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Title: Grade 11 Biology Notes
Description: Covers the entire unit. Will help beginners study for tests, and has all the information required for all quizzes and unit tests. Covers things such as - plant and animal cells - cell cycles 31 pages!!! - the human body and organ systems - cell structure
Description: Covers the entire unit. Will help beginners study for tests, and has all the information required for all quizzes and unit tests. Covers things such as - plant and animal cells - cell cycles 31 pages!!! - the human body and organ systems - cell structure
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Created by Lartiel Pants Wontercorporated™
Unit 1: Biology
*It begins again
A neverending cycle
The first of many
(too much CAH) **protip, do the chapter reviews on the moodle
Chapter 1: Cells and More Cells
1
...
2
1
...
4
Review
Microscopes
Parts and Functions:
Part
Tube
Function
Connects the eyepiece to the nosepiece
...
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Eyepiece
Arm
Nosepiece
The eyepiece is the lens of the microscope
and is present at the top of the machine
...
Supports the tube of the microscope and
connects it to the base of the microscope
...
Rotating this part of the microscope allows
the use of the different lenses
...
Objective Lenses
Usually, microscopes will have three to four
objective with magnifications of 4, 10, 40, and
100 respectively
...
These lenses provide the
magnification needed to see the microscopic
specimens a microscope is used for
...
Diaphragm
The diaphragm controls the amount of light
that is passing through the opening in the
center of the stage
...
Coarse adjustment knob
Used to focus in on the specimen while using
the low power lens by moving the stage or
upper part of the microscope up and down
...
Base
Provides support for the microscope
...
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Rules of the microscope:
1
...
2
...
3
...
4
...
5
...
6
...
7
...
8
...
9
...
10
...
11
...
Types of microscopes:
Leeuwenhoek - up to 250x
Fluorescence microscope - up to 1500x
One of the first microscopes, its creator,
Leeuwenhoek used it to view organisms he
called “beasties”
...
Upon
observation, certain cell structures of
substances glow
...
Brightfield/Darkfield - up to 2000x
This microscope is named as such because
the image viewed either has a bright or dark
background
...
Produces very realistic 3-D
images viewable only as photographs or on a
monitor
...
The images created by a
TEM can only be viewed using a separate
monitor
...
O
...
= measurement of F
...
V
...
O
...
/ #of times specimen fits on F
...
V
...
All living organisms are made of one or more cells
...
Cells are the basic organizational unit of all life
...
All cells come from preexisting cells
...
-”Spherical”
-Plant cells can be larger than
animal cells
-Chloroplast convert sunlight
into glucose, mitochondria
convert glucose into energy
-Rigid cell wall
-One large vacuole
-Membrane bound organelles
-Cytoplasm
-Similar organelle functions
Organelles:
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Organelle
Function
Cell membrane
Separates the inside of the cell from everything outside
...
Cytoskeleton
Supports structure and helps move proteins
...
Nucleus
Contains a cell’s DNA which controls all cell activity via
regulation of gene expression
...
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
Site where ribosomes bind and operate (produce proteins
and such)
...
Site where lipids are synthesized
...
Mitochondrion
Produces energy through cellular respiration (glucose +
oxygen -> carbon dioxide + ATP (adenosine triphosphate))
...
Vacuole
Effectively larger size versions of vesicles used to store or
transport small molecules
...
Golgi Apparatus/Body
Synthesizes, packages, and releases concentrated proteins
or lipids
...
Lysosome
Specialized vesicles that contain decomposition enzymes
to destroy many types of unwanted biological
materials/waste
...
Chloroplast
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Creates glucose via photosynthesis (carbon dioxide +
water --sunlight-> glucose, oxygen)
...
These
chromosomes come in pairs with one of each pair coming from either parent
...
Chromosomes are all made of DNA with each chromosome consisting of a single molecule of
DNA
...
These genes provide instructions for
making proteins
...
The current model for DNA was created by two scientists: James Watson and Francis
Crick
...
Adenine will always bond with
thymine and cytosine will always bind to guanine
...
