Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Brief Contents
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- About the Authors
- Contents
- Preface
- 1. An Introduction to Life on Earth
- Case Study: The Boundaries of Life
- 1.1. What is Life?
- Organisms Acquire and Use Materials and Energy
- Organisms Actively Maintain Organized Complexity
- Organisms Sense and Respond to Stimuli
- Organisms Grow
- Organisms Reproduce
- Organisms, Collectively, Have the Capacity to Evolve
- Case Study Continued: The Boundaries of Life
- 1.2. What is Evolution?
- Three Natural Processes Underlie Evolution
- Case Study Continued: The Boundaries of Life
- 1.3. How do Scientists Study Life?
- Life May be Studied at Different Levels
- Biologists Classify Organisms Based on Their Evolutionary Relationships
- 1.4. What is Science?
- Science Is Based on General Underlying Principles
- The Scientific Method Is an Important Tool of Scientific Inquiry
- Biologists Test Hypotheses Using Controlled Experiments
- Scientific Theories Have Been Thoroughly Tested
- Science Is a Human Endeavor
- How do we know that? Controlled Experiments Provide Reliable Data
- Case Study Revisited: The Boundaries of Life
- Unit 1: The Life of the Cell
- 2. Atoms, Molecules, and Life
- Case Study: Unstable Atoms Unleashed
- 2.1. What Are Atoms?
- 2.2. How do Atoms Interact to Form Molecules?
- 2.3. Why is Water so Important to Life?
- 3. Biological Molecules
- Case Study: Puzzling Proteins
- 3.1. Why is Carbon so Important in Biological Molecules?
- 3.2. How are Large Biological Molecules Synthesized?
- 3.3. What are Carbohydrates?
- 3.4. What are Proteins?
- 3.5. What are Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids?
- 3.6. What are Lipids?
- 4. Cell Structure and Function
- Case Study: New Parts for Human Bodies
- 4.1. What is the Cell Theory?
- 4.2. What are the Basic Attributes of Cells?
- 4.3. What are the Major Features of Prokaryotic Cells?
- 4.4. What are the Major Features of Eukaryotic Cells?
- 5. Cell Membrane Structure and Function
- Case Study: Vicious Venoms
- 5.1. How is the Structure of the Cell Membrane Related to its Function?
- 5.2. How do Substances Move Across Membranes?
- 5.3. How do Specialized Junctions Allow Cells to Connect and Communicate?
- 6. Energy Flow in the Life of a Cell
- Case Study: Energy Unleashed
- 6.1. What is Energy?
- 6.2. How is Energy Transformed During Chemical Reactions?
- 6.3. How is Energy Transported Within Cells?
- 6.4. How do Enzymes Promote Biochemical Reactions?
- 6.5. How are Enzymes Regulated?
- 7. C apturing Solar Energy: Photosynthesis
- Case Study: Did the Dinosaurs Die from Lack of Sunlight?
- 7.1. What is Photosynthesis?
- 7.2. The Light Reactions: How is Light Energy Converted to Chemical Energy?
- 7.3. The Calvin Cycle: How is Chemical Energy Stored in Sugar Molecules?
- 8. Harvesting Energy: Glycolysis and Cellular Respiration
- Case Study: Raising a King
- 8.1. How do Cells Obtain Energy?
- 8.2. How does Glycolysis Begin Breaking Down Glucose?
- 8.3. How does Cellular Respiration Extract Energy from Glucose?
- 8.4. How does Fermentation Allow Glycolysis to Continue When Oxygen is Lacking?
- Unit 2: Inheritance
- 9. Cellular Reproduction
- Case Study: Body, Heal Thyself
- 9.1. What are the Functions of Cell Division?
- 9.2. What Occurs During the Prokaryotic Cell Cycle?
- 9.3. How is the DNA in Eukaryotic Chromosomes Organized?
- 9.4. What Occurs During the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle?
- 9.5. How does Mitotic Cell Division Produce Genetically Identical Daughter Cells?
- 9.6. How is the Cell Cycle Controlled?
- 10. Meiosis: The Basis of Sexual Reproduction
- Case Study: The Rainbow Connection
- 10.1. How does Sexual Reproduction Produce Genetic Variability?
- 10.2. How does Meiotic Cell Division Produce Genetically Variable, Haploid Cells?
- 10.3. How do Meiosis and Union of Gametes Produce Genetically Variable Offspring?
- 10.4. When do Mitotic and Meiotic Cell Division Occur in the Life Cycles of Eukaryotes?
- 10.5. How do Errors in Meiosis Cause Human Genetic Disorders?
