What are the conditions for life? (9 things)
-are made of cells
-need energy
-grow & develop
-reproduce
-adapt
-respond to the environment
-CHON
-produce waste
-exchange gas
What is an adaption?
Features that increase an organisms chance of survival in an environment
What is an ecosystem?
an environment where (biotic) organisms interact with (abiotic) components
What is a population?
Group of individual species which use a common area, eat similar things, and can reproduce together
What is a community?
Different species interacting. (only biotic things)
What is genetic diversity?
Variations between the same species. (blood type, bill shape, wing span)
Species distribution…
There are more species near the equator.
The 5 kingdom system
animals, plants, fungi, prostisa (single celled organisms), Monera (bacteria)
What is interdependence?
How species rely on other species. (food chains/webs)
Commensalism?
When one species benefits and the other is NOT harmed
Mutualism?
Both species benefit
Parasitism?
One benefits, the other species is harmed.
Inter species competition
When 2 or more species compete for the same resource. This helps limit the size of populations.
What is a niche?
Where it lives, what it eats, what eats it, effects of the species (its entire role)
What is resource partitioning?
Having slightly different roles. Ex- birds eating same thing from different parts of a tree
What is natural selection?
the environment will ‘select’ which individuals will survive. Ex- all flowers die so those rabbits that eat flowers will die while the others live
Inherited vs non-inherited
Heritable characteristics are characteristics that can be DIRECTLY passed from the parents to the offspring. (skin colour)
Non-heritable characteristics include learning something from your parents (becoming athletic like them etc)
Discrete vs continuous variations
Discrete- there are only 2 options
Continuous- there are more than 2 options
Binary fission
only for single-celled organisms- when a cell splits to form an identical copy
Budding
when the parent produces a smaller version of itself which eventually detaches from the parent
Spore production
Like seeds, however produced by the division of cells
Vegetative reproduction
The reproduction of a plant NOT involving a seed. (cuttings, runners, suckers, tubers)
Sexual reproduction
2 organisms, half your genetic material from one parent. Includes the joining of gametes. Male gametes=sperm cells Female gametes=egg cells or ova. when they unite it forms a zygote. The zygote continuously divides until it forms a embryo.
Where are the male/female gametes on a plant?
Male is the pollen which is on the stamen
Female is the ovules found in the pistil