. Some types of birds and bees can reproduce by parthenogenesis.
Plants:
A plants life cycle starts with a seed. When it receives the right amount of
sunlight, water, and air, it will begin to grow. The Seed sprouts, then grows into roots, a
stem, then develops leaves, flowers and more seeds. The sprouted seed which grows
down into the soil is called root. The part which grows to the surface
of the soil is the stem. Later, leaves begin to form from the stem,
and that seed is then called a ‘seedling’ as it can produce and
prepare food. Slowly and steadily it develops as a plant, sheds
seeds, and the cycle continues.
Animals:
Animals that give birth to babies and feed them with their
milk are called mammals. Examples are humans, cows, and dogs. Other animals lay
eggs and hatch them to reproduce new babies. Some insects lay eggs and the young
ones have to undergo the process of metamorphosis.
Fertilization: course, pollen must fuse with the egg to start fertilization, but how does
this process actually work? The process is known as pollination. This process is helped
by animals such as bees which carry pollen from all kinds of different flowers. As they
buzz around the bees drop some of the pollen on the stigma. Once the stigma feels the
pollen, the its way down these tubes and fuses with the eggs and then the flower starts
to pollinate and create a seed.
Types of Flowers:
There are many types of flowers all over the world and not all of them have both of
these reproductive organs in them. Some flowers have only one and therefore depend
on other animals in order to reproduce. These flowers are known as Imperfect flowers.
The flowers which have both of these organs are known as perfect flowers.
Review Questions :
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
______________1. part of the flower that produces the pollen
______________2. animals having both the male and female sex organs
______________3. a type of reproduction which uses only the cells from one
parent
______________4. flowers having both the reproductive organs
______________5. the fertilized egg of animals
DNA
Deoxyribonucleic acid or DNA is a genetic material which is stored in the
nucleus. The nucleus is a part of the eukaryotic cell and contains nucleic acids and it is
responsible in protein production. Small segments of DNA are called genes. Each gene
holds the instructions for how to produce a single protein.
DNA is usually a double-helix and has two strands
running in opposite directions.
DNA is the recipe for life. It is a molecule found in the nucleus
of every cell and is made up of 4 subunits called bases and
are represented by the letters A ( Adenine ), T ( Thymine), G
( Guanine ), and C ( Cytosine ). The order of these subunits in
the DNA strand holds a code of information for the cell. The
genetic language uses 4 letters to spell out the instructions for
how to make the proteins an organism will need to grow and live.
Pairing of Subunits
In the double-stranded DNA, the two strands run in opposite directions and the
bases pair up such that A always pairs with T and G always pairs with C. The A-T base-
pair has 2 hydrogen bonds and the G-C base-pair has 3 hydrogen bonds. The G-C
interaction is therefore stronger (by about
30%) than A-T, and A-T rich regions of
DNA are more prone to thermal
fluctuations.
The smaller base is always paired
with a bigger one. The effect of this is to
keep the two chains at a fixed distance
from each other all the way along. These particular pairs fit exactly to form very effective
hydrogen bonds with each other. It is these hydrogen bonds which hold the two chains
together.
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The backbone of DNA is based on a repeated pattern of a sugar group and a
phosphate group. The full name of DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid, gives the name of the
sugar present - deoxyribose.
Deoxyribose is a modified form of another sugar called ribose. Ribose is the
sugar in the backbone of RNA, ribonucleic acid.
Each of the four corners where there isn't an atom shown has a carbon atom in
the ring.
Deoxyribose, as the name might suggest, is ribose which
has lost an oxygen atom - "de-oxy".
simplified
nucleotide diagram of
nucleotide
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These bases attach in place of the –OH group on the 1’ carbon atom in the sugar
ring. The nitrogen and hydrogen atoms ( in blue ) on each molecule show where these
molecules join on to the deoxyribose. In each case, the hydrogen is lost together with
the -OH group on the 1' carbon atom of the sugar. This is a condensation reaction - two
molecules joining together with the loss of a small one (not necessarily water).
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How is genetic engineering done?
Genetic engineering, also called transformation, works by physically removing a
gene from one organism and inserting it into another, giving it the ability to express the
trait encoded by that gene.
The process of genetic engineering requires the successful completion of five
steps :
Step 1 : DNA Extraction
DNA is extracted from the desired organism. A sample of an
organism containing the gene of interest is taken through a series of
steps to remove the DNA.
Exercise :
Write the sequence of bases on a strand of DNA that is complementary to
the following DNA strand :
CATGCCTAAGCCAT
What is a GMO?
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GMOs, or genetically modified organisms, are organisms whose genetic material
has been altered using genetic engineering. Genetic engineering is the modification of
an organism's phenotype by altering its genetic make-up. Genetic engineering is
primarily performed by simple mating or gene recombination. GMOs range from
microorganisms like yeast and bacteria to insects, plants, fish and mammals. Genetically
modified crops (GM crops) are those engineered to introduce a new trait into the
species. Purposes of GM crops generally include resistance to certain pests, diseases,
or environmental conditions, or resistance to chemical treatments (e.g. resistance to a
herbicide). Other purpose of genetic modification of crops is to enhance its nutritional
value, as seen in the case of golden rice.
The use of GM crops is widely debated. At the moment there is no known harm
in consuming genetically modified foods. GM foods are developed – and marketed –
because there is some perceived advantage either to the producer or consumer of these
foods. This is meant to translate into a product with a lower price, greater benefit (in
terms of durability or nutritional value) or both.
Issue on GMOs
Those who are pro-GMO claim that GMOs are not only safe for us and the
environment, but also potentially, a very beneficial development. Those who are anti-
GMO argue that the risk of negative consequences to our environment is high and very
difficult to predict. It is important to determine the magnitude of potential damage to our
environment due to the spread of GMO genes into wild plants and microbes. GM crops
can cause short and long term effects on the environment.
CHAPTER TEST
I. True or False. Write T if the statement is correct and F if it is not.
_____1. Animals perform asexual reproduction.
_____2. The pistil is the plant’s female reproductive organ.
_____3. Adenine always pairs with guanine.
_____4. DNA and RNA are examples of nucleic acids.
_____5. The genetic language uses 3 letters .
_____6. Gene cloning is the second phase of genetic engineering process
_____7. A DNA consists of 4 strands.
_____8. All flowers have both the reproductive organs.
_____9. Wind can be a medium of cross-pollination in flowers.
_____10.In a DNA strand, there is no particular ruling in pairing the bases.
Objectives :
1. To define metabolism
2. To differentiate between catabolism and anabolism
3. To explain the different metabolic processes involved in the various organ
systems
Metabolism
Metabolism is from the Greek word metabolē , meaning "change" It is a set
of life-sustaining chemical trans- formations within the cells of living organisms. The
three main purposes of metabolism are the conversion of food/fuel to energy to run
cellular processes, the conversion of food/fuel to building blocks for proteins,
lipids, nucleic acids, and some carbohydrates, and the elimination of nitrogenous
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wastes. These enzyme-catalyzed reactions allow organisms to grow and reproduce,
maintain their structures, and respond to their environments.
The word metabolism can also refer to the sum of all chemical reactions that
occur in living organisms, including digestion and the transport of substances into and
between different cells, in which case the set of reactions within the cells is
called intermediary metabolism.
Metabolism is usually divided into two categories :
a). catabolism - the breaking down of organic matter by way of cellular respiration
b). anabolism - the building up of components of cells such as proteins and
nucleic acids.
Metabolic Processes
Metabolic processes are sequences of biochemical reactions that take place
within living cells to maintain life.
They can be divided into two main types :
A. Catabolic processes involve the breakdown of complex molecules from food
into smaller units that can be used as building blocks for new molecules or to
provide energy
B. Anabolic processes involve the use of energy to build new chemicals that
become components of cells. These reactions are made possible by a number
of organic catalysts known as enzymes.
Together, the two types of metabolic processes allow the transformation of the
raw materials, or nutrients, that are taken in by an organism into tissue. One compound,
common to all cellular life, is essential to these trans- formations. Adenosine triphos-
phate (ATP) is used to store energy obtained from nutrients, such as carbohydrates, and
to release energy when it is required for the building of new molecules.
Catabolic Processes
Some organisms, such as green plants, make their own food from inorganic
materials, while others, such as animals, consume organic materials to obtain their
nutrition. The food consumed by animals can be broken down into three main types —
carbohydrates, lipids (fats and oils), and proteins. Digestion involves catabolic processes
that break these down into simpler components. For example, relatively complex
carbohydrates, such as polysaccharides and disaccharides are broken down
into glucose, and proteins are broken down into amino acids. These simpler compounds
may be used by anabolic processes to build new materials, or they may be further
broken down to provide energy.
Cellular respiration is the process by which the carbohydrate glucose (C 6H12O6)
is broken down into carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O), producing energy that is
stored in ATP. The procedure involves oxidation, and where there is atmospheric
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oxygen available it is used in what is known as aerobic respiration. This is the process
that takes place in animals, plants and some microorganisms.
In conditions where no free oxygen is present, anaerobic respiration takes
place. This is found only in certain microorganisms that live in soil, decaying organic
matter, under the sea, deep underground, and in the intestines of animals. These
organisms use alternatives such as nitrates, sulfates, fumarate, and even sulfur in place
of free oxygen. Anaerobic respiration is much less efficient than the aerobic process, and
produces much less ATP .