- 11. Patterns of Inheritance
- Case Study: Sudden Death on the Court
- 11.1. What is the Physical Basis of Inheritance?
- 11.2. How were the Principles of Inheritance Discovered?
- 11.3. How are Single Traits Inherited?
- 11.4. How are Multiple Traits Inherited?
- 11.5. Do the Mendelian Rules of Inheritance Apply to all Traits?
- 11.6. How are Genes Located on the Same Chromosome Inherited?
- 11.7. How are Sex and Sex-Linked Traits Inherited?
- 11.8. How are Human Genetic Disorders Inherited?
- 12. DNA: The Molecule of Heredity
- Case Study: Muscles, Mutations, and Myostatin
- 12.1. How did Scientists Discover that Genes are Made of DNA?
- 12.2. What is the Structure of DNA?
- 12.3. How does DNA Encode Genetic Information?
- 12.4. How does DNA Replication Ensure Genetic Constancy During Cell Division?
- 12.5. What are Mutations, and how do they Occur?
- 13. Gene Expression and Regulation
- Case Study: Cystic Fibrosis
- 13.1. How is the Information in DNA Used in a Cell?
- 13.2. How is the Information in a Gene Transcribed into RNA?
- 13.3. How is the Base Sequence of mRNA Translated into Protein?
- 13.4. How do Mutations Affect Protein Structure and Function?
- 13.5. How is Gene Expression Regulated?
- 14. Biotechnology
- Case Study: Guilty or Innocent?
- 14.1. What is Biotechnology?
- 14.2. What Natural Processes Recombine DNA between Organisms and between Species?
- 14.3. How is Biotechnology Used in Forensic Science?
- 14.4. How is Biotechnology Used to Make Genetically Modified Organisms?
- 14.5. How are Transgenic Organisms Used?
- 14.6. How is Biotechnology Used to Learn About the Genomes of Humans and Other Organisms?
- 14.7. How is Biotechnology Used for Medical Diagnosis and Treatment?
- 14.8. What are the Major Ethical Issues of Modern Biotechnology?
- Unit 3: Evolution and Diversity of Life
- 15. Principles of Evolution
- Case Study: What Good Are Wisdom Teeth and Ostrich Wings?
- 15.1. How did Evolutionary Thought Develop?
- 15.2. How does Natural Selection Work?
- 15.3. How do we Know that Evolution has Occurred?
- 15.4. What is the Evidence that Populations Evolve by Natura
- 16. How Populations Evolve
- Case Study: Evolution of a Menace
- 16.1. How are Populations, Genes, and Evolution Related?
- 16.2. What Causes Evolution?
- 16.3. How does Natural Selection Work?
- 17. The Origin of Species
- Case Study: Discovering Diversity
- 17.1. What is a Species?
- 17.2. How is Reproductive Isolation between Species Maintained?
- 17.3. How do New Species Form?
- 17.4. What Causes Extinction?
- 18. The History of Life
- Case Study: Ancient DNA Has Stories to Tell
- 18.1. How Did Life Begin?
- 18.2. What were the Earliest Organisms Like?
- 18.3. What were the Earliest Multicellular Organisms Like?
- 18.4. How did Life Invade the Land?
- 18.5. What Role has Extinction Played in the History of Life?
- 18.6. How did Humans Evolve?
- 19. Systematics: Seeking Order Amid Diversity
- Case Study: Origin of a Killer
- 19.1. How are Organisms Named and Classified?
- 19.2. What are the Domains of Life?
- 19.3. Why do Classifications Change?
- 19.4. How Many Species Exist?
- 20. The Diversity of Prokaryotes and Viruses
- Case Study: Unwelcome Dinner Guests
- 20.1. Which Organisms are Members of the Domains Archaea and Bacteria?
- 20.2. How do Prokaryotes Survive and Reproduce?
- 20.3. How do Prokaryotes Affect Humans and Other Organisms?
- 20.4. What Are Viruses, Viroids, and Prions?
- 21. The Diversity of Protists
- Case Study: Green Monster
- 21.1. What are Protists?
- 21.2. What are the Major Groups of Protists?
- 22. The Diversity of Plants
- Case Study: Queen of the Parasites
- 22.1. What are the Key Features of Plants?
- 22.2. How have Plants Evolved?
- 22.3. What are the Major Groups of Plants?
- 22.4. How do Plants Affect Other Organisms?
- 23. The Diversity of Fungi
- Case Study: Humongous Fungus
- 23.1. What are the Key Features of Fungi?
- 23.2. What are the Major Groups of Fungi?
- 23.3. How do Fungi Interact with Other Species?
