Scientific Method
Cells & Transport
Macromolecules/Enzymes
Ecology/Energy Flow
Genetics and Inheritance
Photosynthesis/Cellular Respiration
100

An observation

What is information gathered using the senses

100

The organelles that is the powerhouse of the cell

What is mitochondria

100

the function of carbohydrates

What is Provides quick energy for the body

100

Give an example of a biotic and abiotic factor.

What is Biotic = living (e.g., tree, fish), Abiotic = non-living (e.g., water, sunlight, temperature)

100

Known as the "Father of Genetics"

What is Gregor Mendel

100

What is the equation for photosynthesis?

6CO₂ + 6H₂O + Light → C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂ (Carbon dioxide + Water + Light energy → Glucose + Oxygen)

200

The 8 characteristics of life?

What is made of cells, DNA, Grow and develop, respond to stimuli, maintain homeostasis, reproduce, use energy, adapt over time

200

The difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells

What is Prokaryotic cells (bacteria) have no nucleus or membrane-bound organelles; eukaryotic cells (plants, animals) do.

200

The 4 macromolecules

Carbohydrates, Lipids, Proteins, Nucleic Acids

200

The difference between a food chain and a food web

What is A food chain shows one pathway of energy flow; a food web shows multiple interconnected food chains.

200

the difference between dominant and recessive traits

What is Dominant traits show with one allele (AA, Aa), recessive traits need two copies (aa) to appear.

200

How do plants get their energy?

They use light energy from the Sun to perform photosynthesis and produce glucose.

300

The difference between an observation and an inference

What is an observation is based on the senses; an inference is on a conclusion drawn from observations

300

Part of the cell controls what enters and leaves

What is The cell membrane

300

What does an enzyme do?

Speeds up chemical reactions by lowering activation energy.

300

How does the carbon cycle help sustain life on Earth?

What is It cycles carbon between the atmosphere, plants, animals, and decomposers, allowing organisms to produce energy and grow.

300

What is a Punnett square, and how is it used

What is A diagram used to predict genetic trait inheritance from parent alleles.

300

How do cellular respiration and photosynthesis depend on each other?

The products of photosynthesis (glucose & oxygen) are used in cellular respiration, and the products of cellular respiration (carbon dioxide & water) are used in photosynthesis.

400
Homeostasis and it's importance

Homeostasis is the maintenance of stable internal conditions

400

The difference between passive and active transport

What is passive transport moves molecules without energy (diffusion, osmosis); active transport requires energy (ATP) to move molecules against a gradient.

400

How temperature and pH affect enzyme activity

Enzymes work best at optimal temperature and pH; extreme changes can denature (destroy) them.

400

What happens if a keystone species is removed from an ecosystem?

The ecosystem becomes unbalanced, possibly leading to overpopulation of some species and extinction of others.

400

The difference between mitosis and meiosis

Mitosis = two identical cells for growth/repair; Meiosis = four unique gametes (sperm/egg) for reproduction.

400

What are the two types of fermentation?

Lactic acid fermentation (occurs in muscles, produces lactic acid) and alcoholic fermentation (occurs in yeast, produces ethanol and CO₂)

500

An independent vs dependent variable in an experiment

What is the independent variable is what the scientist changes; the dependent is what scientist measures

500

The three types of passive transport, and how they work

  • Diffusion – Molecules move from high to low concentration 
  • Osmosis – Water moves across a membrane from high to low concentration.
  • Facilitated Diffusion – Large or charged molecules move through a protein channel 
500

The monomer of proteins, and why it is important?

What is Amino acids; they build proteins for muscle, enzymes, and cellular functions.

500

The difference between primary and secondary succession

Primary succession occurs in areas with no prior life (bare rock); secondary succession happens after a disturbance (fire, flood, human activity).

500

What is a mutation, and how can it affect an organism?

A mutation is a change in DNA; it can be beneficial, harmful (cancer), or neutral depending on its effect on the organism's traits.

500

Why do cells need ATP?

ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is the main energy molecule used for cellular processes such as active transport, muscle contractions, and chemical reactions.

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