Biology Quiz - Cell Transport, Carbon/Nitrogen Cycles, and Homeostasis
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Last updated 4:18 AM on 2/2/26
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102 Terms
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Polarity
Uneven distribution of charges in a molecule (oxygen side of H2O is negative and hydrogen side is positive), causes most important water properties
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Cohesion
Water molecules stick to other water molecules
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Hydrogen Bonds
Weak bonds between the negative oxygen side of one water molecule and the positive hydrogen side of another water molecule
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Adhesion
Water molecules stick to other molecules
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Capillary action
Water molecules use cohesion and adhesion to climb thin tubes
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Why is capillary action important?
It allows xylems to transport nutrients
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Universal Solvency
Dissolves most other materials
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Solvent
Dissolves the solute
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Solute
Gets dissolved by solvent
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High Specific Heat Capacity
Takes a large amount of heat energy to break water's bonds and increase its temperature, keeping its heat stable
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Surface tension
The surface water molecules are attracted downwards, creating tension (lets some insects walk on water)
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Variable Density
Ice has a lower density than water, allowing it to float on top of lakes instead of freezing the whole body
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Covalent Bonds
bonds between atoms performed through the sharing of electrons to fill valence electron shells. Forms between two nonmetals.
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Polar covalent bonds
covalent bonds where the sharing of electrons is unequal. Results in slight electrostatic charges on different sides of the molecule.
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Ionic Bonds
bonds between atoms through the transfer of electrons to fill valence electron shells. Forms between a metal and a nonmetal.
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pH value
The measure of H+ ion concentration, shows how acidic or basic a substance is
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Acid
pH lower than 7 (high concentration of H+)
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Neutral substance
pH of 7 (equal concentration of H+ and OH-)
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Base (alkali)
pH higher than 7 (high concentration of OH-)
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Indicator
Compound that changes color dependent on the acidity or alkalinity of a substance
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Litmus Paper
Type of indicator
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Neutralization
A base and an acid are mixed, creating salt and neutral water
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Step 1 of ocean acidification
CO2 + H2O → H2CO3 (carbonic acid)
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Step 2 of ocean acidification
H2CO3 → H+ + HCO3- (bicarbonate, more basic now)
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Step 3 of ocean acidification
HCO3- → H+ + CO3 (carbonate, more basic now)
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Step 4 of ocean acidification
Ca found
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Step 5 of ocean acidification
CO3 + Ca → CaCO3 (calcium carbonate, creates the urchin's shell)
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What happens when CO2 is increased?
The ocean calcification produces a large amount of H+, making the water highly acidic. This kills kelp, decreasing all the other populations.
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Ocean water optimal pH
8 pH
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Semi permeable cell membranes
Let some molecules through but not others (ex: oxygen and carbon can move freely)
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Membrane Protein
Proteins that can send to nearby cells or receive signals from outside their cell. They can also serve as anchors for other proteins inside the cell.
