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Biology is a natural
science concerned with the study of life and living organisms, including their
structure, function, growth, origin, evolution, distribution, and taxonomy.
Biology is a vast subject containing many subdivisions, topics, and disciplines.
Among the most important topics are five unifying principles that can be said to
be the fundamental axioms of modern biology:
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Cells are the basic unit of life
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New species and inherited traits are the product of
evolution
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Genes are the basic unit of heredity
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Living organisms consume and transform energy
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An organism will regulate its internal environment
to maintain a stable and constant condition.
Subdisciplines of biology are recognized on the basis of the scale at which
organisms are studied and the methods used to study them: biochemistry examines
the rudimentary chemistry of life; molecular biology studies the complex
interactions of systems of biological molecules; cellular biology examines the
basic building block of all life, the cell; physiology examines the physical and
chemical functions of the tissues, organs, and organ systems of an organism; and
ecology examines how various organisms interrelate with their environment.
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Branches of biology :
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Aerobiology
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Anatomy
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Arachnology
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Astrobiology
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Anchobiology
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Anthropology
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Bacteriology
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Batrachology
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Biochemistry
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Bionics
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Biogeography
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Bioinformatics
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Biological psychiatry
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Biomechanics
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Biomedical
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Biophysics
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Biotechnology
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Botany
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Cell biology
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Chorology
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Cladistics
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Carcinology
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Computational Biology
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Cryptozoology
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Cycles
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Cytology
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Conservation Biology
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Developmental biology
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Disease (Genetic diseases, Infectious diseases)
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Ecology (Theoretical ecology, Symbiology, Autecology, Synecology)
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Environmental Biology
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Epidemiology
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Ethology
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Entomology
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Evolutionary biology (Evolution)
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Freshwater biology
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Genetics (Population genetics, Quantitative genetics, Genomics, Proteomics)
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Herpetology
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Histology
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Human biology (Anthropology)
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Ichthyology
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Immunology
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Infectious diseases
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Limnology
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Malacology
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Mammalogy
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Marine biology
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Matrix biology
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Medicine
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Microbiology (Bacteriology)
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Molecular biology
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Morphology
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Mycology (Lichenology)
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Myrmecology
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Microbiology
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Nematology
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ANeuroscience (euroanatomy, Neurophysiology, Systems neuroscience, Biological
psychology, Psychiatry, Psychopharmacology, Behavioral science, Neuroethology,
Psychophysics, Computational neuroscience, Cognitive neuroscience, Cognitive
science)
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Oncology
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Ontogeny
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Ophiology
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Origin of life
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Ornithology
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Paleontology (Paleobotany, Paleozoology)
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Parasitology
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Pathology
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Photobiology
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Phycology (Algology)
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Phylogeny (Phylogenetics, Phylogeography)
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Physiology
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Phytopathology
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Population Biology
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Protistology
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Reproductive biology
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Scatology
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Structural biology
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Systems biology
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Synthetic Biology
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Sociobiology
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Symbiology
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Taxonomy
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Toxicology
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Virology
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Xenobiology
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Zoology
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Biology on the Web :
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Biotechnology Industry Organization
BIO is the world's largest biotechnology
organization, providing advocacy, business development and communications
services for more than 1,200 members worldwide. BIO members are involved in the
research and development of innovative healthcare, agricultural, industrial and
environmental biotechnology products. Corporate members range from
entrepreneurial companies developing a first product to Fortune 500
multinationals. We also represent state and regional biotech associations,
service providers to the industry, and academic centers. The mission of BIO is
to be the champion of biotechnology and the advocate for its member
organizations - both large and small.
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Cell (journal)
Cell is a peer-reviewed scientific journal
which publishes novel research in any area of experimental biology that is
significant outside its field. Areas covered include molecular biology,
genetics, structural biology, biochemistry, cell biology, development,
neurobiology and immunology in animals, plants, microbes and viruses. Founded in
1974 by Benjamin Lewin, it is published twice monthly by Cell Press, a division
of Elsevier, from editorial offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
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National Center for Biotechnology Information
The National Center for Biotechnology
Information (NCBI) is part of the United States National Library of Medicine
(NLM), a branch of the National Institutes of Health. The NCBI is located in
Bethesda, Maryland and was founded in 1988 through legislation sponsored by
Senator Claude Pepper. The NCBI houses genome sequencing data in GenBank and an
index of biomedical research articles in PubMed Central and PubMed, as well as
other information relevant to biotechnology. All these databases are available
online through the Entrez search engine.
