CZ:Core Articles > Biology
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This page lists links to entries identified as CZ:Core Articles in biology.
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Biology: The science of life — of complex, self-organizing, information-processing systems living in the past, present or future. [e]
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Life: Living systems, of which biologists seek the commonalities distinguishing them from nonliving systems. [e]
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Biochemistry
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Biochemistry: The chemistry of living things; a field of both biology and chemistry. [e]
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Metabolism: The modification of chemical substances by living organisms. [e]
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Ion channel: Gated, ion-selective glycoproteins that traverse membranes. The stimulus for channel gating can be a membrane potential, drug, transmitter, cytoplasmic messenger, or a mechanical deformation (U.S. National Library of Medicine). [e]
- Protein synthesis: Add brief definition or description
- Oxidative phosphorylation: Add brief definition or description
- Anaerobic respiration: Add brief definition or description
- Active site: Add brief definition or description
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Adenosine triphosphate: A molecule sometimes called the "energy currency" of a cell [e]
- Antibody: Add brief definition or description
- ATP synthase: Add brief definition or description
- Carbohydrate: Add brief definition or description
- Chemiosmosis: Add brief definition or description
- Electron transport chain: Add brief definition or description
- Enzyme kinetics: The time course of chemical reactions catalyzed by enzymes. [e]
- Fat: Adipose tissue; the body's store of energy. [e]
- Glycoprotein: Add brief definition or description
- Michaelis-Menten kinetics: Add brief definition or description
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Monoclonal antibody: Highly specific antibodies produced in large quantity by the clones of a single hybrid cell formed in the laboratory by the fusion of a B cell with a tumor cell. [e]
- Myosin: Add brief definition or description
- Peptide: Add brief definition or description
- Protein phosphorylation: Add brief definition or description
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Polypeptide: Compound containing two or more amino acids linked by a peptide bond, called dipeptide, tripeptide, etc., depending on the number of amino acids present. [e]
- Polysaccharide: Add brief definition or description
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Protein folding: The physical process by which a polypeptide folds into its characteristic and functional three-dimensional structure from random coil. [e]
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Protein structure: The structure of a protein, consisting of primary, secondary and tertiary structures. [e]
- Proteolysis: Add brief definition or description
- Receptor (biochemistry): Add brief definition or description
- Redox: Add brief definition or description
- Substrate (biology): Add brief definition or description
- Vitamin: Add brief definition or description
Biography
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Biography: The history of a person's life. [e]
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Francis Crick: (1916-2004) British Nobel Prize-winning biochemist; co-discoverer of the helical structure of DNA. [e]
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Félix d'Hérelle: (1873 – 1949) - A French-Canadian bacteriologist, and the discoverer of bacteriophages. [e]
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Charles Darwin: (1809 – 1882) English natural scientist, most famous for proposing the theory of natural selection. [e]
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Barbara McClintock: (1902 – 1992) - American cytogeneticist who won a Nobel Prize in 1983 for the discovery of genetic transposition. [e]
- Joseph Lister: (1827 – 1912) Surgeon who promoted the idea of sterile surgery. [e]
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Carl Linnaeus: (1707–1778) Established principles for classifying plants and animals into the groupings we know as species and genera. [e]
- Lynn Margulis: Add brief definition or description
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Gregor Mendel: (1822 - 1884) Discovered the fundamental principles of inheritance which were essential in establishing the genetic basis of heredity. [e]
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Thomas Hunt Morgan: (1866-1945), Winner of the 1933 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work in genetics, specifically his discoveries of the role of the chromosome in heredity. [e]
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Louis Pasteur: (1822 - 1895) Disproved abiogenesis, the theory of spontaneous generation of microbes. [e]
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Frederick Twort: (1877 – 1950) - English bacteriologist who discovered that bacteriophages are viruses that attack and destroy bacteria. [e]
- James Watson: Add brief definition or description
Botany
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Botany: The study of plants, algae and fungi (mycology). [e]
- Xylem: Add brief definition or description
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Photosynthesis: Scientific term for the conversion of sunlight into energy by plants [e]
- Ethylene: Add brief definition or description
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Action spectrum: Scientific terminology for the correlation between specific wavelengths of the light spectrum and corresponding physiological activity. [e]
- Auxin: Add brief definition or description
- Calvin cycle: Add brief definition or description
- Cellulose: Add brief definition or description
- Chlorophyll: Add brief definition or description
- Gibberellin: Add brief definition or description
- Gravitropism: Add brief definition or description
- Leaf: Add brief definition or description
