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obligate
aerobe (ob-lig-it air-obe) |
An organism that requires oxygen for cellular respiration and cannot live without it. | |
obligate
anaerobe (an-ur-obe) |
An organism that cannot use oxygen and is poisoned by it. | |
oceanic
zone |
The region of water lying over deep areas beyond the continental shelf. | |
oligotrophic
lake |
A nutrient-poor, clear, deep lake with minimum phytoplankton. | |
omnivore [L. omnis, all + vorare, to devour] |
A heterotrophic animal that consumes both meat and plant material. | |
oncogene (on-koh-jeen) [Gk. onkos, tumor + genos, birth, race] |
A gene found in viruses or as part of the normal genome that is involved in triggering cancerous characteristics. | |
ontogeny (on-toj-en-ee) |
The embryonic development of an organism. | |
oocyte (o-uh-sight) [Gk. oion, egg + kytos, vessel] |
A cell that gives rise by meiosis to an ovum. | |
oogamy (oh-og-um-ee) |
A condition in which male and female gametes differ, such that a small, flagellated sperm fertilizes a large, nonmotile egg. | |
oogenesis (oo-oh-jen-eh-sis) |
The process in the ovary that results in the production of female gametes. | |
open
circulatory system |
An arrangement of internal transport in which blood bathes the organs directly and there is no distinction between blood and interstitial fluid. | |
operant
conditioning |
A type of associative learning that directly affects behavior in a natural context; also called trial-and-error learning. | |
operator |
A segment of DNA that interacts with a repressor protein to regulate the transcription of the structural genes of an operon. | |
operon (op-ur-on) [L. opus, operis, work] |
A unit of genetic function common in bacteria and phages, consisting of coordinately regulated clusters of genes with related functions. | |
opportunistic
species |
Species characterized by high reproduction rates, rapid development, early reproduction, small body size, and uncertain adult survival. | |
opsonization |
An immune response in which the binding of antibodies to the surface of a microbe facilitates phagocytosis of the microbe by a macrophage. | |
orbital [L. orbis, circle, disk] |
In the current model of atomic structure, the volume of space surrounding the atomic nucleus in which an electron will be found 90 percent of the time. | |
order |
A taxonomic grouping of related, similar families; the category below class and above family. | |
organ [Gk. organon, tool] |
A specialized center of body function composed of several different types of tissues. | |
organ-identity
gene |
A plant gene in which a mutation causes a floral organ to develop in the wrong location. | |
organ
of Corti |
The actual hearing organ of the vertebrate ear, located in the floor of the cochlear canal in the inner ear; contains the receptor cells (hair cells) of the ear. | |
organelle (or-guh-nel) [Gk. organon, instrument, tool] |
One of several formed bodies with a specialized function, suspended in the cytoplasm and found in eukaryotic cells. | |
organic [Gk. organon, instrument, tool] |
Pertaining to (1) organisms or living things generally, or (2) compounds formed by living organisms, or (3) the chemistry of compounds containing carbon. | |
organic
chemistry |
The study of carbon compounds (organic compounds). | |
organic
compound |
A chemical comound containing the element carbon and usually synthesized by cells. | |
organism |
An individual living thing, such as a bacterium, fungus, protist, plant or animal. | |
organogenesis (or-gan-oh-jen-eh-sis) [Gk. organon, instrument, tool + genos, origin, descent] |
An early period of rapid embryonic development in which the organs take form from the primary germ layers. | |
orgasm |
Rhythmic, involuntary contractions of certain reproductive structures in both sexes during the human sexual response cycle. | |
origin
of replication |
A specific sequence of bases in a nucleic acid molecule to which the enzymes responsible for replicating the nucleic acid bind to initiate the copying process. | |
osmoconformer |
An animal that does not actively adjust its internal osmolarity because it is isotonic with its environment. | |
osmolarity (oz-moh-lar-eh-tee) |
Solute concentration expressed as molarity. | |
osmoregulation |
Adaptations to control the water balance in organisms living in hypertonic, hypotonic, or terrestrial environments. | |
osmoregulator |
An animal whose body fluids have a different osmolarity than the environment, and that must either discharge excess water if it lives in a hypotonic environment or take in water if it inhabits a hypertonic environment. | |
osmosis (oz-moh-sis) [Gk. osmos, impulse, thrust] |
The diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane. | |
osmotic
potential (oz-mot-ik) [Gk. osmos, impulse, thrust] |
The tendency of water to move across a selectively permeable membrane into a solution; it is determined by measuring the pressure required to stop the osmotic movement of water into the solution. | |
osmotic
pressure |
A measure of the tendency of a solution to take up water when separated from pure water by a selectively permeable membrane. | |
Osteichthyes |
The vertebrate class of bony fishes, characterized by a skeleton reinforced by calcium phosphate; the most abundant and diverse vertebrates. | |
ostracoderm (os-trak-uh-durm) |
An extinct agnathan; a fishlike creature encased in an armor of bony plates. | |
outgroup |
A species or group of species that is closely related to the group of species being studied, but clearly not as closely related as any study-group members are to each other. | |
ova |
See ovum. | |
ovarian
cycle (oh-vair-ee-un) |
The cyclic recurrence of the follicular phase, ovulation, and the luteal phase in the mammalian ovary, regulated by hormones. | |
ovarian
follicle [L. ovum, egg + folliculus, small ball] |
A developing oocyte and the specialized cells surrounding it; located near the surface of the ovary; following ovulation, forms the corpus luteum. | |
ovary (oh-vur-ee)[L. ovum, egg] |
1) In flowers, the portion of a carpel in which the egg-containing ovules develop. (2) In animals, the structure that produces female gametes and reproductive hormones. | |
oviduct [L. ovum, egg + ductus, duct] |
A tube passing from the ovary to the vagina in invertebrates or to the uterus in vertebrates. | |
oviparous (oh-vip-ur-us) |
Referring to a type of development in which young hatch from eggs laid outside the mother's body. | |
ovoviviparous (oh-voh-vy-vip-ur-us) |
Referring to a type of development in which young hatch from eggs that are retained in the mother's uterus. | |
ovulation |
The release of an egg from ovaries. In humans, an ovarian follicle releases an egg during each menstrual cycle. | |
ovule (ov-yool) [L. dim. of ovum, egg] |
A structure that develops in the plant ovary and contains the female gametophyte. | |
(oh-vum) [L., egg] |
The female gamete; the haploid, unfertilized egg, which is usually a relatively large, nonmotile cell. | |
oxidation |
The loss of electrons from a substance involved in a redox reaction. | |
oxidative
phosphorylation (fos-for-eh-lay-shun) |
The production of ATP using energy derived from the redox reactions of an electron transport chain. | |
oxidizing
agent |
The electron acceptor in a redox reaction. | |
oxygen
debt |
In muscle, the cumulative deficit of oxygen that develops during strenuous exercise when the supply of oxygen is inadequate for the demand; ATP is produced anaerobically by glycolysis, and the resulting pyruvic acid is converted to lactic acid, which is subsequently metabolized when adequate oxygen is available. | |
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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z | |
Glossary from Biology, Fifth
Edition By Campbell, Reece, Mitchell © 1998, Benjamin Cummings. Reprinted with Permission. All Rights Reserved |