AQA Combined Science Biology Paper 2

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123 Terms

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What is homeostasis?

The regulation of the internal conditions in a cell or organism to maintain optimum conditions for function in response to internal and external changes

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What key three factors does homeostasis in human control?

Blood glucose concentration, body temperature, water levels

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What does the nervous system do in humans?

Enable humans to react to their surroundings and to coordinate their behaviour

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What is the Central Nervous System?

The brain and spinal cord

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What does the Central Nervous System do?

Coordinates the response of effectors which may be muscles or gland secreting hormones

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What is the Central Nervous System sequence?

Stimulus --> Receptor --> Coordinator --> Effector --> Response

(Silly Rabbits Cant Eat Rice)

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What is the endocrine system?

A system composed of glands which secret chemicals called hormones directly into the bloodstream

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What is the pituitary gland?

The 'master gland' in the brain which secretes hormones into the blood in response to body conditions

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What does the pancreas do?

Monitor and control blood glucose concentration

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What happens when the blood glucose concentration is too high?

The pancreas produces the hormone insulin that causes glucose to move from the blood into the cells

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H What happens when the blood glucose concentration is too low?

The pancreas produces the hormone glucagon that causes glycogen to be converted into glucose and release into the blood

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What is glucose converted to in liver and muscle cells?

Glycogen

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What is Type 1 diabetes?

A disorder where the pancreas fails to produce sufficient insulin

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What is Type 2 diabetes?

Where body cells no longer respond to insulin produced by the pancreas

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How do you treat Type 1 diabetes?

Through insulin injections

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How do you treat Type 2 diabetes?

Through a carbohydrate-controlled diet and exercise regime

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What is oestrogen?

The main female reproductive hormone produced in the ovary

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What is ovulation?

Where a mature egg is released

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What is testosterone?

The main male reproductive hormone produced by the testes and it stimulates sperm production

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Name the hormones involved in the menstrual cycle

Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), Luteinising hormone (LH), Oestrogen, Progesterone

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What does Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) cause?

The maturation of an egg in the ovaries

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What does Luteinising hormone (LH) do

Stimulates the release of the egg

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What is the role of Oestrogen and Progesterone?

They are involved in maintaining the uterus lining

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What do oral contraceptives do?

Contain hormones to inhibit FSH production so that no eggs mature

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How do injection, implant or skin patch contraceptives work?

By slowly releasing progesterone to inhibit the maturation and release of eggs for a number of months or years

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Name two barrier methods of contraception

Condom, diaphragms

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What is an intrauterine device?

A device that prevents the implantation of an embryo or releases a hormone

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What do spermicidal agents do?

Kill or disable sperm

29
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HT What are the four steps of In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) treatment?

A mother is given FSH and LH to stimulate maturation of several eggs, eggs are collected from the mother and fertilised by sperm from the father in the laboratory, the fertilised eggs develop into embryos. One or two embryos are inserted into the mother's uterus

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HT Give three negative about IVF

Emotionally and physically stressful, success rates are not high, can lead to multiple births which are a risk to both babies and the mother

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HT What is adrenaline?

A hormone produced by the adrenal gland in times of fear or stress

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HT What are the effects of adrenaline?

Increases heart rate, boosts the delivery of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles

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HT What is thyroxine?

A hormone produced by the thyroid gland that stimulates basal metabolic rate

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HT How are thyroxine levels controlled?

By negative feedback

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What process leads to the formation of non-identical cells?

Meiosis

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What process leads to the formation of identical cells?

Mitosis

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What are the male gametes in animals?

Sperm cells

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What are the female gametes in animals?

Egg cells

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What are the male gametes in plants?

Pollen cells

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What are the female gametes in plants?

Eggs cells

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Which reproduction process involves the mixing of genetic material?

Sexual reproduction

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Which reproduction process involves no mixing of genetic material?

Asexual reproduction

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What is formed when cells in reproductive organs divide by meiosis?

Gametes

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What happens to the number of chromosomes in gametes during meiosis?

It halves

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What happens to gametes during fertilisation?

They join to restore the normal number of chromosomes

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After fertilisation how does the new cell divide?

By mitosis

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What is the basic structure of DNA?

A polymer made up of two strands forming a double helix

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What is a gene?

