Bio Paper 2

    Cards (83)

    • Homeostasis
      An organism's ability to regulate internal conditions even when external conditions change
    • Importance of homeostasis
      • Allows crucial chemical reactions involving enzymes to happen at an Optimum rate
      • Regulates blood glucose concentration, temperature, and water levels
    • Nervous system regulation of homeostasis
      1. Receptor detects change
      2. Electrical signal travels to spine through sensory and relay neurons
      3. Signal travels across synapse by neurotransmitter
      4. Signal goes to brain
      5. Conscious decision to act
      6. Signal goes back to effector via relay and motor neurons
    • Reflex
      Signal bypasses the brain and goes straight through the spine to the effector
    • Effectors
      Glands that produce specific chemicals the body needs
    • Investigating reaction time
      1. Hold ruler between finger and thumb
      2. Drop ruler without warning
      3. Measure distance fallen before caught
      4. Repeat multiple times and take mean average
    • Parts of the brain
      • Cerebral cortex - responsible for higher level functions like memory, speech, problem solving
      • Cerebellum - responsible for motor skills, movement, balance, coordination
      • Medulla oblongata - controls unconscious actions like heart rate and breathing
    • MRI scans

      Magnetic resonance imaging - way of seeing brain activity safely
    • Accommodation in the eye
      For far objects: Ciliary muscles relax, suspensory ligaments tighten, lens becomes thin
      For near objects: Ciliary muscles contract, suspensory ligaments slacken, lens becomes fatter
    • Pupil
      Hole in the iris that can change size depending on light intensity
    • Retina
      Contains rods (detect light intensity) and cones (detect colour)
    • Myopia
      Shortsightedness - can't focus on far objects
    • Hyperopia
      Longsightedness - can't focus on near objects
    • Thermoregulation
      Brain senses blood temperature
      Sends nervous and hormonal signals to effectors
      Effectors cause body to lose or retain heat
    • Endocrine system
      System of glands that produce hormones that travel to effectors via the blood
    • Pituitary gland
      Main or master gland that produces hormones in response to stimuli
    • Pancreas
      Produces insulin to regulate blood glucose levels
    • Type 1 diabetes
      Pancreas can't produce enough insulin
    • Type 2 diabetes

      Cells no longer absorb glucose properly
    • Water and nitrogen balance
      Body loses water through exhaling, sweating, urinating
      Kidneys remove excess water from blood and mix with urea to form urine
      Antidiuretic hormone regulates water reabsorption in kidneys
    • Dialysis
      Process that does the job of non-functioning kidneys
    • Menstrual cycle
      FSH causes egg maturation and estrogen production
      LH causes egg release
      Progesterone maintains uterus lining
    • IVF
      In vitro fertilization - eggs harvested and fertilized in lab, then implanted
    • Adrenaline
      Hormone that increases heart and breathing rate in stressful situations
    • Thyroxin
      Hormone secreted by thyroid that controls metabolic rate
    • Plant hormones
      Gibberellins - seed germination, flowering, fruit size
      Ethylene - fruit ripening
      Auxins - shoot and root growth
    • Investigating plant tropisms
      Place seeds on damp cotton wool, stand dish on side, turn 90 degrees - observe root growth
    • Meiosis
      Process of cell division that produces gametes with half the normal number of chromosomes
    • Asexual reproduction
      Produces genetically identical daughter cells via mitosis
    • Genome
      All the genetic material in an organism
    • Gene
      Section of DNA that codes for a specific protein
    • Human Genome Project
      Mapped out what every gene is responsible for coding
    • Genotype
      Genetic code stored in DNA
    • Phenotype
      How the genetic code is expressed in characteristics
    • Nucleotides
      Monomers that make up DNA
    • Asexual reproduction
      Only one parent is needed
    • Parasite that causes malaria
      Can do both asexual and sexual reproduction
    • DNA
      A two-stranded polymer in a double helix shape
    • Gene
      A section of DNA that codes for a specific protein
    • The Human Genome Project completed its initial goal in 2003 when scientists mapped out what every Gene is responsible for coding