In animals, lipids are also oxidized to carbon dioxide and water, but the first few
steps are different. The chemistry of organisms takes place in a water-based envi-
ronment, but fats and oils do not mix with water. The first step is to emulsify these
substances, which means converting them into a form that will mix with water, in the
same way that detergents can help clean up oil spills. This is done by soap-like
substances contained in bile released by the gall bladder into the small intestine. The
lipids are then broken down into fatty acids and glycerol, which can be absorbed through
the intestines, and which can then undergo oxidation reactions similar to those
performed on carbohydrates.
Proteins are very large, complex molecules, made up of building blocks known
as amino acids. They are metabolized by various reactions that split them up into their
amino acids, which can be absorbed, and then used within cells. Generally, proteins are
not used to provide energy, but instead the amino acids are utilized to manufacture new
proteins to build tissue and muscle. In cases where no carbohydrate or fat is available in
the diet, and the body has used up its fat reserves, proteins may be used to generate
energy, by oxidation of their amino acids. In these cases, the body may start breaking
down muscle proteins.
Anabolic Processes
Also known as biosynthesis, these are reactions that use up the energy stored in
ATP by catabolic processes. They include the building of proteins from amino acids and
the construction of DNA from nucleotides. In animals, the muscle contractions that
power movement can also be included, as these require the use of stored energy. In
plants, the synthesis of glucose from carbon dioxide and water through photosynthesis is
another anabolic pathway.
Exercise :
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
_______________1. a type of metabolism that consumed energy
_______________2. a monosaccharide produced by plants in the process
known as photosynthesis
_______________3. a type of respiration that does not require oxygen in its
chemical reaction
_______________4. also known as cellular respiration
_______________5. It is where the energy is stored during respiration or break
down of food.
Objectives:
1. To give the importance of gas exchange
2. To describe how some animals exchange respiratory gases
Gas exchange
Gas exchange is the process by which oxygen and carbon dioxide (the
respiratory gases) move in opposite directions across an organism's respiratory
membranes, between the air or water of the external environment and the body fluids of
the internal environment. Oxygen is needed by cells to extract energy from organic
molecules, such as sugars, fatty acids, and amino acids. Carbon dioxide is produced in
the process and must be disposed.
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oxygen diffuses inward. The concentration gradient for carbon dioxide is in the opposite
direction, and so net diffusion of carbon dioxide keeps it diffusing out of the body.
The solubility of the respiratory gases in water is low, and the solubility of oxygen
is only about one-twentieth that of carbon dioxide. Special transport molecules within
body fluids increase the oxygen content by holding oxygen molecules within circulating
fluids. These molecules are called respiratory pigments and include hemoglobin , which
is red, and hemocyanin, which is blue. These molecules combine with oxygen at the
respiratory membrane, where oxygen concentrations are relatively high and easily
release the oxygen in deeper tissues, which are low in oxygen.
Filaments of a salmon's gills. In fish, water Gills are respiratory organs that absorb oxygen from water
is pumped across gills to enable gas exchange as it flows over the gill surface
Animals with small bodies exchange respiratory gases sufficiently through the
body surface without specialized respiratory membranes. Even some vertebrates, such
as small, slender salamanders, exchange respiratory gases solely across the skin, which
is richly supplied with blood vessels. Larger animals require an extended surface for gas
exchange. For most fish, many aquatic invertebrates, and some terrestrial invertebrates
the specialized respiratory organs are the gills. In crustaceans, gills are often found
where the legs attach to the body; moving the legs sweeps water across the gill
surfaces. In fish and some mollusks, gills are ventilated by muscular contractions that
pump water across the respiratory surface.
Terrestrial animals must protect their respiratory membranes from drying out.
Many spiders have book lungs, which are specialized, leaf-shaped, inward folds of the
cuticle, surrounded by an air chamber that can be ventilated with muscular contractions.
In larger terrestrial insects, the respiratory organs are inward, branching, tubular
extensions of the body wall called tracheae. The system is so extensive that most cells
are in close proximity to a tracheal branch and the tissues do not depend on blood
circulation for gas transport.
Terrestrial vertebrates generally have lungs. Endotherms, such as birds and
mammals, have a high metabolic rate and a correspondingly high respiratory surface
area. Birds have one-way flow through their lungs, enabled by a complex system of air-
storing sacs.
Mammals, reptiles, and amphibians have saclike lungs with tidal (two way) air
flow. This results in residual air remaining in the lungs, reducing the concentration of
available oxygen in comparison to bird lungs. Reptile lungs have fewer air sacs and less
respiratory surface area than mammals, and amphibian lungs have less surface area
than reptilian lungs.
Review Questions::
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
_______________1. the 2 respiratory 60
gases
_______________2.
_______________3. the gas that must be eliminated from the animal’s body
_______________4. the respiratory organ of fish that absorbs oxygen
_______________5. the spreading of gas molecules
Lesson 7.3: CIRCULATION - THE INTERNAL TRANSPORT SYSTEM
Objectives:
1. To differentiate between cardiovascular system and
lymphatic system
2. To identify the components of blood
3. To describe the functions of the major components
of the circulatory system
Circulatory System
The circulatory system, also called the cardiovascular system or the vascular
system, is an organ system that permits blood to circulate and transport nutrients (such
as amino acids and electrolytes), oxygen, carbon dioxide, hormones, and blood cells to
and from the cells in the body to provide nourishment and help in fighting diseases,
stabilize temperature and pH, and maintain homeostasis.
2. Blood Vessels
a. Veins - take blood back toward your heart
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b. Arteries - take oxygen-rich blood away from the heart
c. Capillaries - are very tiny blood vessels that form a connection
between arteries and veins; facilitate the transfer of oxygen, nutrients
and wastes in and out of the body
Exercise :
True or False. Write T if the statement is correct and F if it is not.
_______1. It is the vein that takes away oxygenated blood away from the heart.
_______2. The red blood cells defend the body from harmful organisms.
_______3. The most dominant part of the blood is the platelets.
_______4. The human circulatory system is a closed circulatory system.
_______5. Veins are bigger than capillaries.
Objectives :
1. To describe homeostasis
2. To give examples of homeostasis
3. To give the importance of homeostasis
What is homeostasis ?
Homeostasis is the property of a system in which variables are regulated so that
internal conditions remain stable and relatively constant. Examples of homeostasis
include the regulation of temperature and the balance between acidity
and alkalinity (pH), water levels, presence of waste, salt and other electrolytes, and
metabolism.
Human homeostasis is the process that maintains the stability of the human
body's internal environment in response to changes in external conditions.
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5. Volume and pressure of extracellular fluid
Temperature
Temperature is a very delicate example of homeostasis, especially for warm-
blooded animals like humans. Warm-blooded animals need an almost constant body
temperature. Heat is produced by the liver and muscle contractions, and is a product of
metabolizing food. The human body has lots of mechanisms to cool down and heat up.
When one feels unusually cold or hot, his internal body temperature hasn't changed
much at all - it's just that his body is panicking and trying to cool him off or heat him up. If
he get too hot, bodily processes will start working and he will die, so the system is highly
sensitive to any changes.
o Most aquatic invertebrates that live in salt water are osmoconformers, but
most fish are osmoregulators; marine and freshwater fish face different
problems in maintaining a salt/water balance.
o Animals that live on land must find fresh water to drink and risk water loss
by evaporation.
Salts are lost in the sweat of mammals which is essential for cooling the body.
Osmoregulation
Osmoregulation is the active regulation of the osmotic pressure of an organism's
body fluids to maintain the homeostasis of the organism's water content; that is, it
maintains the fluid balance and the concentration of electrolytes (salts in solution) to
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keep the fluids from becoming too diluted or too concentrated. Osmotic pressure is a
measure of the tendency of water to move into one solution from another by osmosis.
The higher the osmotic pressure of a solution, the more water tends to move into it.
Pressure must be exerted on the hypertonic side of a selectively permeable membrane
to prevent diffusion of water by osmosis from the side containing pure water.
Kidneys play a very large role in animal osmoregulation by regulating the amount
of water reabsorbed from glomerular filtrate in kidney tubules, which is controlled by
hormones such as antidiuretic hormone (ADH), aldosterone, and angiotensin II.
Therefore, a large proportion of water is reabsorbed from fluid to prevent a fair
proportion of water from being excreted.
Exercise :
True or False.
_____1. Filtered sea water can be used to replenish lost water in the body.
_____2. Kidney helps in the removal of toxic waste substance from the human body
_____3. Drinks, like Gatorade can restore salts during heavy exercise.
_____4. Salt is necessary to maintain the water content in the human body.
_____5. A change in the internal state of the human body can be fatal.
Objectives:
1. To describe the role of white blood cells in the body system
2. To name the components of the immune system
IMMUNE SYSTEM
The immune system is a complex network of organs containing cells that
recognize foreign substances in the body and destroy them. It protects vertebrates
against pathogens, or infectious agents, such as viruses, bacteria, fungi, and other
parasites. The human immune system is the most complex.
Leukocytes come in two basic types that combine to seek out and destroy
disease-causing organisms or substances.
B. Passive immunity - is "borrowed" from another source and it lasts for a short
time. For example, antibodies in a mother's breast milk give a baby
temporary immunity to diseases the mother has been exposed to.
This can help protect the baby against infection during the early
years of childhood.
Exercise :
Identify the word being described below.
________________1. It is the body's defense against infectious organisms and
other invaders.
________________2. It is the antibody present in mother’s milk.
________________3. They are also known as leucocytes.
________________4. immunity that is only temporary
________________5. leukocytes that engulf or eat pathogens
Objectives :
1. To describe the functions of neuron and glial cells
2. To identify the parts of the human nervous system
Nervous system
The nervous system is the part of an animal's body that coordinates its voluntary
and involuntary actions and transmits signals to and from different parts of its body.