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Cytoskeleton Filaments
Long protein chains that help the cell hold its shape. Organelles and other large molecules can travel along these chains like super highways in the cell
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Cholesterol
A hydrophobic lipid molecule that changes the fluidity of the membrane
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Phospholipid
Lipids with hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic heads that form two layers in the membrane
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Transport or Channel Proteins
Proteins that help carry substances across the membrane or allow molecules to pass through a channel
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Glycolipid
Lipids with carbohydrate chains that serve as cell recognition markers
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Glycoprotein
Proteins with carbohydrate chains that serve as cell recognition markers and can help neighboring cells interact or stick to each other
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Concentration gradient
High concentration to low concentration
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Passive Transport
Movement along the concentration gradient; does not require energy
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Simple Diffusion
Movement of molecules from high concentration to low concentration
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Osmosis
Water diffusing across a membrane
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Facilitated Diffusion
Ions, polar molecules, large molecules diffuse with protein help
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Active Transport
Movement against the concentration gradient; requires ATP energy
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Na+/K+ Pumps
Push molecules against the concentration gradient to generate nerve impulses
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Exocytosis
Small and large molecule removal from the cell from the vesicles
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Endocytosis
Taking in of molecules into the cell
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Pinocytosis
Cell drinking
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Phagocytosis
Cell eating
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Receptor Mediated Endocytosis
A cell picks up and concentrates a specific kind of molecule
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Tonicity
The ability of a surrounding solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water
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Hypertonic solution
Higher concentration of water in the cell (hyper- = more)
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Direction of water movement in hypertonic solutions
Water released, enters the environment
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Result of net movement in hypertonic solutions
Blood vessels shrivel up
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Isotonic solution
Equal concentration of water in the cell and environment (iso- = equal)
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Direction of water movement in isotonic solutions
No movement
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Result of net movement in isotonic solutions
No change
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Hypotonic solution
Lower concentration of water in the cell (hypo- = less)
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Direction of water movement in hypotonic solutions
Water absorbed, enters the cell
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Result of net movement in hypotonic solutions
Blood vessel swells up
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Aquaporin
Proteins that facilitate the transport of water across the membrane
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Diffusion of water into brain matrix
Increases pressure (think chem: same volume but moles go up (brain doesn't have room to expand), pressure goes up)
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Pressure of brain matrix increases
Neuron firing rate increases and seizures occur
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Carbon Cycle
The cycle of carbon being used and released back into the environment
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Photosynthesis
Plants intake carbon
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Plant respiration
Plants release carbon for energy
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Plant biomass
Plants store excess carbon from photosynthesis
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Soil
Stores carbon from photosynthesis
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Fossil pool
Stores carbon (dead animals and plants that had carbon storage)
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Terrestrial Microbial respiration
Microbes release carbon into the atmosphere through cellular respiration for energy
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Terrestrial Decomposition
Dead matter broken down and its carbon is released into the atmosphere
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Human emissions
Fossil fuels, cement, and land-use exchange release carbon into the environment
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Air-sea gas exchange
Carbon enters the ocean and is released back into the atmosphere
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Phytoplankton photosynthesis
Intakes carbon, produces oxygen
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Aquatic Respiration and Decomposition
Animals use the oxygen for respiration, releasing carbon. Their bodies also contain excess carbon, released when decomposed
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Deep Ocean
Stores carbon from the air-sea gas exchange, respiration, and decomposition
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Reactive sediments
Stores carbon from dead animals and deep ocean
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Are CO2 levels in homeostasis?
No, a net uptake of 4 is too much
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Nitrogen Cycle
A repeating cycle during which nitrogen moves through both living and non-living things
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Nitrogen gas
N2
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Nitrite
NO2
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Nitrate
NO3
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Ammonia
NH3
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Ammonium
NH4
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Atmospheric Nitrogen
Enters soil
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Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
Use nitrogen in the soil for plants and convert it into ammonium and ammonia.
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Decomposers
Decompose dead plants and animals, releasing ammonium and ammonia into the soil
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Nitrifying bacteria
Nitrification; turns ammonium and ammonia to nitrite and nitrite to nitrate
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Lightning fixation
Breaks bonds in N2, bonds with oxygen to form nitrate
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Fertilizers
Put nitrate and ammonia in the soil
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Runoff
Fertilized nitrate and ammonia washed into surface water
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Assimilation
Nitrate in the soil given to plants
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Leaching
Nitrate in the soil enters water
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Denitrifying bacteria
Turn nitrates back into nitrogen gas
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Burning fossil fuels
Release nitrogen gas into the atmosphere
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Use of nitrogen for producers
Nitrates build components of their biomass and nucleic acids
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Use of nitrogen for consumers
Nitrogen builds proteins and nucleic acids
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Eutrophication
Excessive richness of nutrients in water causes excessive plant growth
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Step 1 of eutrophication
Excess nitrates in the water cause an excess of algae growth
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Step 2 of eutrophication
Algae blocks light from bottom plants, killing them, and the algae itself dies due to the running out of nutrients