Because of this exclusive binding property, there will always be the
same number of adenine bases as thymine, and same to cytosine and guanine
...
One of these include
amniocentesis, which consists of a needle being inserted into a pregnant woman’s abdominal
wall to withdraw a sample of amniotic fluid
...
This micrograph, called a karyotype, displays the
chromosomes in the cell, allowing doctors to detect a genetic disorder by seeing if there are too
many or too little of any chromosomes
...
Other techniques include the examination of a patient’s blood for specific enzymes, as
done when testing for PKU
...
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However, DNA screening has a few ethical issues
...
Transgenic Organisms:
Transgenic organisms are those that have had their genes altered, thus gaining new
characteristics they would not normally have
...
Uses of GMOs (transgenic organisms):
●
●
●
●
Bacteria can be genetically modified to produce many different types of proteins and
substances, useful for medicinal, industrial, and scientific applications
Common applications:
○ Insulin, hormone that regulates metabolism, needed to treat diabetes
○ Production of viruses for vaccines
○ Biomining and bioremediation
Many crops we eat today have been genetically modified to produce more crop per
season (provide more yield)
The same has been done for fish to increase the amount of flesh we get when farming
fish (increase growth speed, and increase yield)
Cloning:
Mammals are cloned by taking a nucleus from the egg of a female and a mature cell and
placing them next to each other in a bath of chemicals
...
Once fused, the cells will begin dividing to form an embryo
...
Mutations and Mutagens:
When a change occurs in the normal DNA building it is called a mutation
...
Mutations usually occur because of either chance or mutagens
...
These
include radiation, cigarettes, or whatever else you can name
...
As such, research has gone into gene therapy; however, this research
has so far been unsuccessful
...
The nuclear membrane begins to break
down, and the nucleolus disappears
...
k
...
centrioles) head towards opposite ends and
begin to form spindle fibers, which kind of act
as supporting struts
...
Metaphase - the phase of mitosis in which the
chromosomes are aligned across the centre of
the cell
The centrosomes reach the opposite ends
and have finished latching onto the
chromosomes, which them move towards the
center
...
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Anaphase - the phase of mitosis in which the
centromere splits apart and the chromatids are
pulled to opposite sides of the cell by the
spindle fibres
The proteins holding the chromosomes
together are broken apart
...
Telophase - the phase of mitosis in which two
daughter nuclei are formed
The spindle fibres start to disappear
...
Chromosomes become less coiled
and harder to see
...
It pinches the cell membrane until
the parent cell is separated into two
identical cells
...
The vesicles line up between the two nuclei, forming a
cell plate which grows outward and joins the old cell
wall
...
New cell membranes form on each side of the cell walls
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Why can’t cells continue growing
Cells divide for a multitude of reasons
...
This is important because surface area to volume ratio expands geometrically
...
Passive transport is on the amount of surface area exposed
...
If a cell becomes too large, there is a point where the surface area for
passive transport is not enough to sustain its volume
...
The more distance a particle needs to move, the more chance for it to wander
...
If a cell is too large, then critical substances, such as
oxygen, would potentially take months to reach their destinations
...
For example, some cells that
become highly mutated become cancerous as they no longer listen to the stop signs within the
cell cycle
...
Generally, cells require
several mutations before complete loss of control over cell division occurs
...
However, cancer cells do not follow this principle because
(most of them) emit an enzyme called telomerase, which tells cells they don’t need to kill
themselves
...
Diffusion
Movement of a substance in a solution from
an area of higher to lower concentration
...
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Membrane not required, simply just the
movement due to the concentration gradient
...
Imagine a droplet of dye dropped into a glass
of water
...
Plants use this principle to maintain rigidity
by filling its vacuole to fill the entirety of the
cell wall (turgor pressure)
...
1
2
...
These
tissues are formed by groups of specialized cells
...
Dermal tissue becomes cells in the outermost areas of
the plant such as epidermal cells
...
Additionally, they protect the inner tissues of
the plant and regulate the exchanges of water and
gases between the plant and its environment
...
Vascular tissue does one of the more important jobs in the plant, that being
the transportations of water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant
...