Animals with a defined head possess a two-part nervous system:
1. the central nervous system (CNS) consists of the animal's brain and spinal
cord
2 the peripheral nervous system (PNS) consists of all the nerves that travel from
the CNS to the rest of the animal's body
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them to send signals rapidly and precisely to other cells. They send these signals in
the form of electrochemical waves travelling along thin fibers called axons, which
cause chemicals called neuro-transmitters to be released at junctions called synapses. A
cell that receives a synaptic signal from a neuron may be excited, inhibited, or otherwise
modulated. The connections between neurons can form neural circuits and also neural
networks that generate an organism's perception of the world and determine its
behavior.
Along with neurons, the nervous system
contains other specialized cells called glial cells
which provide structural and metabolic support.
Among the most important functions of glial cells
are to support neurons and hold them in place; to
supply nutrients to neurons; to insulate neurons
electrically; to destroy pathogens and remove dead
neurons; and to provide guidance cues directing the
axons of neurons to their targets.Glial cells are the
most abundant cell types in the central nervous system. Types of glial cells include
oligodendrocytes, astrocytes, ependymal cells, Schwann cells, microglia, and satellite
cells.
Exercise :
Fill in the blank with the correct answer.
1. Among the nervous system cells, ____________ cells are the most abundant .
2. The central nervous system consists the __________ and the ____________.
3. Signals are send to the other cells by _________________________________.
4. Neuron cells are hold in their position67
by ______________________________.
5. The peripheral nervous system is made up of ___________________________.
Lesson 7.7 : BODY IN MOTION
Objectives :
1. To describe the functional relationship of the muscular and skeletal system
2. To be familiarized with the parts of the muscular and skeletal system
Muscular System
The muscular system is an organ system consisting of skeletal, smooth and
cardiac muscles. It permits movement of the body, maintains posture, and circulates
blood throughout the body. The muscular system in vertebrates is controlled through the
nervous system, although some muscles (such as the cardiac muscle) can be
completely autonomous. Together with the skeletal system it forms the musculoskeletal
system, which is responsible for movement of the human body.
Muscles
Muscle tissues are formed from specialized
cells called muscle fibers that joined together to
constitute the muscular system. These tissues are
tough and elastic and their predominant function is
contractibility. Muscles, attached to the bones or
internal organs and blood vessels, are responsible for
movement. Nearly all movement in the body is the
result of muscle contraction. Muscles could either be
voluntary or involuntary. Involuntary muscles ( non-
striated )are muscles that cannot be controlled by the
conscious thought of the organism while voluntary muscles ( striated muscles )can be.
Examples of non-striated muscles are the heart and the smooth muscles. Hand
and leg muscles are striated muscles.
There are approximately 639 skeletal muscles in the human body.
Importance of muscles
Muscles provide strength, balance, posture, movement and heat for the body to
keep warm. The integrated action of joints, bones, and skeletal muscles produces
obvious movements such as walking and running. Skeletal muscles also produce more
subtle movements that result in various facial expressions, eye movements, and
respiration.
Three types of muscles :
A. Smooth muscle
- found lining the walls of blood vessels, visceral organs (such as the digestive
tract and uterus) and are also found attached to hairs in the integument
B. Cardiac muscle
- are found solely in the musculature of the heart wall
- cardiac muscle does not fatigue readily, which is a desirable trait in the muscles
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that maintain circulation of blood
C. Skeletal muscle
- skeletal muscles are closely associated with the skeleton and are used in
locomotion
- fibers are closely associated with connective tissues and are under voluntary
control by the nervous system
- there are approximately 639 skeletal muscles in the human body
Skeletal System
Skeletal system is the system of bones, associated cartilages and joints of
human body. Together these structures form the human skeleton. Skeleton can be
defined as the hard framework of human body around which the entire body is built.
Almost all the hard parts of human body are components of human skeletal system.
Joints are very important because they make the hard and rigid skeleton allow different
types of movements at different locations.
4. PRODUCTION OF RED BLOOD CELLS: Bones like the sternum, and heads of
tibia have hemopoeitic activity (blood cells production). These are the sites of
production of new blood cells.
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Lower Limbs - includes bones of the legs and feet
Parts of the
Skeleton
Parts of the
Skull
Skeleton Components
The skeleton is composed of fibrous and mineralized connective tissues that give it
firmness and flexibility. It consists of the following :
1. Bone - a type of mineralized connective tissue that contains collagen and calcium
phosphate, a mineral crystal. Calcium phosphate gives bone its firmness.
Bone tissue may be compact or spongy. Bones provide support and
protection for body organs.
2. Cartilage - a form of fibrous connective tissue that is composed of closely packed
collagenous fibers in a rubbery gelatinous substance called chondrin.
Cartilage provides flexible support for certain structures in adult humans
including the nose, trachea, and ears.
3. Tendon - a fibrous band of connective tissue that is bonded to bone and connects
bone to bone.
4. Ligament - a fibrous band of connective tissue that joins bones and other connective
tissues together at joints.
5. Joint - a site where two or more bones or other skeletal components are joined
together.
Animal locomotion and its importance
Locomotion is any of a variety of movements or methods that animals use to
move from one place to another. Some modes of locomotion are self-propelled, e.g.,
running, swimming, and flying. There are also many animal species that depend on their
environment for transportation, a type of mobility called passive locomotion, e.g., rolling
(some beetles).
Animals move to find food, a mate, a suitable habitat, to escape predators and
for survival.
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Different media for locomotion
Animals move through four types of environment : aquatic (in or on water ) ,
terrestrial (on ground or other surface), fossorial (underground), and aerial (in the air).
CHAPTER TEST:
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
Objectives :
1. To identify the parts of a plant
2. To describe the function of the different plant organs
Tissues are organized together to form organs (two or more tissues performing
specific functions)
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o Example: Leaves, stamens
D. Sclerenchyma – the walls of these cells are very thick and built
up in a uniform layer around the entire margin of the cell. Often,
the cells dies after its all wall was fully formed. Sclerenchyma
cells give mechanical support to other cells types.
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Longitudinal section Vascular bundle showing
(companion cell and sieve tube) the xylem and the phloem
Shoot system
A. Vegetative part
1. Leaf – is an organ of a vascular plant and is the principal lateral appendage of the
stem . The plant leaf is an organ whose shape promotes efficient gathering of light for
photosynthesis. The form of the leaf must also be balanced against the fact that most
of the loss of water a plant might suffer is going to occur at its leaves (transpiration).
Leaves are extremely variable in terms of their size, shape, and adornments (such as
small hairs on the face of the leaf). Although the leaves of most plants carry out the
same basic functions, there is nonetheless an amazing variety of leaf sizes, shapes,
margin types, forms of attachment, ornamentation , and color.
Parts of a leaf : midrib
a. apex – the tip of the blade
b. margin – the surrounding edge of the blade
c. vein – the slender structure branching from the midrib
d. base – the lower part of the blade where midrib starts
e. petiole – the stalk which attaches the blade to the stem
f. stipule – leaf-like structure arising from the lower part of the petiole
g. midrib - the slender structure dividing the blade into right half and left half
2. Stem – is the part of the plant that holds up other structures such as the leaves and
flowers. It conducts water and food substances through the xylem and phloem.
(cross-section of stem)
Internal Features of Stem
Apical meristem – Tissues at the tip of a stem capable of cell division, gives rise to
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stem elongation.
Epidermis – Outer layer of wax-coated cells that provides protection and covering.
Cortex – Primary tissues of a stem externally bound by the epidermis and internally by
the phloem.
Vascular bundle :
Xylem tissues – Distribute water and minerals from the roots up through the plant.
Xylem provides the structural support in plants, becoming the
“woody ” tissue.
Cambium tissues are the single-celled layer of meristematic (dividing) tissues that
continually divides to form phloem tissues toward the outside and
xylem tissues toward the inside. Cell division of the cambium tissue
adds width to the stem.
Phloem tissues (inner bark) – distribute sugars ( pro-
ducts of photosynthesis ) throughout
the plant. It is important to understand
what happens when the phloem is
blocked, as when a tree is girdled with
a tie or rope. The stem often enlarges
just above the blockage due to the
sugars moving down from the leaves
cross-section of stem
for distribution throughout the plant. Tissues
below the blockage slowly starve. Roots die
back, eventually leading to death of the plant.
Pith – Center of dicot plant stems. In some plants the pith breaks down forming a hollow
stem. In older woody plants, the pith is filled with rigid xylem wood fiber.
Monocot or Dicot
Monocot and dicot stems differ in the arrangement of
their vascular system. In monocot stems, the xylem and
phloem are paired in bundles, with bundles dispersed
throughout the stem. Monocot and dicot stems differ in the
arrangement of their vascular system . In monocot stems, the
xylem and phloem are paired in bundles, with bundles monocot stem
dispersed throughout the stem. cross-section
In woody dicot plants, the rings grow to make a complete ring around the stem.
Xylem growth makes the “annual rings” used to tell a tree’s age. In woody dicot plants,
water and mineral movement occurs in the more recent years of xylem rings. Drought
reduces the size of the annual rings ( size of xylem tubes ) and thus the potential for
water and nutrient movement. Multi-year droughts, with their corresponding reduction in
xylem size , have long-term impacts on plant growth potential.
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Left: herbaceous/ Right: woody
75
Node and Internode Terminal bud scars or annual
growth rings
Bud type
The type of bud is also used in plant identification.
Modified Stems:
Tuberous stem – Short, flattened, modified storage stem (tuberous begonias, dahlias).
