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  • Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and in this podcast I'm just going to give you an

  • overview of biology. Biology as most of you know is the study of life. But former students

  • that I have don't usually go on to major in biology. They go into major in biochemistry

  • or molecular biology or wildlife ecology or evolutionary biology. Or they become a biophysicist.

  • And so there are lots of different disciplines that use the concepts that that you're going

  • to learn in biology. And even myself, I worked in a biofilm lab for a couple of summers.

  • And just having a basic understanding of biology, I was able to follow most of the conversations

  • that the professors were having. Just understanding some of these four concepts. And so basically

  • those four big ideas were developed by the college board as they developed the new AP

  • biology framework. But they're pretty good standards. And so those are evolution, free

  • energy, information and systems. In other words these are four big ideas that are going

  • to cover all of biology. And so as you watch the other podcast you should always be looking

  • back to these concepts and figuring out which ones, if many, it might fit into. And so the

  • first one we'll start with is evolution. This is always where I like to start the year.

  • And this right here is a picture of Charles Darwin, early in life when we was starting

  • to formulate his ideas on natural selection. And if you ask people, what did Charles Darwin

  • do? Lots of times they will just say, oh he invented biology, or he invented evolution.

  • And that's really not super accurate. He did, was a proponent of evolution. And I love this

  • right here. It's taken right out of his notebook. And basically he's, this is a private notebook,

  • and what he's saying is I think that all life shares common ancestry. There was one life

  • form on the planet and that split into two and many after that. And if we look at, this

  • is the phylogenetic tree of life that we have today, it looks a whole heck of a lot like

  • that early drawing of Darwin, with bacteria, archaea, bacteria and eukarya on the side.

  • And if we find us, we're way up here on the animals. And so he was a proponent of what

  • we call macroevolution. In other words, species forming new species. But what's really makes

  • him special is that he was the first one to come up with a mechanism to explain how adaptation

  • and evolution actually works. And that's called natural selection. The quintessential example's

  • with the peppered moths. And so peppered moths in Europe have two different phenotypes or

  • physical appearances, dark and light. The trees were light, relatively, but during the

  • industrial revolution so much soot coming from the coal was making the trees turn black.

  • And so if you were a bird, back in the day, you would pick on the white moths. But as

  • the trees got darker and darker and darker then they started to blend in and the birds

  • were starting to isolate on these white moths. And so we saw a change in the number of each

  • of those. And so basically the moths aren't changing their appearance, it's just selection

  • in nature that's determining that. And so basically it's the idea of natural selection.

  • Now the one thing that you should remember is that there are actually five things that

  • can cause evolution. And natural selection is simply one of those five. The other four

  • are small sample size, non random mating, mutations and then immigration or emigration,

  • movement into or out of a population. But if we ever get change in the frequency of

  • a gene pool, evolution has occurred. Natural selection is that fifth one and the nice thing

  • about natural selection is that it allows organisms to become better adapted to their

  • local environment. And that's all evolution really is. Next one is the idea of free energy.

  • And what this means is that energy is going to flow from the sun to the earth. On the

  • earth plants or producers are going to use the process of photosynthesis to convert the

  • energy into that, into sugar. So converting it into sugar so they can build plants out

  • of and they can use for energy. Because plants also do another process called respiration.

  • Respiration is a way to release the energy found in sugars. Generally in the form of

  • ATP. And so energy is going to flow in this direction to the earth, through photosynthesis,

  • to sugars, to respiration, to ATP. And then it eventually all leaves as something called

  • heat. And so free energy is a big concept. Basically what it means is it's energy that's

  • available to do work. Or energy that's available to do something. Now another thing that's

  • important though within this idea of free energy is just maintaining a stable internal

  • environment. In other words, in this cruel universe, where energy is flowing, it's important

  • that you maintain what's called homeostasis. And so also within this big theme of free

  • energy is the idea of homeostasis. Maintaining a stable environment. And that's what a plant

  • does. If you can't maintain homeostasis, then you're dead. And so the way we do that is

  • using a feedback mechanism. And so the best example I can come up with for feedback mechanisms

  • are these speed signs like this. So you drive by. Your speed is 30 miles an hour. It's supposed

  • to be 30 miles an hour and so you notice that your speed is a little fast and so you slow

  • down. And now all of a sudden let's say it's 26. Then you speed up. And our body is doing

  • the same thing. Like for example, inside our body it's 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. And how

  • do we maintain that? We maintain that through homeostasis. But there's so many other things

  • that we maintain inside our body like blood glucose level, blood calcium level. All of

  • these things have to be maintained. Osmolarity. In order to keep ourselves alive. And we're

  • utilizing free energy to do that. Next thing would be the idea of information. That's information

  • flow from organism to organism. Generation to generation. And remember the one thing

  • that we use to do that is DNA. And so DNA has really taken over biology. When I learned

  • biology it wasn't as big role as it is today. And when your grandparents studied biology,

  • really they didn't know much about DNA at all. In fact in the 50s is when they finally

  • unlocked the shape of it. But this is what we would call the central dogma of life. And

  • what that means is that basically the DNA sits in the nucleus of your cell. It makes

  • RNA. And that RNA makes proteins. And then those proteins make you. And so you are basically

  • the result of proteins and protein action. But it's the blueprint or the DNA inside you

  • that says this is the proteins that you need to make and when you need to do them. And

  • so that information flow is super important. And if we were to go back to that first organism,

  • what did it have? Well it had DNA. And that DNA has been copied and mutated and changed

  • and selected through time to create all the organisms that we have on our planet. So information

  • is super important. Within this would be the idea of genetics and genes. This over here

  • is Gregor Mendel, and really unlocked that idea, you probably learned how to do punnett

  • squares, but what a gene is, what an allele is, is important. And then one thing we're

  • starting to really figure out is that you're not static. In other words you're able to

  • respond to your environment. And so a big thing that's becoming more and more important

  • is cell communication. In other words cells are communicating, communication, I hope I

  • spelled that right. Cells are communicating with one another. So this right here would

  • be a signal transduction pathway where a ligand hits on a protein and you have a series of

  • chemical reactions. And so we can actually express a gene and we can make a protein to

  • do something. But nerves, hormones, pheromones, all these things are examples of cell communication.

  • So it's the transfer of information. Even a wolf howling at night is an example of information

  • transfer. So that's another major theme. And then the final one is the idea of systems.

  • In other words in biology we're built on this hierarchy of life, it's sometimes referred

  • to as. And what that means is that basically living things are made up of carbon compounds.

  • Those are organized into macromolecules which make organelles, which make cells, which make

  • tissues, which make organs, which make organ systems, which make organisms, which make

  • populations, which make communities and ecosystems and biomes and biospheres. So there's this

  • hierarchy of life. And so we have all these different systems. And at each of these different

  • levels what we start to get are emergent properties. Or properties that weren't there the level

  • before. And so systems and the way systems are organized is important. But just as important

  • as that are interactions. And so this right here is E.O. Wilson. He's probably the most

  • famous biologist alive today. But basically you would refer to him as the father of biodiversity.

  • And what he has become famous for showing is that in these major ecosystems, we have

  • interactions between different populations, symbiosis and so all of these systems are

  • interacting together. And so all of the organs in an organ system like the circulatory system

  • are working together. But so are all the populations in a community. And so systems and interactions

  • are also another major theme in biology. And so that's kind of the four major themes in

  • biology. It's again something that you always want to look back to when you're studying

  • new material. And I hope that's helpful.

Hi. It's Mr. Andersen and in this podcast I'm just going to give you an

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