Heredity
Genetic Change
Infectious disease
Non-infectious disease
Working Scientifically
100

What is the main advantage of sexual reproduction compared to asexual reproduction?

It increases genetic variation, which improves survival chances in changing environments.

100

What type of mutation involves a single nucleotide change?

Point mutation.

100

Name two types of pathogens.

Bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, macroparasites or prions.

100

What is homeostasis?

The maintenance of a stable internal environment despite external changes.

100

What is the purpose of a control in an experiment?

To provide a baseline for comparison, ensuring only the independent variable affects the results.

200

Which cellular process halves the chromosome number to produce gametes?

Meiosis.

200

Name one example of a mutagen.

UV radiation, X-rays, asbestos, or cigarette smoke.

200

Who developed the postulates that link pathogens to disease?

Robert Koch.

200

Name one negative feedback loop in humans and draw a flow chart 

Temperature regulation (sweating/shivering) or blood glucose regulation (insulin/glucagon).

200

Define dependent and independent variables.

Independent variable = what is changed; dependent variable = what is measured.

300

Name the two stages of protein synthesis and their locations in the cell.

Transcription (nucleus) and translation (ribosome in cytoplasm).

300

Distinguish between somatic and germ-line mutations.

Somatic mutations occur in body cells (not inherited); germ-line mutations occur in gametes and can be passed to offspring.

300

How do vaccines protect individuals and populations from disease?

They stimulate an immune response to build memory cells, giving individual immunity and herd immunity.

300

List two categories of non-infectious disease.

Genetic diseases, nutritional diseases, environmental diseases, cancer.

300

Why is it important to control variables in an experiment?

Controlling variables ensures the experiment is valid by making sure only the independent variable affects the dependent variable. 

400

How does crossing over during meiosis contribute to genetic variation?

Homologous chromosomes exchange DNA segments, producing new allele combinations.

400

How can gene flow alter the gene pool of a population?

Migration introduces or removes alleles, increasing or decreasing genetic diversity.

400

Compare the adaptations of pathogens that allow them to enter or spread between hosts.

Examples: adhesion proteins (viruses), protective capsules (bacteria), spores (fungi), antigenic variation (influenza).

400

How does epidemiology help scientists study non-infectious diseases?

By analysing incidence, prevalence, and distribution patterns to identify causes, risk factors, and prevention strategies.

400

Why must experimental procedures be repeatable and replicable?

To increase reliability, validity, and reduce the influence of random error.

500

Analyse how both genes and environment interact to influence phenotype. Give an example.

Phenotype is the product of genotype and environmental factors (e.g., identical twins may have different heights due to nutrition).

500

Evaluate the benefits and risks of using recombinant DNA technology in agriculture.

Benefits: increased yield, pest/disease resistance, improved nutrition. Risks: reduced biodiversity, ethical concerns, potential ecological effects.  

500

Evaluate one current strategy to predict and control the spread of an infectious disease.

Quarantine and vaccination programs reduce spread; effectiveness depends on compliance, coverage, and pathogen mutation rate.

500

Evaluate the role of lifestyle and environmental factors in the development of cancer.

Lifestyle factors (diet, smoking, alcohol, sun exposure) and environmental factors (radiation, pollutants) increase mutation risk; prevention involves modifying these risks.

500

Evaluate the reliability of data in a secondary source, citing two criteria.

Check if the source is peer-reviewed and whether data are consistent with other studies.

M
e
n
u