Unlike tubers, which have buds scattered all over, tuberous stems only have
leaf buds on the "up" end.
B. Reproductive part
1. Flower- is the reproductive organ of plants classified as angiosperms. All plants have
the means and corresponding structures for reproducing sexually. The basic function of
a flower is to produce seeds through sexual reproduction. Seeds are the next
generation, and serve as the primary method in most plants by which individuals of the
species are dispersed across the landscape.
Structure of a Flower :
Pistil – Central female organ of the flower. It is generally
bowling-pin shaped and located in the center of
of the flower.
Stigma – receives pollen, typically flattened and sticky
Style – connective tissues between stigma and ovary
Ovary – contains ovules or embryo sacs
Ovules – unfertilized, immature seeds
Stamen – male flower organ
Anthers – pollen-producing organs
Filament – stalk supporting anthers
Petals – Usually colorful modified leaves that make up the “flower”, collectively called
the corolla. They may contain perfume and nectar glands.
Sepals – Protective leaf-like enclosures for the flower buds, usually green, collectively
called calyx. Sometimes highly colored like the petal as in iris.
Receptacle – base of the flower
Pedicel – flower stalk of an individual flower
2. Fruit. Fruit evolves from the maturing ovary following pollination and fertilization.
Fruits can be either fleshy or dry. They contain one or more seeds. It is the structural part
that typically surrounds the seed which contains the germ of life of the next generation.
Fruit is the actual agent of dispersal in most flowering plants.
Fruit Structure
Fruit consists of carpels where the ovules (seeds) develop and the ovary wall or
pericarp, which may be fleshy (as in apples) or dry and hard (as in an acorn). Some
fruits have seeds (mature ovules) enclosed within the ovary (apples, peaches, oranges,
squash and cucumbers). The peel of an orange, the pea pod, the sunflower shell, and
the skin flesh and pit of a peach are all derived from the pericarp.
Other fruit have seeds that are situated on the periphery of the pericarp (corncob,
strawberry flesh).
In apples, the ovary wall becomes the fleshy part of the fruit. Notice the small fruit
structure in the blossom.
Fruit Types :
Fruits are classified according to the arrangement from which they derive. There
are four types — simple, aggregate, multiple, and accessory fruits. Simple fruits develop
from a single ovary of a single flower and may be fleshy or dry. Principal fleshy fruit
types are the berry, in which the entire pericarp is soft and pulpy (e.g., the grape, tomato,
banana, hesperidium, and blueberry) and the drupe, in which the outer layers may be
pulpy, fibrous, or leathery and the endocarp hardens into a pit or stone enclosing one or
more seeds (e.g., the peach, cherry, olive, coconut, and walnut). An aggregate fruit (e.g.,
blackberry and raspberry) consists of a mass of small drupes (drupelets), each of which
developed from a separate ovary of a single flower. A multiple fruit (e.g., pineapple and
mulberry) develops from the ovaries of many flowers growing in a cluster. Accessory
fruits contain tissue derived from plant parts other than the ovary; the strawberry is
actually a number of tiny achenes (miscalled seeds) outside a central pulpy pith that is
the enlarged receptacle or base of the flower. The core of the pineapple is also
receptacle (stem) tissue. The best-known accessory fruit is the pome (e.g., apple and
pear), in which the fleshy edible portion is swollen stem tissue and the true fruit is the
central core.
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Bud development – On temperate-zone woody plants, buds typically develop mid-
summer of the previous year. An exception is on summer flowering shrubs, where the
buds develop on the current season’s wood.
Pollination – Transfer of pollen from the male flower to the stigma of the female flower.
Fertilization – Union of the pollen grain from the male flower with the egg cell in the
female flower.
Seed
A seed (mature ovule) is a miniature plant with a protective cover in a suspended
state of development. Most seeds contain a built-in food supply called endosperm
(orchid is an exception). The endosperm can be made up of proteins, carbohydrates or
fats.
Seed Structure
Seeds of monocots and dicots differ in structure and method of emergence.
Root System
The roots are the beginning of the vascular system pipeline that moves water
and minerals from the soil up to the leaves and fruits. Roots anchor and support plants.
To function, roots must have adequate levels of soil oxygen. Soil compaction or
waterlogged soil reduces soil oxygen levels, kills roots and lead to a shallow root
system.
Root Structure :
Epidermis – The outer layer of cells
Root hairs – Absorptive unicellular extensions of epidermal cells of a
root. These tiny, hair-like structures function as the major site of
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water and mineral uptake. Root hairs are extremely delicate and
subject to desiccation. Root hairs are easily destroyed in
transplanting.
Cortex – Primary tissues of a root bound on the outside by the
epidermis and on the inside by the endodermis. In a carrot, the cortex becomes a
storage organ.
Endodermis – A single layer of cells in a root that separates the cortex tissues from the
pericycle.
Pericycle – A layer of cells immediately inside the endodermis. Branch roots arise from
the pericycle.
Vascular system :
Phloem tissue conducts products of photosynthesis from leaves throughout plant
including down the roots.
Xylem tissue conducts water and minerals up from the roots up through the plant.
Zone of Maturation - Pipeline section of the roots, conducting water and nutrients from
the root hairs up to the stems.
Zone of elongation –Area where new cells are enlarging.
Meristematic zone :
Root tip meristem – Region of cell division that supports root elongation, found at the
root tips just behind the root cap.
Root cap – A thimble-shaped group of thick-walled cells at the root tip serves as a “hard
hat” to push though soil. The root cap protects the tender meristem tissues.
Types of Roots :
Fibrous – Profusely branched roots that occupy a large volume of shallow soil around a
plant's base (petunias, beans, peas).
Taproot – Main, downward- growing root with limited branching, where soils permit
(carrots, beets, radishes).
Combination –In nursery production the taproot of young plants (like oaks) is cut,
forcing a fibrous growth pattern. This has a significant impact on the plant’s ability to
survive transplanting.
Adventitious roots - arise at an unexpected place. For example, the brace roots on
corn and the short whitish bumps along a tomato stem are adventitious roots.
Aerial roots - arise from above-ground stem tissues. Aerial roots support the vine on
English ivy and poison ivy.
Lateral root – Side root
Sinker roots - make a sharp dive into deeper soils, following soil cracks where oxygen
is available. Sinker roots are common on some tree species.
Storage or Tuberous root – Enlarged roots that serve as storage organs. (Canadian
thistle, morning glory, sweet potato, dahlia).
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Exercise :
Identify the word that is being described by the given statement.
_______________1. the part of the plant that makes food
_______________2. It is the colorful part of the plant that attracts bees and other
insects.
_______________3. conducts water and dissolved minerals from the roots to all
other parts of the plants
_______________4. It is the actual agent of dispersal in most flowering plants.
_______________5. the hard protective covering of the seed
Objectives:
1. To describe the difference between photosynthesis, respiration, and
transpiration
2. To differentiate light reaction from dark reaction
3. To identify the factors needed in food production by plants
Major plant functions that are the basics for plant growth and development are
photosynthesis, respiration, and transpiration.
Photosynthesis
One of the major differences between plants and animals on earth is the ability of
plants to internally manufacture their own food. To produce food for itself a plant requires
energy from sunlight, carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil. If any of these
ingredients is lacking, photosynthesis, or food production, will stop. If any factor is
removed for a long period of time, the plant will die. Photosynthesis literally means "to
put together with light."
Any green plant tissue is capable of photosynthesis. Chloroplasts in these cells
contain the green pigment called chlorophyll which traps the light energy. However
leaves are generally the site of most food production due to their special structure.
The internal tissue (mesophyll l) contains cells with
abundant chloroplasts in an arrangement that
allows easy movement of water and air. The
protective upper and lower epidermis (skin) layers of
the leaf include many stomata that are openings in
the leaf formed by two specialized guard cells on
either side. Guard cells regulate movement of the
gases, (i.e. CO2 into and O2 and H2O out of the leaf),
involved in photosynthesis. The lower epidermis of
the leaf normally contains the largest percentage of
stomata.
Photosynthesis is the process of turning the energy of sunlight into chemical
energy from the raw products of CO 2 and H2O. This process is necessary to sustain
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nearly all forms of life. Photosynthesis is divided in to two separate reactions known as
the light and dark reactions.
light
Carbon Dioxide + Water Sugar + Oxygen
light
6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2
(Photosynthesis Reaction)
Light Reaction
Light reaction takes place when light is present but the dark reaction does not
require light. The whole process is begun by light reacting with pigments in the leaf
causing the splitting of water molecules. This is called photolysis or the Hill Reaction
which is not completely understood. Three products are produced in this reaction.
Electrons from the hydrogen molecules and remaining H + ions are used to form two
separate energy storage molecules. The air we breathe is from the remaining oxygen
portion of H2O. The carbon dioxide molecules are transformed into sugars during the
dark reaction using the energy that was formed during the light reaction.
Dark Reaction
This reaction does not require light. This part of the photosynthetic process is
called the Calvin Cycle. With one cycle of this reaction 3 carbon atoms are fixed or
placed in a sugar molecule. This pathway is called C-3 photosynthesis. This is the way
that most dicots or broadleaf plants make sugars during the dark reaction. The
disadvantage of this process is that oxygen competes with CO2 for a binding site during
the dark reaction. Sometimes sugars are not formed, but energy is still expended to
complete the cycle. This is called photorespiration.
