Characteristics of Life
Cells, Organization, and Evolution
Atoms and Molecules
Bonds and Water
Properties of Water
100

Name one of the characteristics that make something alive

growth and development, metabolism, organization, response to stimuli, reproduction, evolution

100

What is the smallest unit of life?

A cell

100

What are the 3 parts of an atom?

Protons, neutrons, and electrons

100

What does hydrophobic mean?

"Water-fearing" - doesn't dissolve in water

100

Ice (sinks in/floats on) liquid water

floats on

200
A lizard's tail gets longer as it gets older. Which characteristic of life does this show?

Growth

200

What happened to the generations of finches on the Galapagos Islands that showed that they were evolving?

Their beak shapes changed over generations to match the type of food that was available to them - they were adapting to their environment

200

Which part of the atom makes bonds with other atoms?

Electrons

200

Why can polar molecules attract or repel one another?

Because they have partial positive and negative ends (like magnets)

200

What property of water causes it to bead up into droplets?

Cohesion

300

What is the difference between growth and development?

Growth = increase in size

Development = becoming more complex

300

How are unicellular and multicellular organisms different?

Unicellular = organism made of one cell; Multicellular = organism made of many cells

300

What is formed when atoms join by covalent bonds?

A molecule

300

What are hydrogen bonds?

bonds formed between polar molecules with partially positive hydrogen atoms

300

What's the difference between cohesion and adhesion

Cohesion = attraction between molecules of the same type (water-to-water); Adhesion = attraction between molecules of different types (water-to-other)

400

Give an example of a stimulus and a possible response

Example: Light (stimulus) → plant grows toward it (response)

400

Place these in order from smallest to largest: organ, tissue, cell, organ system

Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System

400

What's the difference between an ion and an isotope

Ion = charged atom (uneven protons/electrons); Isotope = different number of neutrons

400

How many hydrogen bonds can water make and why is this important?

Up to 4 - this gives water it's unique properties

400

Why is water called the "universal solvent"?

It dissolves more substances than any other liquid

500

Explain homeostasis and give one example

Keeping internal conditions stable (ex: sweating to cool body)

500

Is a single atom or molecule considered "alive"? Why or why not?

No, because it doesn't perform all the life functions (e.g. metabolism, growth) like a cell does
500

Explain the main difference between ionic and covalent bonds

Ionic = electrons transferred; Covalent = electrons shared

500

Why is water a polar molecule?

Water's electrons spend more time near the oxygen than the hydrogens

500

Water can absorb lots of heat without changing its temperature very much. Why is this important for life on Earth?

It keeps stable temperatures in oceans, lakes, rivers, etc. for the organisms that live in them.