- Phloem: Add brief definition or description
- Plasmolysis: Add brief definition or description
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Root: The leafless part of a plant that is used to take up water and nutrients. [e]
- Seed: Add brief definition or description
- Starch: Add brief definition or description
- Stoma: Add brief definition or description
- Thylakoid: Add brief definition or description
Cell Biology
- Cell Biology: The study of the components of cells and their interactions. [e]
- Phospholipid bilayer: Add brief definition or description
- Flagellum: Add brief definition or description
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Cell nucleus: Membrane-enclosed organelle found in eukaryotic cells, containing most of the cell's genetic material, organized as multiple long linear DNA molecules in complex with a large variety of proteins, such as histones, to form chromosomes. [e]
- Chloroplast: Add brief definition or description
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Mitochondrion: Structure, function, life cycle and evolutionary theories involving the origins and role of the mitochondrion. [e] -- Thomas Simmons
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Apoptosis: Programmed cell death by which cells in a multicellular organism undergo a controlled death. [e]
- Biological membrane: An amphiphilic envelope of cells and subcellular structural units. [e]
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Cell division: The process by which a parent cell divides into two or more daughter cells. [e]
- Cell wall: A rigid enclosure (in plants, made of cellulose and pectin; in prokaryotes, generally of peptidoglycan) for a cell for structural purposes. [e]
- Cytoplasm: The content of the cell, not including the nucleus. [e]
- Cytosol: The portion of the cytoplasm that is not inside membrane-bound organelles. [e]
- Endoplasmic reticulum: Add brief definition or description
- Fluid mosaic model: Add brief definition or description
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Golgi apparatus: An organelle in eukaryotic cells that modifies many proteins and lipids from the endoplasmic reticulum; it is named after Camillo Golgi who discovered it in 1898. [e]
- Microtubules: Add brief definition or description
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Organelle: Specialized subunit within a cell that has a specific function, and is usually separately enclosed within its own lipid membrane, found in all eukaryotic cells. [e]
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Phagocytosis: That part of immune response in which defensive cells such as neutrophils and macrophages surround and "digest" foreign particles [e]
- Pseudopod: Add brief definition or description
- Ribosome: Add brief definition or description
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Signal transduction: The intercellular or intracellular transfer of information (biological activation/inhibition) through a signal pathway (U.S. National Library of Medicine). [e]
- Vacuole: Add brief definition or description
- Vesicle (biology): Add brief definition or description
Developmental Biology
- Developmental Biology: Add brief definition or description
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Embryo: An organism in its earliest stages of development; the process of development during this period is called embryogenesis. [e]
Ecology
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Ecology: The study of the distribution and abundance of organisms and how they are affected by the environment. [e]
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Habitat: Place where an organism or a biological population normally lives or occurs. [e]
- Chemoautotrophic: Add brief definition or description
- Parasitism: One organism living off another, with no benefit to the host. [e]
- Carbon cycle: Add brief definition or description
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Carnivore: An animal that eats other animals in its primary diet. [e]
- Ecological niche: Add brief definition or description
- Fundamental niche: Add brief definition or description
- Growth curve: Add brief definition or description
- Herbivore: Add brief definition or description
- Hibernation: Add brief definition or description
- Insectivores: Add brief definition or description
- Invasive species: Add brief definition or description
- Nitrogen cycle: Add brief definition or description
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Population: Collection of inter-breeding organisms of a particular species, in a specifically defined area considered as a whole. [e]
- Predation: Add brief definition or description
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Symbiosis: The interdependence of organisms belonging to different species. [e]
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Thermocline: A boundary layer between water at different temperatures in deep bodies of water. [e]
Evolution
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Evolution: A change over time in the proportions of individual organisms differing genetically. [e]
- Microevolution: Add brief definition or description
- Speciation: An event that produces two lineages that become separate species. [e]
- Phylogeny: Add brief definition or description
- Endosymbiosis: Add brief definition or description
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Adaptation: Describes the event of a trait being selected by the mechanism of natural selection. [e]
- Convergent evolution: Add brief definition or description
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Evolution of cells: The birth of cells marked the passage from pre-biotic chemistry to partitioned units resembling modern cells. [e]
- Evolutionary tree: Add brief definition or description
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Fossilization: The set of geological processes that convert organic remains into fossils. [e]
- Genetic drift: Describes how some alleles either increase or decrease in a population due to chance events. [e]
- Homology (biology): Add brief definition or description