Another dark reaction pathway is called C-4 photosynthesis because 4 carbons
are fixed or placed in a sugar molecule each time the cycle is completed. The dark
reaction of C-4 photosynthesis occurs inside of specialized parts of leaf cells in the leaf
called the bundle sheath, which exclude the presence of O2. Because there is no oxygen
present photorespiration does not occur. The C-4 photosynthetic pathway is what occurs
in most monocots or grasses. This is a more efficient pathway and allows grasses to
grow faster than broadleaf plants. Crassulacean acid metabolism or CAM
photosynthesis is the dark reaction type found in many cactus, succulents, bromeliads,
and orchids as well as a few other plants. CAM photosynthesis is similar to C-4
photosynthesis. However, CAM plants open their stomata only during the night to collect
CO2, when air temperatures are cooler, thus conserving water because of reduced
transpiration. The CO2 is converted into malic acid and then converted back to CO 2
during the day when light is present, thus producing sugars, while the stomata are
closed and greatly reducing water loss.
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Plants convert the energy from light into simple sugars, such as glucose. This
food may be converted back to water and carbon dioxide, releasing the stored energy
through a process called respiration. This energy is required for growth in nearly all
organisms. Simple sugars are also converted to other sugars and starches
( carbohydrates ) which may be transported to the stems and roots for use or storage, or
they may be used as building blocks for more complex structures like oils, pigments, etc.
Photosynthesis is dependent on the availability of light. As sunlight increases in
intensity photosynthesis increases. Water plays an important role in photosynthesis in
several ways. First, it maintains a plant's turgor or the firmness or fullness of plant tissue.
Water pressure or turgor is needed in plant cells to maintain shape and ensure cell
growth. Second, water is split into hydrogen and oxygen by the energy of the sun that
has been absorbed by the chlorophyll in the plant leaves. The oxygen is released into
the atmosphere and the hydrogen is used in manufacturing carbohydrates. Third, water
dissolves minerals from the soil and transports them up from the roots and throughout
the plant, where they serve as raw materials in the growth of new plant tissues. Water is
pulled through the plant by evaporation of water through the leaves (transpiration).
Respiration
Carbohydrates made during photosynthesis are of value to the plant when they
are converted into energy. This energy is used in the process of building new tissues.
The chemical process by which sugars and starches produced by photosynthesis are
converted into energy is called respiration. It is similar to the burning of wood or coal to
produce heat or energy. This process in cells is shown most simply as:
This equation is precisely the opposite of that used to illustrate photosynthesis, although
more is involved than just reversing the reaction. However, it is appropriate to relate
photosynthesis to a building process, while respiration is a breaking-down process.
. Unlike photosynthesis, respiration occurs at night as well as during the day.
Respiration occurs in all life forms and in all cells. The release of accumulated carbon
dioxide and the uptake of oxygen occurs at the cell level.
In plants there is simple diffusion into the open spaces within the leaf and
exchange occurs through the stomata.
Transpiration
Transpiration is the process by which
a plant loses water, primarily through leaf
stomata. Transpiration is a necessary process
that involves the use of about 90% of the
water that enters the plant through the roots.
The other 10% of the water is used in
chemical re-actions and in plant tissues.
Transpiration is necessary for mineral
transport from the soil to the plant for the
cooling of the plant through evaporation, to
move sugars and plant chemicals, and for the
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maintenance of turgor pressure. The amount of water lost from the plant depends on
several environmental factors such as temperature, humidity and wind or air movement.
An increase in temperature or air movement decreases relative humidity and causes the
guard cells in the leaf to shrink, opening the stomata and increasing the rate of
transpiration.
REVIEW TEST:
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
_______________7.
_______________8. energy from light is converted into what compound by plants
_______________9. also known as Calvin Cycle
______________10. the transfer of pollen from the male flower to the stigma of the
female flower
Objectives:
1. To cite evidences that support evolution
2. To explain how populations of organisms have
changed and continue to
change over time
What Is Evolution?
Biological evolution is genetic change in a population
from one generation to another. The speed and direction of
change is variable with different species lines and at dif-
ferent times. Continuous evolution over many generations
can result in the development of new varieties and species.
Likewise, failure to evolve in response to environmental
changes can, and often does, lead to extinction. The result of the massive amount of
evidence for biological evolution accumulated over the last two centuries can safely
conclude that evolution has occurred and continues to occur. All life forms, including
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humans, evolved from earlier species, and all still living species of organisms continue to
evolve today.
Evidence of Evolution
The evidence for evolution has primarily come from sources like fossil record of
change in earlier species, homologies, DNA and protein, the chemical and anatomical
similarities or related life forms, the geographic dis-tribution of related species, and the
recorded genetic changes in living organisms over many generations.
Fossil Record
Remains of animals and plants founding sedimentary rock deposits give us an
indisputable record of past changes through vast periods of time. This evidence attests
to the fact that there has been a tremendous variety of living things. Some extinct
species had traits that were transitional between major groups of organisms. Their
existence confirms that species are not fixed but can evolve. Geological strata
containing into other species over time. The an evolutionary sequence of evidence also
shows fossils that what have appeared to be gaps in the fossil record are due to
incomplete data collection. The more that we learn about the evolution of specific
species lines, the more that these so-called gaps or "missing links in the chain of
evolution" are filled with transitional fossil specimens. One of the first of these gaps to be
filled was between small bipedal dinosaurs and birds. Just two years after Darwin
published On the Origin of Species, a 150-145 mil-lion year old fossil of Archaeopteryx
was found in southern Germany. It had jaws with teeth and a long bony tail like
dinosaurs, broad wings and feathers like birds, and skeletal features of both. This
discovery verified the assumption that birds had reptilian ancestor.
Since the discovery of Archaeopteryx, there have been many other crucial
evolutionary gaps filled in the fossil record. Perhaps, the most important one, from our
human perspective, was that between apes and our own species. Since the 1920's,
there have been literally hundreds of well-dated intermediate fossils found in Africa that
were transitional species leading from apes to humans over the last 6-7 million
years. The fossil record also provides abundant evidence that the complex animals and
plants of today were preceded by earlier simple ones. In addition, it shows that
multicelled organisms evolved only after the first single-celled ones. This fits the
predictions of evolutionary theory.
Homology
Evolutionary theory predicts that related organisms will share similarities that are
derived from common ancestors. Similar characteristics due to relatedness are known
as homologies. Homologies can be revealed by comparing the anatomies of different
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living things, looking at cellular similarities and differences, studying embryological deve-
lopment, and studying vestigial structures within individual organisms.
If evolution has occurred, there should be many anatomical similarities among
varieties and species that have diverged from a common ancestor. Those species with
the most recent common ancestor should share the most traits. For instance, the many
anatomical similarities of wolves, dogs, and other members of the genus Canis are due
to the fact that they are descended from the same ancient canine species and still share
99.8% of their genes. Wolves and dogs also share similarities with foxes, indicating a
slightly more distant ancestor with them.
In the following photos of plants, the leaves are quite different from the "normal"
leaves we envision.
Each leaf has a very different shape and function, yet all are homologous
structures, derived from a common ancestral form. The pitcher plant and Venus' flytrap
use leaves to trap and digest insects. The bright red leaves of the poinsettia look like
flower petals. The cactus leaves are modified into small spines which reduce water loss
and can protect the cactus from herbivory.
Genetics
One of the strongest evidences for common descent comes from the study of
gene sequences. Comparative sequence analysis examines the relationship between
the DNA sequences of different species, producing several lines of evidence that confirm
Darwin's original hypothesis of common descent. If the hypothesis of common descent is
true, then species that share a common ancestor inherited that ancestor's DNA
sequence, as well as mutations unique to that ancestor. More closely related species
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have a greater fraction of identical sequence and shared substitutions compared to more
distantly related species.
The simplest and most powerful evidence is provided by phylogenetic
reconstruction. Such reconstructions, especially when done using slowly evolving protein
sequences, are often quite robust and can be used to reconstruct a great deal of the
evolutionary history of modern organisms (and even in some instances of the
evolutionary history of extinct organisms, such as the recovered gene sequences of
mammoths or Neanderthals). These reconstructed phylogenies recapitulate the
relationships established through morphological and biochemical studies. The most
detailed reconstructions have been performed on the basis of the mitochondrial
genomes shared by all eukaryotic organisms, which are short and easy to sequence; the
broadest reconstructions have been performed either using the sequences of a few very
ancient proteins or by using ribosomal RNA sequence.
DNA sequencing
Comparison of the DNA sequences allows organisms to be grouped by sequence
similarity, and the resulting phylogenetic trees are typically congruent with traditional
taxonomy, and are often used to strengthen or correct taxonomic classifications.
Sequence comparison is considered a mea-sure robust enough to correct erroneous
assumptions in the phylogenetic tree in instances where other evidence is scarce. For
example, neutral human DNA sequences are approximately 1.2% divergent (based on
substitutions) from those of their nearest genetic relative, the chimpanzee, 1.6% from
gorillas, and 6.6% from baboons. Genetic sequence evidence thus allows inference and
quantification of gene-tic relatedness between humans and other apes. The sequence
of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene, a vital gene encoding a part of the ribosome, was used
to find the broad phylogenetic relationships between all extant life. The analysis ,
originally done by Carl Woese, resulted in the three-domain system, arguing for two
major splits in the early evolution of life. The first split led to modern Bacteria and the
subsequent split led to modern Archaea and Eukaryotes.
