Themes connect the concepts of biology - campbell book

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Themes connect the concepts of biology

Biology is a subject of enormous scope, and anyone who follows
the news knows that biological knowledge is expandingat an ever-increasing rate. Simply memorizing the factual details of this huge subject is nota reasonable option. How, then, can you, as a student, go beyond the facts to develop a coherent view of life? One approach is to fit the many things you learn into a s et of themes that pervade all ofbiology-ways of thinking about life that will still apply decades from now. Focusing on a few big ideas will help you organize and make sense of all the information you'll encounter as you study biology. To help you, we have selected seven unifying themes to serve as touchstones as you proceed through this book.

Evolution, the Overarching Theme of Biology
Evolution is biology's core theme-the one idea that makes sense of everything we know about living organisms. Life has been evolving on Earth for billions of years, resulting in a vast diversity of past and present organisms. But along with the diversity we find many shared features. For example, while the sea horse, jackrabbit, hummingbird, crocodile, and penguins in Figure 1.3 look very different, their skeletons are basically similar. The scientific explanation for this unity and diversity-and for the suitability of organisms to their environments-is evolution: the idea that the organisms living on Earth today are the modified descendants ofcommon ancestors. In other words, we can explain traits shared by two organisms with the idea that they have descended from a common ancestor, and we can account for differences with the idea that heritable changes have occurred along the way. Many kinds of evidence support the occurrence of evolution and the theory that describes how it takes place. We'll return to evolution later in the chapter, after surveying some other themes and painting a fuller picture of the scope of biology.

Theme: New properties emerge at each level in the biological hierarchy
The study of life extends from the microscopic scale of the molecules and cells that make up organisms to the global scale of the entire living planet. We can divide this enormous range into different levels of biological organization.
Imagine zooming in from space to take a closer and closer look at life on Earth. It is spring, and our destination is a forest in Ontario, Canada, where we will eventually explore a maple leaf right down to the molecular level. Figure 1.4 (on the next two pages) narrates this journey into life, with the circled numbers leading you through the levels of biological organization illustrated by the photographs.

Emergent Properties
If we now zoom back out from the molecular level in Figure 1.4, we can see that novel properties emerge at each step, properties that are not present at the preceding level. These emergent properties are due to the arrangement and interactions of parts as complexity increases. For example, if you make a testtube mixture of chlorophyll and all the other kinds of molecules found in a chloroplast, photosynthesis will not occur. Photosynthesis can take place only when the molecules are arranged in a specific way in an intact chloroplast. To take another example. if a serious head injury disrupts the intricate architecture ofa human brain, the mind may cease to function properly even though all of the brain parts are still present. Our thoughts and memories are emergent properties of a complex network of nerve cells. At a much higher level ofbiological organization-at the ecosystem level-the recycling of chemical elements essential to life, such as carbon, depends on a network ofdiverse organisms interacting with each other and with the soil, water, and air.
Emergent properties are not unique to life. We can see the importance of arrangement in the distinction between a box of bicycle parts and a working bicycle. And while graphite and diamonds are both pure carbon, they have very different properties because their carbon atoms are arranged differently. But compared to such nonliving examples, the unrivaled complexity ofbiological systems makes the emergent properties of life especially challenging to study.

The Power and Limitations of Reductionism
Because the properties of life emerge from complex organization, scientists seeking to understand biological systems confront a dilemma. On the one hand, we cannot fully explain a higher level of order by breaking it down into its parts. Adissected animal no longer functions; a cell reduced to its chemical ingredients is no longer a cell. Disrupting a living system interferes with its functioning. On the other hand, something as complex as an organism or a cell cannot be analyzed without taking it apart.
Reductionism-the reduction of complex systems to simpler components that are more manageable to study-is a powerful strategy in biology. For example, by studying the molecular structure of DNA that had been extracted from cells, James Watson and Francis Crick inferred, in 1953, how this molecule could serve as the chemical basis of inheritance. The central role of DNA in cells and organisms became better understood, however, when scientists were able to study the interactions of DNA with other molecules. Biologists must balance the reductionist strategy with the larger-scale, holistic objective of understanding emergent properties-how the parts of cells, organisms, and higher levels of order, such as ecosystems, work together. At the cutting edge of research today is the approach called systems biology.






source: Campbell and Reece book

No comments:

Post a Comment