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Macroevolution: Describes macroevolution, research history and emphasis and its primary focus and role in the theories of evolution. [e]
- Molecular clock: Add brief definition or description
- Monophyletic: Add brief definition or description
- Muller's ratchet: Add brief definition or description
Genetics
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Horizontal gene transfer: Transfer of genetic material to a being other than one of the donor's offspring. [e]
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Genetics: The study of the inheritance of characteristics, genes and DNA. [e]
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DNA: A macromolecule that stores genetic information. Chemically, a nucleic acid. [e]
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Mitosis: The process of eukaryotic cell division. [e]
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Genetic code: Correlation between RNA codons and protein amino acids. [e]
- Chromosome: A compact body of DNA wrapped around proteins that is the unit of genetic material, visible only during cell division. [e]
- Mendelian inheritance: Add brief definition or description
- Acquired characteristics: Add brief definition or description
- Adaptive radiation: Add brief definition or description
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Allele: A specific sequence of a gene, and one of a pair in a diploid cell (one per chromosome). [e]
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Asexual reproduction: Forms of biological reproduction that do not require a prior fusion of sexually differentiated cells [e]
- Autosome: Add brief definition or description
- Centromere: Add brief definition or description
- Chiasma: Add brief definition or description
- Chromatid: Add brief definition or description
- Chromatin: Add brief definition or description
- Codon: Add brief definition or description
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Diploid: Organism with a pair of each type of chromosome, so that the basic chromosome number is doubled. [e]
- Double helix: Add brief definition or description
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Epigenetics: Modifications in a gene's activity, expression, and/or regulation that do not involve changes to the DNA sequence. It is possible for such differences to be inherited from one generation to the next. [e]
- Exon: Add brief definition or description
- Gamete: Add brief definition or description
- Gene duplication: Add brief definition or description
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Gene: The functional unit of heredity. [e]
- Genetic recombination: Add brief definition or description
- Genome: The set of all genes of an organism. [e]
- Haploid: Add brief definition or description
- Heredity: Add brief definition or description
- Hermaphrodite: Add brief definition or description
- Heterochromatin: Add brief definition or description
- Heterozygote: Add brief definition or description
- Homozygote: Add brief definition or description
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Intron: Non-coding sequence of nucleic acid that is between the expressed sequences (exons) in a gene. [e]
- Locus (genetics): Add brief definition or description
- Lyon hypothesis: Add brief definition or description
- Meiosis: Add brief definition or description
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Metaphase: The process of eukaryotic cell division. [e]
- Mutagen: Add brief definition or description
- Oncogene: Add brief definition or description
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Phenotype: Observable characteristic or trait of an organism, such as its morphology, development, biochemical or physiological properties, or behaviour. [e]
- Punnett square: Add brief definition or description
- Quantitative trait loci: Add brief definition or description
- Recombination: Add brief definition or description
- Sexual reproduction: Add brief definition or description
- Sister chromatid: Add brief definition or description
- Splicing (genetics): Add brief definition or description
- Telomere: Add brief definition or description
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Transposon: Blocks of conserved DNA that can occasionally move to different positions within the chromosomes of a cell. [e]
- Trait (biology): Add brief definition or description
- Wobble base pair: Add brief definition or description
- X chromosome: Add brief definition or description
- Y chromosome: Add brief definition or description
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Microbiology: The study of microorganisms (overlapping with areas of virology, bacteriology, mycology, and parasitology). [e]
Molecular Biology
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RNA interference: Process that inhibits the flow of genetic information to protein synthesis. [e]
- Molecular Biology: Add brief definition or description
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Human Genome Project: Genetic sequencing project that has mapped the entirety of one human genome. [e]
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Polymerase chain reaction: A biochemical technique used to amplify the amount of DNA obtained from a sample. [e]
- Transcription (genetics): Add brief definition or description
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Actin: A globular protein that can polymerise to form microfilaments; essential for cell movement and muscle contraction. [e]
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Antibiotic resistance: The development of resistance to an antibiotic in an organism originally susceptible to it [e]
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Connexin: Family of structurally-related transmembrane proteins that assemble to form vertebrate gap junctions. [e]
- DNA replication: Add brief definition or description
- Electrophoresis: Add brief definition or description
- Enhancer: Add brief definition or description
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Erythropoietin: A protein hormone produced by the kidneys in response to hypoxia; it is essential for normal development and maturation of red blood cells (RBC). [e]