Some DNA sequences are shared by very different organisms. It has been
predicted by the theory of evolution that the differences in such DNA sequences
between two organisms should roughly resemble both the biological difference between
them according to their anatomy and the time that had passed since these two
organisms have separated in the course of evolution, as seen in fossil evidence. The
rate of accumulating such changes should be low for some sequences, namely those
that code for critical RNA or proteins, and high for others that code for less critical RNA
or proteins; but for every specific sequence, the rate of change should be roughly
constant over time. These results have been experimentally confirmed. Two examples
are DNA sequences coding for rRNA, which is highly conserved, and DNA sequences
coding for fibrino peptides (amino acid chains that are discarded during the formation of
fibrin), which are highly non-conserved.
Proteins
The proteomic evidence also supports the universal ancestry of life. Vital
proteins, such as the ribosome, DNA polymerase, and RNA polymerase, are found in
everything from the most primitive bacteria to the most complex mammals. The core part
of the protein is conserved across all lineages of life, serving similar functions. Higher
organisms have evolved additional protein subunits, largely affecting the regulation and
protein-protein interaction of the core. Other overarching similarities between all lineages
of extant organisms, such as DNA, RNA, amino acids, and the lipid bilayer, give support
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to the theory of common descent. Phylogenetic analyses of protein sequences from
various organisms produce similar trees of relationship between all organisms. The
chirality of DNA, RNA, and amino acids is conserved across all known life. As there is no
functional advantage to right- or left-handed molecular chirality, the simplest hypothesis
is that the choice was made randomly by early organisms and passed on to all extant life
through common descent. Further evidence for reconstructing ancestral lineages comes
from junk DNA such as pseudogenes, "dead" genes that steadily accumulate mutations.
These segments of DNA contain chemically coded recipes for creating proteins by
linking together particular amino acids in specific sequences.
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All of the tens of thousands of types of proteins in living things are mostly made
of only 20 kinds of amino acids. Despite the great diversity of life on our planet, the
simple language of the DNA code is the same for all living things. This is evidence of the
fundamental molecular unity of life.
In addition to molecular similarities, most living things are alike in
that they either get the energy needed for growth, repair, and
reproduction directly from sunlight, by photosynthesis or they get it
indirectly by consuming green plants and other organisms that eat
plants. Many groups of species share the same types of body
structures because they inherited them from a common ancestor that
had them. This is the case with the vertebrates, which are the animals
that have internal skeletons. The arms of humans, the forelegs of
dogs and cats, the wings of birds, and the flippers of whales and seals
all have the same types of bones (humerus, radius, and ulna) be-
cause they have retained these traits of their shared common ancient
vertebrate ancestor.
All of these major chemical and anatomical similarities between living things can
be most logically ac- counted for by assuming that they either share a common ancestry
or they came into existence as a result of similar natural processes. These facts make it
difficult to accept a theory of special and independent creation of different species.
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case with the purple bacteria in the Petri dishes shown below--the bacteria population
has evolved.
Artificial selection
Artificial selection demonstrates the diversity that can exist among organisms
that share a relatively recent common ancestor. In artificial selection, one species is bred
selectively at each generation, allowing only those organisms that exhibit desired
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characteristics to repro-duce. These characteristics become increasingly well deve-loped
in successive generations. Artificial selection was successful long before science
discovered the genetic basis. Examples of artificial selection include dog breed-ing,
genetically modified food, flower breeding, and the cultivation of foods such as wild
cabbage and others.
Experimental evolution
Experimental evolution uses controlled experiments to test hypotheses and
theories of evolution. In one early example, William Dallinger set up an experiment
shortly before 1880, subjecting microbes to heat with the aim of forcing adaptive
changes. His experiment ran for around seven years, and his published results were
acclaimed, but he did not resume the experiment after the apparatus failed.
Evolution Of Man
The modern theory concerning the evolution of man proposes that humans
and apes derive from an apelike ancestor that lived on earth a few million years ago.
The theory states that man, through a combination of environmental and genetic factors,
emerged as species to produce the variety of ethnicities seen today, while modern apes
evolved on a separate evolutionary pathway. Perhaps the most famous proponent of
evolutionary theory is Charles Darwin (1809-82) who authored The Origin of Species
(1859) to describe his theory of evolution. It was based largely on observations which he
made during his 5-year voyage around the
world aboard the HMS Beagle (1831-36). Since
then, mankind's origin has generally been
explained from an evolutionary perspective.
Moreover, the theory of man's evolution has
been and continues to be modified as new
findings are discovered, revisions to the theory
are adopted, and earlier concepts proven
incorrect are discarded.
Exercise:
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
______________1. the remains of once living animals or plants
______________2. the gaps in the fossil records
______________3. He is the Father of evolution.
______________4. the existence of shared ancestry between a pair of
structures, or genes,
91in different taxa
______________5. the process by which different kinds of living organisms are
thought to have developed and diversified from earlier forms
during the history of the earth
Lesson 9.2 The Origin and Extinction of Species
Objectives:
1. To state the theories on the origin of life
2. To cite the causes of extinction of species
3. To recognize the system of classification of organisms
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popular almost till seventeenth century. Many scientists like Descartes, Galileo and
Helmont supported this idea.
The theory of Spontaneous Generation was disproved in the course of time due
to the experiment conducted by Fransisco Redi, (1665), Spallanzani (1765) and later by
Louis Pasteur (1864) in his famous Swan neck experiment. This theory was
disapproved, as scientists gave definite proof that life comes from pre-existing life.
Theory of Catastrophism
It is simply a modification of the theory of Special
Creation. It states that there have been several creations of life
by God, each preceded by a catastrophe resulting from some
kind of geological disturbance. According to this theory, since
each catastrophe completely destroyed the existing life, each
new creation consisted of life form different from that of previous
ones. A French scientist Georges Cuvier (1769-1832) and
Orbigney (1802 to 1837) were the main supporters of this theory.
Organic Evolution
Speciation stretches back over3.5 billion years during which life has existed on
earth. It is thought to occur in multiple ways such as slowly, steadily and gradually
overtime or rapidly from one long static state to another. Evolution (also known as
biological or organic evolution) is the change over time in one or more inherited traits
found in populations of organisms. Inherited traits are particular distinguishing
93
characteristics, including anatomical, biochemical or behavioral characteristics, that are
passed on from one generation to the next. Evolution has led to the diversification of all
living organisms, which are described by Charles Darwin as “endless forms most
beautiful and most wonderful”.
Principles of Evolution
I. The Theory of Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics (by Jean Lamarck : 1809 )
Modifications acquired during one’s lifetime are inherited by the next generation,
ex. giraffes acquired a long neck slowly over time as each generation of giraffe stretched
its neck slightly longer in trying to reach leaves high in trees. At first glance this theory is
deceptively close to Darwin’s theory (both include the concept that evolution produces
life forms adapted to their environments) but the inheritance of acquired characteristics
implies that the organism itself in response to environmental pressures can control the
direction of change. Unfortunately, there have been no discoveries of any such
mechanism of change.
3. High rate of population growth. Most populations have more offspring each
year than local resources can support leading to a struggle for resources. Each
generation experiences substantial mortality.
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Beak variations in finches Darwin Evolution of the horse family
Observed in the Galapagos Island
From one generation to the next, the struggle for resources (what Darwin called
the “struggle for existence”) will favor individuals with some variations over others and
thereby change the frequency of traits within the population. This process is natural
selection. The traits that confer an advantage to those individuals who leave more
offspring are called adaptations.
In order for natural selection to operate on a trait, the trait must possess heritable
variation and must confer an advantage in the competition for resources. If one of these
requirements does not occur, then the trait does not experience natural selection. (We
now know that such traits may change by other evolutionary mechanisms that have
been discovered since Darwin’s time.)
What is Extinction ?
Extinction is the end of an organism or of a group of organisms (taxon), normally
a species. The moment of extinction is generally considered to be the death of the last
individual of the species, although the capacity to breed and recover may have been lost
before this point. Because a species' potential range may be very large, determining this
moment is difficult, and is usually done retrospectively. This difficulty leads to
phenomena such as Lazarus taxa, where a species presumed extinct abruptly
"reappears" (typically in the fossil record) after a period of apparent absence.
Many factors are driving an unprecedented rate of extinction of plant and animal
species worldwide. Although extinction is a natural process, the rate at which current
extinction is taking place is clearly not, and all scientific evidence indicates that the
activities of man- kind are the primary engine behind most recent and present extinction
events
Habitat Loss
Destructive change to environments or landscapes, either through natural
phenomena (such as floods, volcanoes, hurricanes etc.), or human processes (such as
construction, deforestation, changing land use for agriculture, artificial land drainage
etc.), is the single greatest threat to the biodiversity of Planet Earth, and the greatest
cause of extinction in our world. When a plant or an animal does not have a habitat, and
cannot adapt to a different environment, it will become extinct.
Introduced Species
The introduction of plant and animal species that are not endemic to a given
locality is both a natural and human process that often has disastrous knock-on
consequences for local biota, often including extinction of native taxa. Introduction of
species that are not native to a given area may occur through regular dispersal
processes over short geographic distances. Artificial or accidental introduction of non-
native plant and animal species occurs much more commonly, particularly as humans
travel more extensively and frequently across the globe. Seeds are rapidly transported
by humans on their clothes and shoes, and or rats on board ships. Both natural and
anthropogenic introduction of non native plant or animal taxa may profoundly upsets the
balance of the local ecosystem of a given locality and push the most vulnerable native
taxa towards extinction, particularly those that are endemic to a small geographic area,
or have a small or slow-regenerating population overall.