Meristematic cells
Meristematic cells, or meristem, are unspecialized plant cells that give
rise to a specific specialized cell
...
Meristematic cells can become three kinds of tissues: dermal tissue,
ground tissue, and vascular tissue
...
Meristematic cells are either located at the tip of plant shoots and roots,
or they are located laterally
...
The most active growth occurs near the terminal bud, while
the lateral buds are inactive but have the potential to produce new branches, leaves, and
flowers
...
Cell differentiation is the process that a cell undergoes to
acquire that specialization
...
Cell differentiation is the process of turning undifferentiated (stem) cells into specialised cells
...
Textbook:
Cell specialization - the process by which cells develop from similar cells into cells that have
specific functions within a multicellular organism
...
This hormone shuts down the development of cells in lateral buds
...
However, when the terminal bud is removed
(which happens naturally when a moose or deer nibbles the top branches), this suppressing
hormone is removed, and so the plant will start growing laterally and outwards
...
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Functions of Plant Cells
Leaf cells:
❖ Upper Surface
➢ Cuticle
■ Secreted by the epidermis
■ Waxy
■ Reduce the amount of water that evaporates from the leaf’s surface
➢ Epidermis
■ Protects the leaf
■ Does not perform photosynthesis
■ Sunlight passes through them to the photosynthesising palisade cells
❖ Mesophyll Tissue
➢ Palisade Tissue
■ Specialized to perform most of the photosynthesis in the leaf
■ Arranged in lines that resemble long poles side by side
■ Tops of cells meet the sunrays, so the rays pass through the length of the
cell
■ Packed with mitochondria for cellular respiration
➢ Spongy Parenchyma
■ Loosely packed cells - form a network with spaces in between
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Stores gases produced and required by the leaf e
...
Water Vapour,
Carbon Dioxide, and Oxygen
➢ Vascular bundles
■ Made of xylem and phloem
■ Form veins that go through the plant at regular intervals, kind of like a
salt shaker
■ The tips of these vascular tissues meet the open spaces in the
parenchyma tissue, where they drop off water and sugars or intake
sugars
...
Most plants perform photosynthesis to survive on a
daily basis
...
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Organs of plants
The Leaf:
The job of the leaf is to use its large surface area to perform photosynthesis and generate loads
of glucose using the energy of the sun, carbon dioxide, and water
...
The stem
contains most of the plant’s xylem tissues
...
They can also act as a storage area in some plants
...
The flower itself does not partake in
any self-maintenance
...
Most plants pollinate and are pollinated through
external forces such as the wind or insects
...
This anchors the plant firmly
into the ground
...
● a single tap root plant can easily be pulled out of the ground by strong
winds or animals (humans included)
Plants with fibrous roots, however, spread horizontally with no main
root
...
Benefits:
●
●
●
Cons:
●
●
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more surface area allows more absorption of more nutrients
large tangle of roots means the plant is harder to uproot
falling foliage supplies fresh nutrition
cannot reach the nutrients deeper in the ground
more competition for resources
○ e
...
two large plants/trees can’t grow next to each other (and survive)
Plant Viruses and Galls (their causes and differences from human tumours)
Plants can also be susceptible to viruses as well (LINK)
...
Others, such as tobacco mosaic virus
(TMV, right), are extremely destructive and often lowers the
yields of the plants
...
Galls: an abnormal growth of plant tissue caused by insects or microorganisms
(LINK)
...
Plants produce galls in response to outside forces (insects, fungi,
bacteria, viruses, etc
...
The tree is injected with a chemical from the insect that
changes the genes of the plants (which genes are turned on and which are turned off)
...
Pollination and Fertilization
Pollination is the act of transferring pollen from the male parts of a flower (the anther) to the
female parts of the flower (this is the stigma in the first instance)
...
This cell will then divide to form an embryo and ultimately, if all goes well, a new
individual of that organism
...
You should note that many types of plants do not produce pollen, although
they may still reproduce sexually, in which case pollination does not occur, but fertilisation
does
...
