Gateway - Science

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Succession ecological succession change in composition of species over time; species diversity and total biomass increases as succession progresses primary succession plants and animals gradually invade a region where THERE WAS NO SOIL INITIALLY colonization of a newly formed volcanic island (rising after a volcano eruption) succession on sand dunes secondary succession existing community cleared by disturbance that left the soil intact fire, flood, insect devastations, overgrazing, clearcutting, abandoned lots and construction sites

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Gateway - Science

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  • Successionecologicalsuccessionchangeincompositionofspeciesovertimespeciesdiversityandtotalbiomassincreasesassuccessionprogresses

    primarysuccessionplantsandanimalsgraduallyinvadearegionwhereTHEREWASNOSOILINITIALLY

    colonizationofanewlyformedvolcanicisland(risingafteravolcanoeruption) successiononsanddunes

    secondarysuccessionexistingcommunityclearedbydisturbancethatleftthesoilintact

    fire,flood,insectdevastations,overgrazing,clearcutting,abandonedlotsandconstructionsites

  • Vocabulary keystonespecieshaveimportantecologicalnichesandotherspeciesdependonthem

    alot disturbancestorm,fire,flood,drought,etc.whichchangescommunityandresources pioneerspeciestypicallyrselectedspecies(gooddispersalcapabilities,fastgrowing,

    tolerateharsherconditionssuchasintensesunlightoraridclimates),nitrogenfixingbacteria(fornutrientdeficientsoils)

    Kselectedspeciesgraduallyreplacerselectedspecies,perennialgrasses,herbs,shrubs,trees,slowsdownrateofsuccessionbecausetheylivelonger

    population biome ecosystem abioticfactors&bioticfactors climaxcommunityfinalstageofsuccessionwherespeciescompositionremains

    relativelystableuntiladisaster ecologicalnicheplaceorfunctionoforganisminitsecosystemcanrangefromwhere

    itlivestohowithelps/harmstheenvironment

    NutritionVocabulary

    bileemulsifiesfats esophagustubeconnectingmouthtostomach pepsinenzymebreakingdownproteins

    operatesatlowpH largeintestinesiteofwaterreclamation

    removeswaterandanyremainingabsorbablenutrientsfromthefoodbeforesendingtheindigestiblemattertotherectum

    stomachwhereproteindigestionstarts rectumstoresfeces liverproducesbile mouthwheremechanicalandchemical

    digestionbeginssalivaryglandsdeliversalivatodochemicaldigestion(throughamylase)here

    smallintestinewheremostdigestionandnutrientabsorptionhappens

    villiincreasessurfaceareaofsmallintestinesmallfibroushairs

    amylasesalivarygland,breaksdownstarch

  • Biomolecules

    1. Carbohydrates monosaccharidesinglesugarmoleculesuchasfructoseorglucose

    disaccharidetwosugarmoleculesjoinedbyglycosidiclinkage,awatermoleculeislostthroughadehydrationreaction(thereverse,whereonemoleculeissplittoformtwomoleculesbytheadditionofwaterishydrolysis)

    polysaccharideaseriesofconnectedmonosaccharides(apolymer),forexample:starch(energystorage),glycogen(energystorage),cellulose(structural),andchitin(structuralinexoskeletons

    2. Lipidshighlysolubleinnonpolarsubstances

    triglyceridesfatsandoilsconsistofthreefattyacidsattachedtoaglycerolmoleculeeithersaturatedfattyacids(packedtightlyandhavehighermeltingtemperaturesandsolidatroomtemperature,fats)orunsaturatedfattyacids

    phospholipidshasonefattyacidchainreplacedbyaphosphategrouptailsarenonpolarandhydrophobic,headsarepolarandhydrophilicmakeupmembranes

    steroidsbackboneoffourlinkedcarbonringscholesterol,testosterone,estrogen

  • 3. Proteins types:structuralkeratin,collagen,silkinspiderwebsstoragetransport

    defensiveantibodiesenzymes polymersofaminoacidsbondedbypeptidebondstoformachaincalleda

    polypeptide structure:primary(aminoacids),secondary(3D,alphahelixorbetapleated

    sheets),tertiary(globularproteinformedwithhydrogenbonds,ionicbonds,disulfidebonds,etc.)

    4. NucleicAcids

    CellParts&Function

    eukaryotesorganismswithDNAincellsinformsofchromosomeswithinanucleus Ex:animals,plants,algae,fungi(euknowtheyreafunguy)

    prokaryotessinglecelledorganismnodistinctnucleuswithmembraneorspecializedorganelles

    Ex:bacteria,cyanobacteria

  • Vocabulary(harderorganelles) mitochondriaconvertsenergytousable

    formsiteofcellularrespiration EndoplasmicReticulum(ER)transports

    secretoryproteinshasfoldedsacsandinterconnectedchannels

    smoothmakeshormonesandlipids roughproteinsynthesis

    GolgiApparatusmodifyandfurthertransportproteins

    lysosomescontainhydrolyticenzymesgetridofcellularwaste

    centriolesinvolvedinspindlefiberdevelopmentincells

    flagellatailusedtomovearound(someanimalshave)

    Genetics

    mitosisasexualreproductionwithsomatic(body)cells,2daughtercellsproduced,

    identicaltoparent

  • Knowthephases:Interphase,Prophase,Metaphase,Anaphase,Telophase,Cytokinesis

    meiosissexualreproduction formedfromspermandegg

    (gametes) daughtercelliscombinationof

    DNAfrombothparents,uniquefromoneanother

    Steps:ProphaseI,MetaphaseI,AnaphaseI,TelophaseI,ProphaseII,MetaphaseII,AnaphaseII,TelophaseII

    DNA

    DNA:doublehelix,twostrandsofnucleotidesjoinedbymiddleHbonds fourbases:Adenine,Thymine,Guanine,andCytosine ApairswithT,GpairswithC doublestranded

    DNAreplication doublehelixunwinds eachstrandusedastemplateforcomplementarystrand(hasOkazaki

    fragments,usesDNApolymerase,etc.) RNA

    singlestranded,RibonucleicAcid(riboseinsteadofdeoxyribose) fourbases:Adenine,Uracil,Guanine,Cytosine

    threetypes rRNA:formsribosomes tRNA:transportsaminoacids

    fromcytoplasmtoribosome mRNAcarriesinformationfor

    proteinstructure

    Proteinsynthesis transcription:copiesinformationfrom

    DNAtomRNA mRNAtransportedthenfrom

    DNAtoaribosome translation:informationtranslatedfrom

    languageofnucleotidestolanguageofaminoacids

  • Photosynthesis&Respiration

    respiration occursinmitochondriaofplantsandanimals

    photosynthesis

    lightreactions

  • CalvinCycle:

    cellularrespiration