These are the two inputs to cellular respiration.
What are glucose and oxygen?
When molecules move from high to low concentration.
What is diffusion?
When bacteria evolve to not be susceptible to the use of antibiotics.
What is antibiotic resistance?
A cell identifier.
What is an antigen?
The heart, veins, and arteries.
What is the circulatory system?
Along with ATP, these are the two products of cellular respiration.
What are CO2 and H2O?
The organelle that stores water.
What is a vacuole?
When an organism blends in with its surroundings to avoid being seen by predators.
What is camouflage?
The immune system's primary defense.
What is the skin and mucous membranes?
The lungs, trachea, bronchi.
What is the respiratory system?
This is the organelle where cellular respiration takes place.
What is the mitochondria?
When two sides of a membrane have an equal amount of solutes.
What is isotonic?
These random genetic events are the driving force of natural selection.
What are mutations?
These white blood cells engulf pathogens.
What are macrophages or phagocytes?
The brain, spinal chord, meninges.
This part of the body will have the most mitochondria.
What are the muscles?
An area with fewer solutes.
What is hypotonic?
The man who coined the term "natural selection."
Who was Charles Darwin?
These cells hold onto antibodies to prevent future infections.
What are memory B-cells?
The kidneys, urethra, bladder.
What is the excretory system?
This is the rate of oxygen consumption, used to measure an athlete's abilities.
What is VO2 max?
Plant cells must have high concentrations of water inside of them in order to produce this type of pressure on the cell wall.
What is turgor pressure?
This is the gene that makes some people immune to the black plague.
What is the ERAP2 gene?
This organ works with the bone marrow to produce T-cells.
What is the Thymus?
The pancreas, gallbladder, small intestine.
What is the digestive system?