Pollution
Pollution may be a natural or human cause of extinction, and can take many
forms. Natural pollution events may result from cataclysmic geographic processes
(volcanic eruptions, floods, earthquakes, etc.), or from over-population of ecosystems by
specific species (red tide) or other processes. Natural pollution events commonly cause
local extinction events, but rarely are sufficiently wide scale to cause complete extinction
of significant numbers of plant and animal taxa. Human pollution can take many forms,
but usually arises when toxic substances are dumped, either advertently or inadvertently,
into biologically diverse areas of our planet. Anthropogenic pollution may have knock-on
consequences, for example, eutrophication. Large scale anthropogenic pollution events
(i.e. oil spills) may have the scope to cause the complete extinction of plant and animal
taxa, particularly those that are endemic to a small geographic area, or have a small or
slow-regenerating population overall. Pollution may impact entire ecosystems, including
humans. For example, the pesticide DDT, which was used against arthropods up until
the 1970s, but causes catastrophic impacts at all ecological levels, from the water and
soil, through water feeders, ground arthropods, predators, and humans.
Competition
On going evolutionary processes are driven by competition, and over (usually)
long periods of time, plant and animal taxa that are unable to adapt may be out
competed and naturally displaced from their habitat, and pushed towards extinction.
Disease
The spread of disease may be both a natural and human factor behind extinction.
Naturally occurring diseases that afflict specific plant or animal taxa may be inadvertently
spread by humans with disastrous consequences, for example, Dutch elm disease,
which is a fungal disease of elm trees spread by the elm bark beetle. Although believed
to be originally native to Asia, the disease has been accidentally introduced into North
America and Europe, where it has devastated native populations of elms which had not
had the opportunity to evolve resistance.
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Effects of ancient humans
Human beings have been affecting the environment for a very long time. Early
humans burned woodland to clear it and make way for grassland. They also made
spears and used them to hunt more efficiently. Some scientists believe that some recent
mass extinctions took place because of the actions of ancient humans. One example is
the extinction of Australian megafauna, or very large animals, that took place
approximately 40 000 years ago . This mass extinction coincided almost exactly with the
arrival of the Australian Indigenous peoples, who would have found the slow-moving
megafauna easy prey. Another example is the mass extinction that occurred between 10
000 and 25 000 years ago in North America. Here, too, a large portion of the native
mega- fauna was wiped out around the same time that human beings appeared.
Climate Change
The biodiverse Earth can't keep up with the rapid changes in temperature and
climate. The species are not used to severe weather conditions and long seasons, or a
changing chemical make-up of their surroundings. As more species die, it is only making
it more difficult for the survivors to find food. The warmer climates we are used to
present-day are perfect for diseases and epidemics to thrive.
Cosmic Radiation
Cosmic Radiation is radiation being emitted from outer space and the Sun. It is
hypothesized that being exposed to too much cosmic radiation can mutate genes, which
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can potentially weaken a species' gene pool in the future. Since the radiation comes
from space and the Sun, it is extremely difficult to avoid the radiation.
Comparative anatomy
The study of body parts of animals of a particular group shows how apparently
dissimilar animals have quite similar anatomical structures. For example , the forelimbs
of man, cat, whale and bat are made up of the same skeletal elements. They have
been modified to suit the environmental conditions in which these animals live.
These organs are functionally dissimilar but structurally similar. Such organs are
called homologous organs. The anatomical similarity points to the existence of a
common ancestor from which these organisms have evolved. However, though the
wings of a bat and the wings of a bird look similar, they are anatomically dissimilar. Such
organs are called analogous organs.
Comparative embryology
A comparative study of the stages of the
embryonic development of animals reveals that in their
early stages they were very similar. These embryonic
stages reflect their ancestry. The embryological stages
of an organism give us an idea about the stages of its
evolution. For example, when we study the human
embryo, we find that at a certain stage it has gills. This
suggests that fish is one of the earliest ancestors in the
evolution of mammals including human beings.
Classification of Organisms
In order to make sense of the diversity of organisms, it is necessary to group
similar organisms together and organize these groups in a non-overlapping hierarchical
arrangement. The classification of organisms into a hierarchy of groups, namely,
kingdoms, phyla (or divisions), classes, orders, families, genera and species, is based
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on their similarities and differences. Classification shows how closely organisms are
related with respect to evolution. It is based on the assumption that each organism has
descended from its ancestral type with some modification
Taxonomy is the science of biological classification. The basic taxonomic group is the
species, which is defined in terms of either sexual reproduction or general similarity.
Morphological, physiological, metabolic, ecological, gene-tic, and molecular
characteristics are all useful in taxonomy because they reflect the organization and
activity of the genome. Nucleic acid structure is probably the best indicator of
relatedness because nucleic acids are either the genetic material itself or the products of
gene transcription.
Taxon (pl. taxa), A taxon is a phylogenetic grouping of organisms. There are two related
processes in taxonomy. Taxonomy is the science concerned with the identification,
classification, nomenclature of organisms.
Hierarchical classification . The full description of a given organism's place among all
the world's organisms does not end with its binomial designation. There exists a
hierarchy of designations only the last of which describe genera and species
denomination. A category in any rank unites groups in the level below it based on shared
properties. The major designations, listed in terms of increasing specificity, include:
domain – kingdom – phylum – class – order – family – genus – species.
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Sample of Classification Scheme of Organisms
CHAPTER TEST:
Identify the word being described by the given phrase or sentence.
______________1. It is the theory that states that living things come from non-living
things.
______________2. a system for naming and organizing things, especially plants
and
animals, into groups that share similar qualities
______________3. the name of the book of Charles Darwin about evolution through
natural selection
______________4. Other than Charles Darwin, who was the other scientist who worked
on the theory of evolution through natural selection ?
______________5. It is an evolutive process that leads to the disappearance of a
species or a population.
______________6. It also known as biological evolution.
______________7. This system of classification creates and differentiates groups in
terms of structural similarities and differences.
______________8. the scientific name for human
______________9. the highest level of biological classification
_____________10. the lowest taxonomic category
Activity :
Simulate the natural formation of fossils using plaster of Paris.
Objectives :
1. To describe the principle of ecosystem
2. To identify the components of ecosystem
3. To cite examples of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem
Ecology is the branch of science that deals with the relationship and interactions
between organisms and their environment, including other organisms. Ecology includes
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not only how living things interact with each other, but how they interact with their
physical environment: things such as climate, water, and soil.
Biodiversity is the variety of all life forms on earth - the different plants, animals
and micro-organisms and the ecosystems of which they are a part.
Ecosystem
An ecosystem is a community of living organisms in conjunction with the
nonliving components of their environment (things like air, water and mineral soil),
interacting as a system. These biotic and abiotic components are regarded as linked
together through nutrient cycles and energy flows. As ecosystems are defined by the
network of interactions among organisms, and between organisms and their
environment, they can be of any size but usually encompass specific, limited spaces.
There are two main components that exist in an ecosystem: the abiotic and biotic
components. The abiotic components of any ecosystem are the properties of the
environment; the biotic components are the life forms that occupy a given ecosystem.
Abiotic Components
Abiotic components of an ecosystem consist of the nonorganic aspects of the
environment that determine what life forms can thrive. Examples of abiotic components
are temperature, average humidity, topography and natural disturbances. Temperature
varies by latitude; locations near the equator are warmer than are locations near the
poles or the temperate zones. Humidity influences the amount of water and moisture in
the air and soil, which, in turn, affect rainfall. Topography is the layout of the land in
terms of elevation. Natural disturbances include tsunamis, lightning storms, hurricanes
and forest fires.
Biotic Components
The biotic components of an ecosystem are the life forms that inhabit it. The life
forms of an ecosystem aid in the transfer and cycle of energy. They are grouped in terms
of the means they use to get energy. Producers such as plants produce their own energy
without consuming other life forms; plants gain their energy from conducting
photosynthesis via sunlight. Consumers exist on the next level of the food chain. There
are three main types of consumers: herbivores, carnivores and omnivores. Herbivores
feed on plants, carnivores get their food by eating other carnivores or herbivores, and
omnivores can digest both plant and animal tissue. Decomposers , like fungi and
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bacteria ,are organisms that break down dead or decaying organisms, and in doing so,
they carry out the natural process of decomposition. Like herbivores and predators,
decomposers are heterotrophic, meaning that they use organic substrates to get their
energy, carbon and nutrients for growth and development.
Processes of Ecosystems
The figure on the side, with the plants,
zebra, lion, and so forth, illustrates the two main
ideas about how ecosystems function:
ecosystems have energy flows and ecosystems
cycle materials. These two processes are
linked, but they are not quite the same.
Energy that enters the biological system
as light energy, or photons, is transformed into
chemical energy in organic molecules by
cellular processes including photosynthesis and
respiration, and ultimately is converted to heat Energy flow and material cycle
energy. This energy is dissipated, meaning it is lost to
the system as heat; once it is lost it cannot be re-cycled. Without the continued input of
solar energy, biological systems would quickly shut down. Thus the earth is an open
system with respect to energy. Elements such as carbon , nitrogen, or phosphorus enter
living organisms in a variety of ways. Plants obtain elements from the surrounding
atmosphere, water, or soils. Animals may also obtain elements directly from the physical
environment, but usually they obtain these mainly as a consequence of consuming other
organisms. These materials are transformed biochemically within the bodies of
organisms, but sooner or later, due to excretion or decomposition, they are returned to
an inorganic state. Often bacteria complete this process ,through the process called
decomposition or mineralization. During decomposition these materials are not
destroyed or lost, so the earth is a closed system with respect to elements (with the
exception of a meteorite entering the system now and then). The elements are cycled
endlessly between their biotic and abiotic states within ecosystems. Those elements
whose supply tends to limit biological
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activity are called nutrients.
