Nervous
Digestive
Circulatory
Respiratory
Immune
100

An Involuntary and almost immediate movement.

What is a reflex?

100

Breaking, crushing and mashing of food.

What is mechanical digestion?

100

What do arteries, veins, and capillaries all have in common?

They are all blood vessels.

100

Oxygen from the atmosphere enters the body and goes into this organ.

What are the lungs?

100

What is the relationship between cells, tissues, organs, and organ systems?

Cells make tissues, which make organs, which make organ systems.

200

Why do you have a reflex response?

To protect your body from injury?

200

Large molecules are broken down into nutrients.

What is chemical digestion?

200

Which gas do your body cells produce and put into your blood stream?

Carbon Dioxide

200

Oxygen passes from the lungs and into here. (this part of the body carries the oxygen away from the lungs)

What is the blood stream?

200

What is immunity?

Being able to resist or recover from a disease.

300

How do the nervous, muscular, and skeletal systems work to provide movement?

Nervous system tells the muscular system to pull on the skeletal system.

300

Small projections inside the small intestine that absorb nutrients.

Villi.

300

Blood vessel responsible for exchanging substances between blood and body cells.

What are capillaries?

300

The blood stream carries this substance back into the lungs so it can be released into the atmosphere.

What is CARBON DIOXIDE?

300

What does a vaccine do?

Help your body develop immunity to a disease without getting sick from it.

400

Define Homeostasis and provide one example of it.

Maintaining a stable internal environment. ex. Sweating to cool your body temperature down.

400

Where does most chemical digestion occur and where does it pass the nutrients to after being digested?

The small intestine - it passes the nutrients into your blood stream (through the capillaries)

400

Two substances which your blood transports to every cell in your body.

What are oxygen and nutrients/sugar/food/glucose?

400

What bridges/connects your respiratory and circulatory systems together? (one part from each)

What are the alveoli (respiratory) and capillaries (circulatory)?

400

What are three types of pathogens? (not specific diseases)

Viruses, some bacteria, fungi, protists, and worms.

500

Define each of the cell parts functions: Nucleus, Cell Membrane, Mitochondria, Chloroplasts, Cell Wall

Nucleus- Stores DNA, Control Center Cell Membrane - Outer layer, controls what enters/exits Mitochondria - Provides energy to cell by breaking sugar Chloroplast - uses sunlight to make sugar (stores energy) Cell Wall- rigid outer layer that provides support (NOT protection)

500

These bridge/connect the digestive and circulatory systems. (one part from each)

What are the villi (digestive) and capillaries (circulatory)?

500

How do you respiratory and circulatory systems work together to give cells energy?

When you inhale, you take in oxygen (respiratory). This oxygen diffuses into red blood cells (circulatory) and is then carried to body cells. The body cells use the oxygen to release energy from sugar.

500

Why do organisms need oxygen? (7th grade answer, not Kindergarten answer)

Oxygen is needed to release energy from food/sugar/glucose. Without oxygen, the cells would have no energy and die.

500

What is the purpose of an antibiotic and identify two types of infections that can be effectively treated with antibiotics? (explain your reasoning)

The purpose of an antibiotic is to kill or slow the growth of a bacteria. Two infections that can be treated with an antibiotic are strept throat and ear infections because they are both caused by a bacterial infection.