- Homeobox: Add brief definition or description
- Lac repressor: Add brief definition or description
- Microarray: Add brief definition or description
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Microsatellite: Polymorphic loci present in nuclear and organellar DNA that consist of repeating units of 1-6 base pairs in length. [e]
- Non-coding RNA: Add brief definition or description
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Nucleic acid: A class of macromolecules important in conveying genetic information. [e]
- Nucleotide: Add brief definition or description
- Okazaki fragment: Add brief definition or description
- Operon: Add brief definition or description
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Oxytocin: A mammalian hormone that is secreted into the bloodstream from the posterior pituitary gland, and which is also released into the brain where it has effects on social behaviors. [e]
- Plasmid: Add brief definition or description
- Promoter: Add brief definition or description
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Restriction enzyme: Enzymes (proteins) that cut DNA at specific DNA base sequences, typically 4-6 base pairs in length. [e]
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RNA: A polymer, made using the nucleotides of adenosine, guanosine, uridine and cytidine, that is used for a variety of biological functions in living systems. [e]
- Transcription factor: Add brief definition or description
- Transformation (genetics): Add brief definition or description
Physiology
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Physiology: The study of the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of tissues and how they interact. [e]
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Homeostasis (biology): The coordinated physiological reactions which maintain most of the steady states in an organism. [e]
- Osmosis: Add brief definition or description
- Circadian rhythm: Add brief definition or description
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Action potential: A brief change in voltage that travels along a cell membrane. [e]
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Hormone: A chemical director of biological activity that travels through some portion of the body as a messenger. [e]
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Neurotransmitter: A class of chemicals which relay, amplify or modulate electrical signals between a neuron and other cells in the nervous system. [e]
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Stress (physiology): Pathological process resulting from the reaction of the body to external forces and conditions that tend to disturb the organism's homeostasis. [e]
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Neuron: An excitable cell that is specialized to conduct nerve impulses. [e]
- Pregnancy: Add brief definition or description
- Reproduction: Add brief definition or description
- Senescence: Add brief definition or description
- Thermoregulation: Add brief definition or description
- Appetite: Add brief definition or description
- Vision: Add brief definition or description
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Systems biology: The study of biological systems as a whole. [e]
Taxonomy
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Taxonomy: The principles underlying classification, often in a hierarchy. [e]
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Organism: An individual living individual: a complex, adaptive physical system that acts a integrated unit that sustains metabolism and reproduces progeny that resemble it. [e]
- Phylogeny: Add brief definition or description
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Systematics: The study of the diversity of organism characteristics, and how they relate via evolution. [e]
- Amniota: Add brief definition or description
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Animal: A multicellular organism that feeds on other organisms, and is distinguished from plants, fungi, and unicellular organisms. [e]
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Archaea: A major group of numerous microorganisms fundamentally different from the bacteria and including many chemolithotrophs and extremophiles. [e]
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Bacteria: A major group of single-celled microorganisms. [e]
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Bacteriophage: A virus that infects bacteria; often called a phage. [e]
- Cyanobacteria: Add brief definition or description
- Drosophila melanogaster: Add brief definition or description
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Eukaryote: An organism that is composed of one or more cells containing cell nuclei. [e]
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Microorganism: A 'germ', an organism that is too small to be seen individually with the naked eye. [e]
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Plant: A eukaryotic organism, grouped into the kingdom Plantae, that typically synthesizes nutrients through photosynthesis and possesses the inability to voluntarily move. [e]
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Prokaryote: Single celled organism with no membrane-bound organelles. [e]
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Protist: A unicellular organism grouped into the kingdom Protista that may have characteristics of plants and/or animals. [e]
- Vertebrata: Add brief definition or description
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Rabbit: Long-eared, short-tailed, burrowing mammals of the family Leporidae of the order Lagomorpha, found in several parts of the world. [e]
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Dog: Domesticated animal often kept as a pet or as a working animal. [e]
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Rottweiler: A large breed of dog known for its great physical strength and strong protective instinct. [e]
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Wheat: Grass crop grown worldwide and used in making flour and fermentation for alcohol production. [e]


