Hooke Carnivore Control

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Hooke
Carnivore
Control
Mutualism
Variable
Trophic level
Hypothesis
Population
Theory
Food web
Scientific method
Ecosystem
Problem
Ecology
Analyze results
Community
Draw conclusions
Niche
Testing
Symbiosis
Succession
Predation
Steps in scientific method
Mutualism
CHNOPS
Parasitism
Biology
Biosphere
Reproduction
Decomposer
Metabolism
Omnivore
Cell theory
Primary succession
CRIMEHH
Secondary succession
Heredity
Biotic factor
Gene
Abiotic factor
Homeostasis
Arm
Evolution
Course focus knob
Herbivore
Opposite direction
Base
Passive transport
Fine focus knob
Solute
Stage
Solvent
Diaphragm
Isotonic
Field of view
Hypertonic
Depth of field
Hypotonic
Magnification
Solution
Resolution
Concentration gradient
Cell membrane
Biosurvey
Nucleus
Biodiversity
Mitochondria
Eukaryotic cell
ER
Cell
Ribosome
Prokaryotic Cell
Cell wall
Plant cell
Cytoplasm
Animal cell
Lysosomes
Bacteria cell
Chloroplasts
A prediction about a problem that can be
tested
Golgi body
Vacuole
DNA
A standard for comparison in an experiment
An explanation backed by results from
repeated tests or experiments
Problem-solving strategies used by scientists
Organelle
A changeable factor in an experiment
Diffusion
First step in scientific method
Osmosis
Second step in scientific method
Third step in scientific method
Nonliving factors in a habitat
Fourth step in scientific method
Living factors in a habitat
Last step in scientific method
The passing of traits from parents to offspring
Type of succession that is faster because soil
already exists
The maintenance of constant internal
conditions in spite of changes in the
environment
Trophic level that recycles nutrients
Type of succession that starts with bare rock
Stands for the traits of all living things
Organisms that eats plants and animals
The study of life
Changes in plant and animal life in an
ecosystem
Symbols for the elements found in all living
things
2 Microscope parts that are used to carry it.
Process by which organisms make more of
their own kind
Part of the microscope that regulates ow
much light enters.
Feed directly on producers
What the slide is set on.
Insects pollinating flowers is an example of
this form of symbiosis
Type of scope with two eye pieces
How many times bigger an object appears
Feeds on herbivores
Feeding level
Seeing many different levels of an object with
changes to the fine focus.
The study of the interaction of organisms with
each other and their environment
This will be bigger on low power than high
power.
An organism’s role in its environment
How objects move when looking through a
compound microscope
The living things interacting in a habitat
Used to bring the object into sharp view.
The living things interacting with each other
and their environment
Used to find an object
The living part of earth
How clear an object appears
A group of organisms of the same type
(species) living in the same geographic area
Assembles the proteins in the cell
Cleans up the cell
A sketch that shows all the feeding
relationships in a community
When an organism hunts, kills and eats its
prey.
A tick on a deer is an example.
Type of symbiosis where one organism
benefits and the other is neither helped nor
harmed.
Provides structure to plant cells
Contains the DNA
Controls the movement of things into and out
of the cell
Provide energy for the cell
Membranes that provide a passageway for
proteins
The dissolved solids
The substance doing the dissolving
Jelly-like substance inside the cell
Mixture of solute and solvent
Green organelle that is the site of
photosynthesis
Solution with a lower solute concentration
Credited with naming cells
Solution with a higher solute concentration
Organelle that packages proteins, found on
rough ER
Solutions with equal solute concentrations
All living things are made of cells
Cells are the basic unit of structure and
function.
Cells come from existing cells.
All the chemical processes taking place in a
cell
Causes materials to move across the cell
membrane IF the membrane is permeable to
it
Study of the number and types of organisms
living in a habitat
Having a large variety of organisms in a
community present in large numbers.
Basic unit of heredity
Store water for the cell
Mini-organ
The genetic code for a cell, composed of a
nucleic acid.
Basic cell type that does not have a nucleus or
membrane-bound organelles
Type of cell that has a cell wall, chloroplasts
and large central vacuole
Basic type of cell that has a nucleus and
membrane-bound organelles
These are always single-celled organisms that
are small and do not have a nucleus
The basic unit of life
Cells that lack cell walls and the kingdom you
belong to.
Movement of molecules from an area of
greater to an area of lesser concentration.
Movement of water from an area of greater to
lesser concentration.
Movement that does not require energy from
the cell
Changes in inherited traits over time in a
population.
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