biology

Cards (397)

  • Movement

    Action by an organism or part of an organism causing a change of position or place
  • Respiration
    Chemical reactions in cells that break down nutrient molecules and release energy for metabolism
  • Sensitivity
    Ability to detect and respond to changes in the internal or external environment
  • Reproduction
    Processes that make more of the same kind of organism
  • Excretion
    Removal of the waste products of metabolism and substances in excess of requirements
  • Nutrition
    Taking in of materials for energy, growth and development
  • Organisms can be classified into groups by the features that they share
  • Species
    A group of organisms that can reproduce to produce fertile offspring
  • Binomial system of naming species

    An internationally agreed system in which the scientific name of an organism is made up of two parts showing the genus and species
  • Classification systems aim to reflect evolutionary relationships
  • The sequences of bases in DNA are used as a means of classification
  • Groups of organisms which share a more recent ancestor (are more closely related) have base sequences in DNA that are more similar than those that share only a distant ancestor
  • Five kingdoms
    • Animal kingdom
    • Plant kingdom
    • Fungus
    • Protoctista
    • Prokaryote
  • Animal kingdom
    • Their cells have a nucleus, but no cell walls or chloroplasts
    • They feed on organic substances made by other living organisms
  • Plant kingdom
    • Their cells have a nucleus and cell walls made of cellulose and often contain chloroplasts
    • They feed by photosynthesis
    • They may have roots, stems and leaves (but some plants do not have these organs)
  • Fungus
    • They are usually multicellular (many-celled), but some such as yeast are unicellular (single-celled)
    • They have nuclei and cell walls, but the walls are not made of cellulose
    • They do not have chlorophyll
    • They feed by digesting waste organic material and absorbing it into their cells
  • Protoctista
    • They are multicellular or unicellular
    • Their cells have a nucleus and may or may not have a cell wall and chloroplasts
    • Some feed by photosynthesis and others feed on organic substances made by other organisms
  • Prokaryote
    • They are usually unicellular (single-celled)
    • They have no nucleus
    • They have cell walls, not made of cellulose
    • They have no mitochondria
    • They have a circular loop of DNA, which is free in the cytoplasm
    • They often have plasmids
  • Vertebrates
    • Fish
    • Amphibians
    • Reptiles
    • Birds
    • Mammals
  • Fish
    • They are vertebrates with scaly skin
    • They have gills throughout their life
    • They have fins
    • Their eggs have no shells and are laid in water
  • Amphibians
    • They are vertebrates with skin with no scales
    • Their eggs have no shells and are laid in water
    • The tadpoles live in water, but adults often live on land
    • The tadpoles have gills for gas exchange, but adults have lungs
  • Reptiles
    • They are vertebrates with scaly skin
    • They lay eggs with soft shells on land
  • Birds
    • They have feathers (and also sometimes a few scales)
    • They have a beak
    • Their front two limbs are wings (though not all birds can fly)
    • They lay eggs with hard shells
  • Mammals
    • They have hair on their skin
    • Their young develop in a uterus, attached to the mother by a placenta
    • The females have mammary glands, which produce milk to feed their young
    • They have different kinds of teeth (incisors, canines, premolars and molars)
    • They have a pinna (ear flap) on the outside of the body
    • They have sweat glands in the skin
    • They have a diaphragm
  • Arthropods
    • Insects
    • Crustaceans
    • Arachnids
    • Myriapods
  • Insects
    • They are arthropods with three pairs of jointed legs
    • They have two pairs of wings (one or both may be vestigial)
    • They have one pair of antennae
    • Their body is divided into a head, thorax and abdomen
    • They breathe through tubes called tracheae
  • Crustaceans
    • They are arthropods with more than four pairs of jointed legs
    • They have two pairs of antennae
  • Arachnids
    • They are arthropods with four pairs of jointed legs
    • They have no antennae
    • Their body is divided into two parts – a cephalothorax and abdomen
  • Myriapods
    • Their body consists of many similar segments
    • Each of their body segments has jointed legs
    • They have one pair of antennae
  • Ferns
    • Plants with leaves called fronds
    • They do not produce flowers, but instead reproduce by means of spores produced on the underside of the fronds
    • They are plants with roots, stems and leaves (fronds)
  • Flowering plants
    • They reproduce by using flowers
    • They are plants with roots, stems and leaves
    • They reproduce using flowers and seeds
    • Their seeds are produced inside an ovary, in the flower
  • Characteristic features of dicots
    • They have seeds with two cotyledons
    • They usually have a main root with side roots coming out from it
    • Their leaves have a network of veins
    • They have flower parts (e.g. petals) in multiples of four or five
    • They have vascular bundles in the stem, arranged in a ring
  • Characteristic features of monocots
    • They have seeds with one cotyledon
    • Their roots grow out directly from the stem
    • Their leaves have parallel veins
    • They have flower parts in multiples of three
    • They have vascular bundles in the stem, arranged randomly
  • Viruses
    • They are not living
    • They have a protein coat and genetic material inside without nucleus
  • Cytoplasm
    Found inside the cell and contains all the other cell structures
  • Nucleus
    The large nucleus is surrounded by a nuclear membrane to separate it from the cytoplasm
  • Cell membrane
    Surrounds the cell
  • Cell wall
    Made of cellulose and surrounds the cell membrane in plant cells
  • Chloroplasts
    Organelles found in the cytoplasm that are packed with the pigment chlorophyll and so are green in colour
  • Vacuoles
    Large vesicles that take up a large part of the interior of plant cell