A small section of DNA on a chromosome that controls a characteristic of that organism

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What is a genome?

The entire genetic material of an organism

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What is a chromosome?

A structure that contains the DNA of an organism

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What is an allele?

The different form of a single gene

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What is a phenotype?

The alleles present in an organism

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What do we mean by a dominant allele?

A characteristic that is always expressed

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What is a recessive allele?

A characteristic that is only expressed if two copies of the allele are present

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What are homozygous alleles?

Where in an organism, two alleles are the same

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What are heterozygous alleles?

Where in an organism, two alleles are different

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What is polydactyly?

Having extra fingers or toes

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Is polydactyly a dominant or recessive allele?

Dominant

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What is cystic fibrosis?

A disorder of cell membranes

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Is cystic fibrosis a dominant or recessive allele?

Recessive

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How many pairs of chromosomes are there in the human body?

23

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What sex is XX?

Female

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What sex is XY?

Male

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What is variation?

Differences in the characteristics of individuals in a population

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What causes variation?

Differences in the genes inherited, the conditions in which they have developed or a combination of both

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Describe the genetic variation within a population of a species

Usually extensive

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How does variation occur?

Through mutations

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How often do mutations occur?

Continuously

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What is evolution?

A change in inherited characteristics of a population over time through a process of natural selection which may result in the formation of a new species

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What is the theory of evolution by natural selection?

That all species of living things have evolved from simple life forms that first developed more than three billion years ago

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When does one species form into two new species?

When the one species becomes so different in phenotype that they can no longer interbreed to produce fertile offspring

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What is selective breeding?

The process by which humans breed plants and animals for particular genetic characteristics

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What is a danger of selective breeding?

'Inbreeding' where some breeds are particularly prone to disease or inherited defects

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List four desired characteristics from selective breeding

Disease resistance in food crops, animals that produce more meat or milk, domestic dogs with a gentle nature, large or unusual flowers

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What is genetic engineering?

A process which involves modifying the genome of an organism by introducing a gene from another organism to give a desire characteristic

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What are genetically modified crops?

Crops that have had their genes modified by genetic engineering

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What are typical characteristics of genetically modified crops?

Resistance to insect attack, resistance to herbicides, increased yields

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What is the evidence for evolution?

Fossils and antibiotic resistance in bacteria

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What are fossils?

The 'remains' of organisms from millions of years ago, which are found in rocks

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How are fossils formed?

From parts of organism that have not decayed, where parts of an organism are replaced by minerals as they decay or as preserved traces of organisms, such as footprints, burrows and rootlet traces

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What is extinction?

When there are no remaining individuals of a species still alive

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What factors contribute to the extinction of a species?

Environment changes, new predators, a new disease, they cannot compete with another species for food, a catastrophic event (like a volcanic eruption)

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Why can bacteria evolve quickly?

Because they reproduce at a fast rate

84
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What is MRSA?

A relatively common 'superbug' that is really hard to get rid of

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Who developed the system of classification of living things?

Carl Linnaeus

86
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Name the seven parts of the classification system

Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species

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How are organisms names?

By the binomial system of genus and species

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Who developed the 'three-domain system' of classification?

Carl Woese

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Name the three domains developed by Carl Woese

Archaea, Bacteria and Eukaryota

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What are Archaea?

Primitive bacteria usually living in extreme environments

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What are four examples of Eukaryota?

Protists, fungi, plants and animals

92
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Define ecosystem

The interaction of a community of living organisms (biotic) with the non-living (abiotic) parts of their environment

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What do plants in a community compete with each other for?

Light, space, water, mineral ions

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What do animals in a community compete with each other for?

Food, mates, territory

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What is interdependence?

Where in a community each species depends on other species such that if one species is removes it affects the whole community

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What is a stable community?

One where all the species and environmental factors are in balance so that the population sizes remain fairly constant

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List eight abiotic factors

Light intensity, temperature, moisture levels, soil pH, mineral content, wind intensity and direction, carbon dioxide levels (for plants), oxygen levels (for aquatic animals)

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List four biotic factors

Availability of food, new predators arriving, new pathogens, one species outcompeting another so that numbers are no longer sufficient to breed

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What are adaptations?

Features that organisms have that enable them to survive in the conditions in which they normally live

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Name the three types of adaptation

Structural, behavioural, functional