Life in the Earth System
Cells to Body Systems
Homeostasis in Humans
Bioengineering
Homeostasis in Other Organisms
100

What are some different types of models that exist?

Physical, mathematical, simulations, and conceptual models.

100

What do specialized cells do?

Work together for the entire organism to maintain homeostasis.

100

What is homeostasis?

Maintaining a stable, internal environment

100

What is the key word to remember for:

A) Criteria

B) Constraints

A) Wants

B) Must 

100

What is osmoregulation?

Controlling the water and salt balance in the body

200

What is an example of a conceptual model?

Flowchart to show the concepts/pathway taken.

200

What are some parts of cells we talked about in class found in plant AND animal cells? Give me 4. 

Mitochondria, Nucleus, Ribosomes, Cell membrane, Cytoskeleton, Nuclear envelope, and Endoplasmic Reticulum

200

What is a negative feedback loop? 

Does it mean this is a bad loop?

When your body tries to return directly to set point.

No! Negative does NOT mean bad.

200

If your design does not cover all of the constraints, what must be done?

Redesigning. Constraints have to be met so you must go back and recreate your design to meet this list

200

Is a freshwater fish concerned about salt levels? What do they release/expel as a result? 

Yes! Large amounts of water and small amounts of salt

300

What are the 4 spheres on Earth?

Hydrosphere, Atmosphere, Geosphere, and Biosphere. 

300

What are types of cells found ONLY in plant cells?

Cell wall, vacuole, and chloroplasts. 

300

What is a positive feedback loop? 

When your body is taken farther away from set point before it returns to normal.

300

What is the first step in the engineering/design process?

Identifying the problem

300

Is a saltwater fish concerned about salt levels? What is released/expelled as a result?

No! Large amounts of salt and small amounts of water. 

400

Define each of the spheres of Earth.

1) Hydrosphere: all water

2) Atmosphere: all air

3) Biosphere: all living

4) Geosphere: all land 

400

1. What do ribosomes do? 

2. What do mitochondria do? 

1. Produce proteins

2. Supply energy 

400

What is the stimulus, receptor, control center, and effector in the following example:

You are outside playing a game of tag without a coat on. The temperature is 30 degrees Fahrenheit. You begin to shiver. 

Stimulus: the cold

Receptors: in your skin

Control center: brain

Effector: shiver

400

What does a decisions matrix do?

Helps you choose which design best meets your criteria and constraints. 

400

What do the stomata do in a plant?

Exchange the carbon dioxide (take in) and oxygen (release). Water is also lost in the process.

500

Organize the following in order from smallest to largest:

Organism, Population, Ecosystem, Community

Organism, Population, Community, Ecosystem, 

500

Which organ systems mainly interact when you are taking a test? Tell why for each. (Hint: Looking for 4) 

Nervous - thinking and sending electric impulses throughout the body

Muscular - your hand is moving to write

Respiratory - you are breathing

Skeletal - supports your body so you can move

500

When you exercise, explain what happens in your body (heart rate, temperature, or oxygen/carbon dioxide content).

Tell me the pathway that is taken for information using the terms: set point, receptors, control center, stimulus, and effectors.

Stimulus is the exercise. This increases your heart rate which takes you farther from set point, your happy resting heart rate. Your lungs are the receptors, noticing that you need to take in more oxygen, so your control center (brain) sends a message out for you to start breathing more rapidly. This increases your heart rate, the effector. 

500

When should you test your prototype and why?

After designing it to see if it meets the criteria and constraints laid out. 

500

What do plants roots do in response to drought?

They grow longer, branch out more, become thinner, and harden. 

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