- 23.4. How do Fungi Affect Humans?
- 24. Animal Diversity I: Invertebrates
- Case Study: Physicians’ Assistants
- 24.1. What are the Key Features of Animals?
- 24.2. Which Anatomical Features Mark Branch Points on the Animal Evolutionary Tree?
- 24.3. What are the Major Animal Phyla?
- 25. Animal Diversity II: Vertebrates
- Case Study: Fish Story
- 25.1. What are the Key Features of Chordates?
- 25.2. Which Animals are Chordates?
- 25.3. What are the Major Groups of Vertebrates?
- Unit 4: Behavior and Ecology
- 26. Animal Behavior
- Case Study: Sex and Symmetry
- 26.1. How does Behavior Arise?
- 26.2. How do Animals Compete for Resources?
- 26.3. How do Animals Behave when they Mate?
- 26.4. How do Animals Communicate?
- 26.5. What do Animals Communicate About?
- 26.6. Why do Animals Play?
- 26.7. What Kinds of Societies do Animals Form?
- 26.8. Can Biology Explain Human Behavior?
- 27. Population Growth and Regulation
- Case Study: The Return of the Elephant Seals
- 27.1. What is a Population and how does Population Size Change?
- 27.2. How is Population Growth Regulated?
- 27.3. How do Life History Strategies Differ Among Species?
- 27.4. How are Organisms Distributed in Populations?
- 27.5. How is the Human Population Changing?
- 28. Community Interactions
- Case Study: The Fox’s Tale
- 28.1. Why are Community Interactions Important?
- 28.2. How does the Ecological Niche Influence Competition?
- 28.3. How do Consumer–Prey Interactions Shape Evolutionary Adaptations?
- 28.4. How do Mutualisms Benefit Different Species?
- 28.5. How do Keystone Species Influence Community Structure?
- 28.6. How do Species Interactions Change Community Structure Over Time?
- 29. Energy Flow and Nutrient Cycling in Ecosystems
- Case Study: Dying Fish Feed an Ecosystem
- 29.1. How do Nutrients and Energy Move Through Ecosystems?
- 29.2. How does Energy Flow Through Ecosystems?
- 29.3. How do Nutrients Cycle within and Among Ecosystems?
- 29.4. What Happens when Humans Disrupt Nutrient Cycles?
- 30. Earth’s Diverse Ecosystems
- Case Study: Food of the Gods
- 30.1. What Determines the Distribution of Life on Earth?
- 30.2. What Factors Influence Earth’s Climate?
- 30.3. What are the Principal Terrestrial Biomes?
- 30.4. What are the Principal Aquatic Biomes?
- 31. Conserving Earth’s Biodiversity
- Case Study: The Wolves of Yellowstone
- 31.1. What is Conservation Biology?
- 31.2. Why is Biodiversity Important?
- 31.3. Is Earth’s Biodiversity Diminishing?
- 31.4. What are the Major Threats to Biodiversity?
- 31.5. Why is Habitat Protection Necessary to Preserve Biodiversity?
- 31.6. Why is Sustainability Essential for a Healthy Future?
- Unit 5: Animal Anatomy and Physiology
- 32. Homeostasis and the Organization of the Animal Body
- Case Study: Overheated
- 32.1. Homeostasis: Why and how do Animals Regulate their Internal Environment?
- 32.2. How is the Animal Body Organized?
- 33. Circulation
- Case Study: Living from Heart to Heart
- 33.1. What are the Major Features and Functions of Circulatory Systems?
- 33.2. How does the Vertebrate Heart Work?
- 33.3. What is Blood?
- 33.4. What are the Types and Functions of Blood Vessels?
- 33.5. How does the Lymphatic System Work with the Circulatory System?
- 34. Respiration
- Case Study: Straining to Breathe—with High Stakes
- 34.1. Why Exchange Gases and what are the Requirements for Gas Exchange?
- 34.2. How do Respiratory Adaptations Minimize Diffusion Distances?
- 34.3. How is Air Conducted Through the Human Respiratory System?
- 34.4. How does Gas Exchange Occur in the Human Respiratory System?
- 35. Nutrition and Digestion
- Case Study: Dying to Be Thin
- 35.1. What Nutrients do Animals Need?
- 35.2. How does Digestion Occur?
- 35.3. How do Humans Digest Food?
- 36. The Urinary System
- Case Study: Paying it Forward
- 36.1. What are the Major Functions of Urinary Systems?
- 36.2. What are Some Examples of Invertebrate Urinary Systems?
- 36.3. What are the Structures of the Mammalian Urinary System?
