Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Z: Zooplankton


Zooplankton: A collective term for the nonphotosynthetic organisms present in plankton.

Y: Yeast


Yeast: A unicellular fungus that lives in liquid or moist habitats, primarily reproducing asexually by simple cell division or by budding of a parent cell.

X: Xylem


Xylem: The tube-shaped, nonliving portion of the vascular system in plants that carries water and minerals from the roots to the rest of the plant.

W: Wild Type


Wild Type: An individual with the normal phenotype.

V: Ventricle


Ventricle: A muscular chamber of the heart that receives blood from an atrium and pumps blood out of the heart, either to the lungs or to the body tissues.

U: Urethra


Urethra: A tube that releases urine from the body near the vagina in females or through the penis in males; also serves in males as the exit tube for the reproductive system.

T: T-cell


T cell: A type of lymphocyte responsible for cell-mediated immunity that differentiates under the influence of the thymus.

S: Secondary Consumer


Secondary Consumer: A member of the trophic level of an ecosystem consisting of carnivores that eat herbivores.

R: Reptilia


Reptilia: The vertebrate class of reptiles, represented by lizards, snakes, turtles, and crocodilians.

P: Placenta


Placenta: A structure in the pregnant uterus for nourishing a fetus with the mother's blood supply; formed from the uterine lining and embryonic membranes.

O: Oogenesis


Oogenesis: The process in the ovary that results in the production of female gametes.

N: Null Hypothesis


Null Hypothesis: In statistical analysis, a hypothesis proposing that there is no statistically significant difference between the observed results of an experiment and the expected results.

M: Macrophage


Macrophage: An amoeboid cell that moves through tissue fibers, engulfing bacteria and dead cells by phagocytosis.

L: Law of Segregation


Law of Segregation: Mendel's first law, stating that allele pairs separate during gamete formation, and then randomly re-form pairs during the fusion of gametes at fertilization.

K: Kinesis


Kinesis: A change in activity rate in response to a stimulus.

J: Joule

Joule (J): A unit of energy: 1 J = 0.239 cal; 1 cal = 4.184 J.

I: Imprinting


Imprinting: A type of learned behavior with a significant innate component, acquired during a limited critical period.

H: Habituation


Habituation: A simple kind of learning involving a loss of sensitivity to unimportant stimuli, allowing an animal to conserve time and energy.

G: Gamete



Gamete: A haploid egg or sperm cell; gametes unite during sexual reproduction to produce a diploid zygote.

F: Fixed Action Pattern


Fixed Action Pattern: A highly stereotypical behavior that is innate and must be carried to completion once initiated.

E: Endoskeleton


Endoskeleton: A hard skeleton buried within the soft tissues of an animal, such as the spicules of sponges, the plates of echinoderms, and the bony skeletons of vertebrates.

D: Darwinian Fitness


Darwinian fitness: A measure of the relative contribution of an individual to the gene pool of the next generation.

C: Catalyst


Catalyst: A substance that lowers the activation energy of a chemical reaction by forming a temporary association with the reacting molecules; as a result, the rate of the reaction is accelerated. Enzymes are catalysts.

B: Bacteriophage


Bacteriophage: A virus that parasitizes a bacterial cell.

A: Anticodon






Anticodon: A nucleotide base triplet in a transfer RNA molecule that pairs with a complementary base triplet, or codon, in a messenger RNA molecule.