Biology
Biology is the science that studies life, living things, and the evolution of life. Living things include animals, plants, fungi (such as mushrooms), and microorganisms such as bacteria and archaea.
The term 'biology' is relatively modern. It was introduced in 1799 by a physician, Thomas Beddoes.[1]
People who study biology are called biologists. Biology looks at how animals and other living things behave and work, and what they are like. Biology also studies how organisms react with each other and the environment. It has existed as a science for about 200 years, and before that it was called "natural history". Biology has many research fields and branches. Like all sciences, biology uses the scientific method. This means that biologists must be able to show evidence for their ideas and that other biologists must be able to test the ideas for themselves.
Biology attempts to answer questions such as:
- "What are the characteristics of this living thing?" (comparative anatomy)
- "How do the parts work?" (physiology)
- "How should we group living things?" (classification, taxonomy)
- "What does this living thing do?" (behaviour, growth)
- "How does inheritance work?" (genetics)
- "What is the history of life?" (palaeontology)
- "How do living things relate to their environment?" (ecology)
Modern biology is influenced by evolution, which answers the question: "How has the living world come to be as it is?"
History
The word biology comes from the Greek word βίος (bios), "life", and the suffix -λογία (logia), "study of".[2][3]
Branches
- Algalogy
- Anatomy
- Arachnology
- Bacteriology
- Biochemistry
- Biogeography
- Biophysics
- Botany
- Bryology
- Cell biology
- Cytology
- Dendrology
- Developmental biology
- Ecology
- Endocrinology
- Entomology
- Embryology
- Ethology
- Evolution / Evolutionary biology
- Genetics / Genomics
- Herpetology
- Histology
- Human biology / Anthropology / Primatology
- Ichthyology
- Limnology
- Mammalology
- Marine biology
- Microbiology / Bacteriology
- Molecular biology
- Morphology
- Mycology / Lichenology
- Ornithology
- Palaeontology
- Parasitology
- Phycology
- Phylogenetics
- Physiology
- Taxonomy
- Virology
- Zoology
Biology Media
- Biology-0001.jpg
Biology: top right - E. coli bacteria, top left - Amanita muscaria fungus, bottom right - Oxalis pes-caprae, bottom left - Crocodylus niloticus
- Hooke-bluefly.jpg
Diagram of a fly from Robert Hooke's innovative Micrographia, 1665
In 1842, Charles Darwin penned his first sketch of On the Origin of Species.
Model of hydrogen bonds (1) between molecules of water
- Glucose Haworth.png
Organic compounds such as glucose are vital to organisms.
- 225 Peptide Bond-01.jpg
The (a) primary, (b) secondary, (c) tertiary, and (d) quaternary structures of a hemoglobin protein
- Biological cell.svg
Structure of an animal cell depicting various organelles
- Activation2 updated.svg
Example of an enzyme-catalysed exothermic reaction
- CellRespiration.svg
Respiration in a eukaryotic cell
References
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- ↑ "biology, n.". OED Online. 2019. Oxford University Press. Physiology therefore—or more strictly biology—by which I mean the doctrine of the living system in all its states, appears to be the foundation of ethics and pneumatology.
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