biology p2

Cards (64)

  • Nervous system
    • One of the ways that different parts of our body communicate with each other
    • Consists of the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) and the peripheral nervous system (cranial nerves and other nerves throughout the body)
  • How nerves work
    1. Receptor (sensory organ) detects stimulus
    2. Sensory neuron transmits signal to relay neuron
    3. Relay neuron transmits signal to brain
    4. Brain sends signal back through motor neuron
    5. Effector (muscle or gland) carries out response
  • Neuron
    • Main body, axon (long tail), dendrites (hair-like connections to other neurons)
    • Axon covered in myelin sheath to speed up signal transmission
  • Synapse
    Gap between neurons where neurotransmitters transmit signals
  • Stimulants and depressants
    Drugs that speed up or slow down neurotransmitter transmission
  • Reflex
    Reaction that bypasses the brain, going directly from receptor to effector
  • Measuring reaction time

    1. Grab ruler when dropped
    2. Repeat with different stimuli (audible, distractions)
    3. Repeat after drinking sugary drink
  • Brain
    • Different parts control different functions (cerebral cortex for motor, cerebrum for movement, medulla oblongata for reflexes)
    • Can be imaged using CT scans or MRI scans
    • Nerves cross over as they enter the brain (contralateral control)
  • Eye
    • Light hits cornea, pupil, lens, focused on retina
    • Rods detect black/white, cones detect colour
    • Optic nerve transmits signal to brain
  • Accommodation
    Lens thickens/thins to focus on distant/close objects
  • Glands in endocrine system

    • Pituitary
    • Thyroid
    • Pancreas
    • Ovaries
    • Testes
    • Adrenal
  • Pancreas
    Produces insulin, which regulates blood sugar levels
  • Diabetes
    Pancreas can't produce enough insulin, leading to high blood sugar
  • Menstrual cycle
    1. FSH stimulates egg maturation
    2. LH triggers egg release
    3. Empty follicle produces progesterone
    4. Lining sheds during period
  • Thermoregulation
    • Controlling internal body temperature of 37°C
    • Sweating, hair standing on end, blood vessel dilation/constriction
  • Kidneys
    Control water levels, remove urea from blood
  • Contraception methods

    • Physical
    • Hormonal (pill, patch)
  • Fertility treatments

    Artificial insemination, IVF, hormone therapy, surrogacy, egg donation
  • Plant hormones

    • Auxins (promote/inhibit growth)
    • Ethene (ripens fruit)
    • Gibberellins (promote flowering, increase fruit size)
  • Tropisms
    Plant growth responses to light (phototropism), gravity (geotropism), water (hydrotropism)
  • Reproduction methods

    • Asexual
    • Sexual
  • Auxin
    A chemical that can make cells elongate or stop them from elongating, used as a herbicide and rooting powder
  • Ethene
    A chemical that can be used to ripen fruits
  • Gibberellins
    Chemicals that promote flowering and make fruit size bigger
  • How auxin works

    1. If in the shoot, light destroys it so it collects on the bottom side, making the stem grow upwards (positive phototropism)
    2. If in the root, it collects on the bottom side, inhibiting growth and making the root bend downwards
  • Methods of reproduction

    • Asexual
    • Sexual
  • Asexual reproduction

    A cell is cloned, no genetic variation between parents and offspring (mitosis)
  • Sexual reproduction

    Gametes (haploid cells) join to form a diploid cell, genetic variation created through meiosis
  • DNA
    A polymer with 4 bases (A, T, C, G), 3 bases form a triplet coding for an amino acid
  • Protein synthesis

    DNA is unzipped, RNA copies the code and takes it to the ribosome, ribosome assembles amino acids into a protein
  • Genome
    All the DNA in an organism
  • DNA structure

    Double helix
  • Gene
    Part of DNA coding for a specific protein
  • Alleles
    Different forms of the same gene
  • Genotype
    The genes an organism has
  • Phenotype
    The observable characteristics of an organism
  • Punnett square

    Used to predict offspring genotypes and phenotypes from parental genotypes
  • Homozygous
    Having two identical alleles
  • Heterozygous
    Having two different alleles
  • Some disorders can be passed down genetically, like cystic fibrosis