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National Institutes of Health
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is an
agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services and is the
primary agency of the United States government responsible for biomedical and
health-related research. It consists of 27 separate institutes and centers which
includes the Office of the Director. Francis S. Collins is the current Director.
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Nature (journal)
Nature is a prominent British scientific
journal, first published on 4 November 1869. It is the world's most highly cited
interdisciplinary science journal. Most scientific journals are now highly
specialized, and Nature is among the few journals (the other weekly journals
Science and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences are also prominent
examples) that still publish original research articles across a wide range of
scientific fields. There are many fields of scientific research in which
important new advances and original research are published as either articles or
letters in Nature.
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History of biology :
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The history of biology
traces the study of the living world from ancient to modern times. Although the
concept of biology as a single coherent field arose in the 19th century, the
biological sciences emerged from traditions of medicine and natural history
reaching back to ancient Egyptian medicine and the works of Aristotle and Galen
in the ancient Greco-Roman world. This ancient work was further developed in the
Middle Ages by Muslim physicians and scholars such as Avicenna. During the
European Renaissance and early modern period, biological thought was
revolutionized in Europe by a renewed interest in empiricism and the discovery
of many novel organisms. Prominent in this movement were Vesalius and Harvey,
who used experimentation and careful observation in physiology, and naturalists
such as Linnaeus and Buffon who began to classify the diversity of life and the
fossil record, as well as the development and behavior of organisms. Microscopy
revealed the previously unknown world of microorganisms, laying the groundwork
for cell theory. The growing importance of natural theology, partly a response
to the rise of mechanical philosophy, encouraged the growth of natural history
(although it entrenched the argument from design).
Over the 18th and 19th centuries, biological sciences such as botany and zoology
became increasingly professional scientific disciplines. Lavoisier and other
physical scientists began to connect the animate and inanimate worlds through
physics and chemistry. Explorer-naturalists such as Alexander von Humboldt
investigated the interaction between organisms and their environment, and the
ways this relationship depends on geography—laying the foundations for
biogeography, ecology and ethology. Naturalists began to reject essentialism and
consider the importance of extinction and the mutability of species. Cell theory
provided a new perspective on the fundamental basis of life. These developments,
as well as the results from embryology and paleontology, were synthesized in
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection. The end of the 19th
century saw the fall of spontaneous generation and the rise of the germ theory
of disease, though the mechanism of inheritance remained a mystery.
In the early 20th century, the rediscovery of Mendel's work led to the rapid
development of genetics by Thomas Hunt Morgan and his students, and by the 1930s
the combination of population genetics and natural selection in the
"neo-Darwinian synthesis". New disciplines developed rapidly, especially after
Watson and Crick proposed the structure of DNA. Following the establishment of
the Central Dogma and the cracking of the genetic code, biology was largely
split between organismal biology—the fields that deal with whole organisms and
groups of organisms—and the fields related to cellular and molecular biology. By
the late 20th century, new fields like genomics and proteomics were reversing
this trend, with organismal biologists using molecular techniques, and molecular
and cell biologists investigating the interplay between genes and the
environment, as well as the genetics of natural populations of organisms.
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Twenty-first century biological sciences :
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At the beginning of the
21st century, biological sciences converged with previously differentiated new
and classic disciplines like Physics into research fields like Biophysics.
Advances were made in analytical chemistry and physics instrumentation including
improved sensors, optics, tracers, instrumentation, signal processing, networks,
robots, satellites, and compute power for data collection, storage, analysis,
modeling, visualization, and simulations. These technology advances allowed
theoretical and experimental research including internet publication of
molecular biochemistry, biological systems, and ecosystems science. This enabled
worldwide access to better measurements, theoretical models, complex
simulations, theory predictive model experimentation, analysis, worldwide
internet observational data reporting, open peer-review, collaboration, and
internet publication. New fields of biological sciences research emerged
including Bioinformatics, Theoretical biology, Computational genomics,
Astrobiology and Synthetic Biology.
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See Also :
Discover sites dedicated to the study of plants, animals,
fungi, protistia, bacteria, and all other forms of life. Sites address the
major sub disciplines and topics in biology such as zoology, anatomy,
botany, microbiology, genetics, evolution, cell biology.
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