Fertilization is when the
male and female (gamete) reproductive cells unite to form a zygote
...
Its job is to take in water and
minerals from the ground
...
Shoot system:
The shoot system is responsible for providing support to the plant
...
Transport of sap
The shoot system transports the sap
...
The sap (which contains sugar converted from starch)
moves up through the phloem or xylem to where they are needed
...
The water then travels
through the cells or through the spaces surrounding the cells until they reach the endodermis,
which is surrounded by a waterproof substance that stops water from passing in between its
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cells
...
Once through, the water and nutrients travel up the xylem vessels to the leaves
up above
...
Then, the
process used changes to transpiration
...
This exerts a pull on the water
column inside the xylem and moves water from farther down the tree upwards to the leaves
...
When there is a large
amount of water in the leaf, the stomata open and transpiration increases, and vice versa
...
The water stays together because of two main
factors: adhesion and cohesion
...
In water, molecules are attracted, positive to negative (hydrogen to oxygen), and this
electric attraction causes surface tension and the two phenomena below
...
○ i
...
coherent: united, consistent
● The force of adhesion causes water to stick to the walls of the xylem for the same reason,
water is attracted to the molecules of the cell walls of the xylem
...
e
...
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Chapter 3: Animals
3
...
2
3
...
g
...
The
walls of arteries are thick so that they can
withstand the pressure of the heart pumping
blood
...
The walls of the veins are thinner,
as the pressure is not as high
...
Capillaries are the smallest of the body's blood vessels
...
They also collect carbon dioxide waste materials and
fluids for return to the veins
...
It can only
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type or organ type
divide into itself
...
Stem cell research
This type of research is highly controversial as it is often required for it to be done using
embryonic stem cells
...
However,
recent research has shown that adult stem cells can be induced to become totipotent cells, thus
allowing research to be conducted without embryonic stem cells
...
Scanning Technologies
Type
Technology
X-ray
-
Produced by transmitting
electromagnetic radiation
through the body, X rays go
through soft tissue and thus
hard tissue will be shown
through contrast
...
It also includes public health
strategies, which are co-ordinated efforts to reduce the incidence of various health problems
...
What are vaccinations?
Vaccinations are the process by which vaccines are given by mouth or injection to provide active
immunity against a disease
...
Active immunity is the creation of antibodies because of the exposure to
a pathogen
...
g
...
coli)
...
However, if a pathogen does enter your body, the
immune system then tries to attack and destroy the invader
...
This causes inflammation
...
Any material that the body
considers foreign and that stimulates this response is called an antigen
...
White
blood cells and other disease fighting molecules are manufactured in the bone marrow
...
Each antibody identifies and
attaches to a specific antigen
...
Examples of infectious diseases
SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) entered Canada in 2003
...
It is easily transferred
through the air, and does not have vaccination available
...
AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is caused by HIV (Human Immunodeficiency
Virus), which attacks the immune system itself
...
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West Nile Virus is a virus that is spread by mosquitoes
...
The Public Health Agency of Canada now
coordinates a strategy to reduce people’s exposure to the virus, by identifying the presence of
the disease and informing the public
...
Clearly, one of best ways to prevent cancer is to avoid the substances and situations ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
that cause cells to mutate in this way
...
For example, people did not know for a long time that asbestos was carcinogenic
...
Other causes of cancer are not known and so cannot be avoided
...
They are tests used to detect cancer cells at an early stage of
the disease so that it can be treated more effectively
...
For how long? I don’t know
...
By removing some cervical cells using the
technique called PAP smear, the cells can be examined for abnormalities that might indicate the
presence of cancer
...
Title: Grade 11 Biology Notes
Description: Covers the entire unit. Will help beginners study for tests, and has all the information required for all quizzes and unit tests. Covers things such as - plant and animal cells - cell cycles 31 pages!!! - the human body and organ systems - cell structure
Description: Covers the entire unit. Will help beginners study for tests, and has all the information required for all quizzes and unit tests. Covers things such as - plant and animal cells - cell cycles 31 pages!!! - the human body and organ systems - cell structure