This blog contains student opinions and postings about the concepts discussed during their study of biology in this college level course.
Saturday, December 7, 2013
AP Biology Cell Energetics Projects
Students in the AP Biology course were given the task of creating a poster, powerpoint presentation and or ANY other form they wished to use to explain a metabolic pathway of Cell Respiration and/or Photosynthesis.
Thursday, December 5, 2013
I read the article; Men Can be Such Worms (and Vice Versa) by Douglas Quenqua. This
article discusses the developing theory that male roundworms secrete signaling
molecules that have the ability to shorten a non-male roundworm’s lifespan. They
use the term non-male because studies have shown that these signaling molecules
affect both female and hermaphrodite roundworms. Researchers have found that
non-male roundworms that are in contact with their male counterparts have a 20%
shorter lifespan. However, researchers do not definitively know when the
roundworms secrete the signaling molecules, but they have reason to believe
that this secretion occurs after sexual intercourse, or copulation. They
believe that there are evolutionary benefits to the roundworms’ secretion. They
see the secretion’s ability to shorten a non-male roundworm’s life after copulation,
as a way is to preserve resources for the offspring and to diminish the mating
selection for other males.
This scientific finding is very insightful
as it supports the evolutionary theory proposed by Charles Darwin. By lessening
the female roundworms’ lifespan, male roundworm secretion increases the natural
selection, as only the most fit will be able to reproduce with the depleting
number of females. We are also able to see the tremendous affect that male have
over the non-male, and that the female roundworms’ main objective is to
reproduce. However, this information doesn’t scientifically relate to humans as
researchers believe that “such behavior is unlikely to extend to mammals, [because] they
rely on the mother to care for the offspring.”
I found this article to
be extremely interesting. I like that it was short and to the point. However, I
thought the author should have explained what “copulation” was because I found
myself searching for the definition. I would have also liked to see some actual
data from their research as it would give more credibility to the article.
Overall, I thought the author did a good job explaining his topic and I think I
have an adequate understanding of the topic.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/03/science/men-can-be-such-worms-and-vice-versa.html?_r=0
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
I read the
article Learning to Diffuse the Aorta
by Gina Kolata. It focused on a disease called Marfan syndrome, which causes
the aorta to swell like a balloon and burst or tear, causing an aortic aneurism
and death. The disease is usually most prevalent in young children because they
do not live long past childhood, and it the kids are usually “Very tall and
thin, with long arms, legs and fingers. They often had unusually flexible
joints, flat feet and teeth that were crowded in their mouth.” The article focused
on a recent discovery that could help slow down aortic growth and help people
with Marfan to survive. They discovered that they had been mistaken in what
they thought was the cause of the syndrome, and that it was in fact a mutation
in fibrillin-1, a protein in connective tissue. In someone with Marfan “the
fibrillin-1 is defective, and the process goes awry. Instead of attaching to
the connective tissue, T.G.F.-beta drifts away from it. Floating free in the
bloodstream, it makes cells behave abnormally, leading to many of the problems
caused by Marfan, including excessive growth of the aorta.” After discovering
what the problem was, scientists discovered that a widely used blood pressure
drug called losartan could help to prevent aortic growth. After several years
of trials, it has been confirmed that losartan is an effective treatment for
people with Marfan.
I found
this article very interesting, but I thought it was a little bit too long and
complicated. There was some unnecessary information that would have made the
article easier to read and understand if it had been left out. It was a
somewhat repetitive in certain areas, and I felt like I was reading nearly the
same sentence, only changed slightly. However, I thought the author did a good
job explaining the disorder and the treatment in depth, and after reading it I
feel like I have a good understanding of the topic.
I thought
that this article related to our study of genetics, because people with Marfin
have a defective gene that causes a protein to malfunction. It is appropriate
to what we are learning in class. In addition, my mom had an aortic aneurism
two years ago that she had surgery to prevent. Like many people with Marfan,
she didn’t know she had it and was very lucky to be recommended to see a
cardiologist by a friend. When she was operated on, the surgeon said that her
aorta had already begun to rupture and that she only had a few more days to
live. Fortunately, she was okay, and now with the discovery that losartan can
help stop the aorta from growing, many more lives will be saved.
This article discusses a certain fossil,
a thigh bone found in Spain, that had previously seemed to many experts to
belong to predecessor to Neanderthals. But, its DNA most closely resembles DNA
from an enigmatic lineage of humans known as Denisovans. Until now, Denisovans
were known only from DNA retrieved from 80,000-year-old remains in Siberia (4,000
miles east of where the new DNA was found). The new finding does not match the
picture of human evolution that has been emerging in recent years based on
fossils and ancient DNA. Denisovans were believed to be limited to East Asia,
and they were not thought to look so Neanderthal-like. The finding shocked the
scientists, who are now rethinking human evolution over the past few hundred
thousand years. For example, they are now considering that there are many
extinct human populations that scientists have yet to discover. It is possible
that the newly discovered DNA was passed to both Neanderthals and Denisovans,
but eventually disappeared from Neanderthals, replaced by other variants. The
article quotes Beth Shapiro, an expert on ancient DNA, who suggests an even
more radical possibility: “that the humans of Sima de los Huesos belong to yet
another branch of humans. They might have been a species called Homo erectus,
which originated about 1.8 million years ago and became extinct within the last
few hundred thousand years.”
This article affects humanity
because it pertains to our species in particular. Moreover, it is questioning
all we have thought about our origins as a species. The study of human
evolution is important to our understanding of our own biology as humans and
this new mystery could eventually lead to a better understanding of our
evolution. This thigh bone will mean even more to humanity once the scientists
get more DNA from the Spanish fossil, as well as other fossils from the site,
to help solve this new mystery they have just come across. This site, a Spanish
cave, proves to be a promising place for new discoveries and new knowledge of
our evolution. Since the 1970s, Spanish scientists have brought out a wealth of
fossils from the cave dating back hundreds of thousands of years including 28
nearly complete skeletons of humans during three decades of excavations.
The article, although incredibly
informative, does at times go off topic. I found this discovery so intriguing
so I personally would have preferred to read more about it. Instead, the author
talks about various other discoveries which, although interesting, were not
necessary for the understanding of the article. Despite some irrelevant information,
I thoroughly enjoyed this article and recommend reading it.
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