- 36.4. How is Urine Formed?
- 36.5. How do Vertebrate Urinary Systems Help Maintain Homeostasis?
- 37. Defenses Against Disease
- Case Study: Flesh-Eating Bacteria
- 37.1. How does the Body Defend itself Against Disease?
- 37.2. How do Nonspecific Defenses Function?
- 37.3. What are the Key Components of the Adaptive Immune System?
- 37.4. How does the Adaptive Immune System Recognize Invaders?
- 37.5. How does the Adaptive Immune System Attack Invaders?
- 37.6. How does the Adaptive Immune System Remember its Past Victories?
- 37.7. How does Medical Care Assist the Immune Response?
- 37.8. What Happens when the Immune System Malfunctions?
- 37.9. How does the Immune System Combat Cancer?
- 38. Chemical Control of the Animal Body: The Endocrine System
- Case Study: Insulin Resistance
- 38.1. How do Animal Cells Communicate?
- 38.2. How do Endocrine Hormones Produce their Effects?
- 38.3. What are the Structures and Functions of the Mammalian Endocrine System?
- 39. The Nervous System
- Case Study: How Do I Love Thee?
- 39.1. What are the Structures and Functions of Nerve Cells?
- 39.2. How do Neurons Produce and Transmit Information?
- 39.3. How does the Nervous System Process Information and Control Behavior?
- 39.4. How are Nervous Systems Organized?
- 39.5. What are the Structures and Functions of the Human Nervous System?
- 40. The Senses
- Case Study: Bionic Ears
- 40.1. How do Animals Sense their Environment?
- 40.2. How is Temperature Sensed?
- 40.3. How are Mechanical Stimuli Detected?
- 40.4. How is Sound Detected?
- 40.5. How are Gravity and Movement Detected?
- 40.6. How is Light Perceived?
- 40.7. How are Chemicals Sensed?
- 40.8. How is Pain Perceived?
- 41. Action and Support: The Muscles and Skeleton
- Case Study: Legs of Gold
- 41.1. How do Muscles Contract?
- 41.2. How do Cardiac and Smooth Muscles Differ from Skeletal Muscle?
- 41.3. How do Muscles and Skeletons Work Together to Provide Movement?
- 42. Animal Reproduction
- Case Study: To Breed a Rhino
- 42.1. How do Animals Reproduce?
- 42.2. What are the Structures and Functions of Human Reproductive Systems?
- 42.3. How can People Prevent Pregnancy?
- 43. Animal Development
- Case Study: Rerunning the Program of Development
- 43.1. What are the Principles of Animal Development?
- 43.2. How do Direct and Indirect Development Differ?
- 43.3. How does Animal Development Proceed?
- 43.4. How is Development Controlled?
- 43.5. How do Humans Develop?
- 43.6. Is Aging the Final Stage of Human Development?
- Unit 6: Plant Anatomy and Physiology
- 44. Plant Anatomy and Nutrient Transport
- Case Study: Autumn in Vermont
- 44.1. How are Plant Bodies Organized?
- 44.2. How do Plants Grow?
- 44.3. What are the Differentiated Tissues and Cell Types of Plants?
- 44.4. What are the Structures and Functions of Leaves?
- 44.5. What are the Structures and Functions of Stems?
- 44.6. What are the Structures and Functions of Roots?
- 44.7. How do Plants Acquire Nutrients?
- 44.8. How do Plants Move Water and Minerals from Roots to Leaves?
- 44.9. How do Plants Transport Sugars?
- 45. Plant Reproduction and Development
- Case Study: Some Like It Hot—and Stinky!
- 45.1. How do Plants Reproduce?
- 45.2 What are the Functions and Structures of Flowers?
- 45.3. How do Fruits and Seeds Develop?
- 45.4. How do Seeds Germinate and Grow?
- 45.5. How do Plants and their Pollinators Interact?
- 45.6. How do Fruits Help to Disperse Seeds?
- 46. Plant Responses to the Environment
- Case Study: Predatory Plants
- 46.1. What are Some Major Plant Hormones?
- 46.2. How do Hormones Regulate Plant Life Cycles?
- 46.3. How do Plants Communicate, Defend Themselves, and Capture Prey?
- Appendix I: Biological Vocabulary: Common Roots, Prefixes, and Suffixes
- Appendix II: Periodic Table of the Elements
- Appendix III: Metric System Conversions
- Appendix IV: Classification of Major Groups of Eukaryotic Organisms
- Glossary
- Answers to Think Critically, Evaluate This, Multiple Choice, and Fill-in-the-Blank Questions
- Credits
- Index
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