Interaction
Biotic components and abiotic components of an eco-system interact with and
affect one another. If the temperature of an area decreases, the life existing there must
adapt to it. Global warming, or the worldwide increase in temperature due to the
greenhouse effect, will speed up the metabolism rates of most organisms. Metabolic rate
increases with temperature because the nutrient molecules in the body are more likely to
contact and react with one another when excited by heat. Accordingly, tropical
ectothermic - cold-blooded-organisms could experience increased metabolic rates from
an increase of as little as 5 oC because their internal temperature is almost entirely
dependent on external temperature. To adapt to these circumstances, cold-blooded life
forms could reside in the shade and not actively search for food during daylight hours
when the sun is at its brightest.
Terrestrial Ecosystems
Terrestrial ecosystems can be found anywhere apart from heavily saturated
places. They are broadly classed into:
Taiga: Situated just before the arctic regions, the taiga is defined by evergreen
conifers. As the temperature is below zero for almost half a year, the remainder
of the months, it buzzes with migratory birds and insects.
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The Desert Ecosystems
Desert ecosystems are located in regions that receive an annual rainfall less than
25. They occupy about 17 percent of all the land on our planet. Due to the extremely
high temperature, low water availability and intense sunlight, fauna and flora are scarce
and poorly developed. The vegetation is mainly shrubs, bushes, few grasses and rare
trees. The stems and leaves of the plants are modified in order to conserve water as
much as possible. The best known desert ones are the succulents such as the spiny
leaved cacti. The animal organisms include insects, birds, camels, reptiles all of which
are adapted to the desert conditions.
Aquatic Ecosystems
The aquatic ecosystem is the ecosystem found in a body of water. It
encompasses aquatic flora, fauna and water properties, as well. There are two main
types of aquatic ecosystem- Marine and Freshwater.
Estuaries
Coral reefs
Salt marshes
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Hydrothermal vents where chemosynthetic bacteria make up the food base.
Many kinds of organisms live in marine ecosystems: the brown algae, corals,
cephalopods, echinoderms, dinoflagellates and sharks.
Wetlands: Places in which the soil is inundated or saturated for some lengthy
period of time.
The ecosystems are habitats to reptiles, amphibians and around 41% of the
world’s fish species. The faster moving turbulent waters typically contain a greater
concentrations of dissolved oxygen, supporting greater biodiversity than slow moving
waters in pools.
Review Questions :
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
Objectives :
1. To identify the limiting factors of population
2. To explain biotic potential
Population
It is a group of organisms of the same species living in an area at the same time.
Birth rate is the ratio of total live births to total population in a specified
community or area over a specified period of time. The birthrate is often expressed as
the number of live births per 1,000 of the population per year.
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Death rate is the ratio of total deaths to total population in a specified community
or area over a specified period of time. The death rate is often expressed as the number
of deaths per 1,000 of the population per year. Also called fatality rate.
Population Density
It is a measurement of population per unit area or unit volume; it is a quantity of
type number density. It is frequently applied to living organisms, and most of the time to
humans.
Environmental resistance
Environmental resistance is the limiting effect of environmental conditions on the
numerical growth of a population.
Environmental resistance factors are things that limit the growth of a population.
They lower the chances for reproduction, affect the health of organisms, and raise the
death rate in the population. They include biotic factors like predators, disease,
competition, and lack of food, as well as abiotic factors like fire, flood, temperature,
wrong amount of sunshine ,and drought.
Food supply
As the population increases, the food supply, or the
supply of another necessary resource , may decrease. When
necessary resources, such as food , decrease, some
individuals will die. Overall, the population cannot reproduce
at the same rate, so the birth rates drop. This will cause the
population growth rate to decrease.
Competition
When populations become crowded, organisms
compete for food,water, space, sunlight and other
essentials.
Predation
Populations in nature are often controlled by
predation. The regulation of a population by predation takes
place within a predator-prey relationship, one of the best-
known mechanism of population control.
Natural disasters
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Natural disasters such as droughts, floods,
hurricanes, and fires, can all influence whatever
populations are in the area at the time. Not only do these
occurrences kill individuals in all populations, they also
disrupt the availability of resources for survivors.
Biotic Potential
The biotic potential of a population is how well a species is able to survive.
While environmental resistance acts like a hill pushing back against population
growth, biotic potential is what urges a population to grow. Biotic potential has to do
with how well a species can survive, including how well adapted it is to the environment
and its rate of reproduction. Some species produce a lot of young very often (while
others produce fewer babies less often), but invest a lot of energy raising and protecting
them. So while the biotic potential of a species causes the population to increase,
environmental resistance keeps it from increasing relentlessly.
When the population is small, environmental resistance factors are, well, not as
big of a factor. There may be plenty of resources around so the population can keep
growing quickly. It's kind of like pushing a piece of gravel uphill rather than a boulder.
But, as competition get stiffer and resources start to become limited, population growth
starts to slow.
Review Questions :
1. Explain the relationship between population and food supply.
2. Give 5 factors that limit the growth of population and write a brief explanation.
Objectives :
1. To identify the activities of man that affect the natural ecosystem
2. To cite measures on how to prevent human activities from damaging the
ecosystem
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1. Introduction of Invasive Species
Invasive species are brought on by transporting species either intentionally or
accidentally from other areas of the world. This can be devastating to existing species as
invasive species are introduced on a time scale much more quickly than typically would
happen with evolution over longer time periods. This can include outcompeting native
species in the ecosystem, leading to the decline or extinction of local species, and
overpopulation as these invasive species may not have any predators in this new
ecosystem.
2. Overexploitation
Overexploitation is a major threat to ecosystems and therefore sustainability. It is
the consumption of a natural resource at a rate greater than that natural resource can
maintain itself.
Overhunting
When humans overhunt key predators such as lions, tigers and bears,
they remove the very animals that keep plant consumers in balance and prevent
overgrazing. A healthy ecosystem has a balance of predators and prey that
naturally cycle through life and death sequences. Over-hunting often results in
ecosystem species imbalance and environmental stress.
Overfishing
Humans also practice commercial overfishing , where massive fishing
nets result in “bycatch,” in which unwanted fish are caught in nets and then
thrown away. Bycatch results in the death of one million sharks annually. Large
weights and heavy metal rollers that are used with the commercial fishing nets
also drag along the bottom of the ocean, destroying anything in their path
including fragile coral reefs.
Overgrazing
It occurs when plants are exposed to intensive grazing for extended
periods of time , or without sufficient recovery periods. It reduces the usefulness,
productivity, and biodiversity of the land and is one cause of desertification and
erosion.
Illegal logging
Illegal logging contributes to deforestation, degrades forest environments,
reduces biodiversity, and contributes to green gas emissions.
Continuous cropping
Continuous cropping refers to a system in which certain crops are
‘‘replanted” in soils that had previously supported the same or similar plant
species. Because of limited arable land sand expansive populations, continuous
cropping systems are commonly practiced in the production of grain crops and
cash crops. However, long-term continuous cropping usually leads to plant
growth inhibition and serious soil-borne diseases. Continuous cropping can lead
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to soil exhaustion, erosion and low productivity if soil and nutrients conservation
practices are not adopted. Excess fertilizers can be washed off by rain into
bodies of water that could cause pollution
3. Pollution
Vehicles, trains and planes emit toxic gases that include carcinogenic
particles and irritants, creating air pollution. Humans have also dumped large
amounts of pesticides, such as organophosphates, onto crops that migrate into
groundwater and bodies of water, poisoning ecosystems. Plants and animals die
from exposure to pollutants such as excess nutrients from chemical fertilizers
and other harmful chemicals. Pollution is increasing around the world and results
in loss of biodiversity causing severe damage to self-sustaining ecosystems.
4. Habitat destruction
Deforestation
Humans have always cut down trees throughout history. The world’s
rainforests are being destroyed resulting in vegetation degradation, nutrient
imbalance, flooding and animal displacement. Trees act as a natural air filter in
the carbon cycle by taking in carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, so
deforestation contributes to global warming.
Kaingin System
Kaingin system is the cutting down and burning of trees and plant growth
in an area for cultivation purposes. Kaingin is a Filipino word that means clear-
ing. Known as swidden farming in other countries, it is a traditional but
destructive agricultural system practiced in many parts of the globe.
Land Conversion
Through urban development, the continued rapid construction of road
systems and buildings has changed the Earth's natural surface, removing soil
nutrients, surface vegetation and trees that filter the air and equalize the carbon
cycle. Urbanization also displaces animals and increases environmental pollution
from vehicles and factories. A system of highways also causes migratory
obstacles for animals and replaces native plants with impermeable concrete,
resulting in habitat destruction. This practice of human construction continues at
a rapid pace, leading to urban sprawl, where cities are essentially forever
expanding outside the traditional inner-city limits.
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CHAPTER TEST :
Identify the word being described by the given statement.
_______________1. tropical grasslands, with few trees, and good for grazers
_______________2. It means contamination with pollutants.
_______________3. It is the ratio of total live births to total population in a specified
area over a specified period of time.
_______________4. a kind of ecosystem found in bodies of water
_______________5. It is an organism that lives in or on another organism (its host) and
benefits by deriving nutrients at the host's expense.
_______________6. It is a measurement of population per unit area.
_______________7. It is the cutting down and burning of trees for clearing purposes.
_______________8. Fatality rate is also known as ________.
_______________9. It is the light energy that enters the biological system.
______________10. factors that limit the growth of a population
Activity :
Make a miniature manmade terrestrial or aquatic ecosystem
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