Levels of Organization
Cell Transport
Cell transport 2
Homeostasis
Homeostasis 2
100

The smallest level of organization.

cell

100

What is the difference between passive and active?

Passive goes from high to low and doesn't use energy. Active is the opposite.

100

What is endocytosis?

Using a vesicle to move things into the cell

100

What is the effect of insulin and glucagon?

Insulin lowers blood sugar and glucagon raises blood sugar

100

a stable internal environment

homeostasis

200

What makes up organ systems?

organs
200

What is the energy molecules?

ATP

200

What is osmosis?

The movement of water

200

How will the body react to high temperatures and low temperatures?

High temps: Sweating, vasodialation

Low temps: Shivering (muscle contraction), vasoconstriction

200

You eat an ice cream sundae.  What happens to your blood sugar level and how does your body respond to the change?

level rises and body responds by lowering it

300

Level between cell and organ.

tissue

300

What is the difference between facilitated diffusion and diffusion?

Facilitated diffusion needs help from a protein.

300

Which transports move high to low?

Osmosis, diffusion and facilitated diffusion

300

What are examples of positive feedback and negative feedback?

Postive- child birth, blood platellets 

Negative- blood sugar, blood ph, temperature

300

the type of feedback loop for labor contractions

positive

400

A stomach is an example of this level.

organ

400

What happens to your cells if you were to drink salt water?

Water moves out because it creates a hypertonic solution around the cells

400

What do the molecules move across for cell transport?

The cell membrane and sometimes need help from a protein

400

Give me an example of a stimulus and it's response.

Answers will vary

400

What is the difference between positive and negative feedback?

positive: amplifies the response

negative: opposite to get back to normal

500

Put these in order from smallest to largest: tissue, atom, organism, cell, organ system.

atom, cell, tissue, organ system, organism

500

What is hypertonic vs hypotonic?

Hypertonic (more water inside so it moves out and shrivels)

Hypotonic (less water inside so it swells because water moves in)

500

Which transport uses a protein and energy?

Molecular pumps

500

How will the kidneys react to not drinking water?

They will hold more water in to maintain homeostasis

500

What is vasoconstriction and vasodialation? 

vasoconstriction- constricting blood vessels

Vasodialation- dialating or opening blood vessels

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