Rwandan Biology & Health Guide
Rwandan Biology & Health Guide
Health Sciences
  FOR RWANDAN SCHOOLS
      Senior 1          Senior
   Student’s Book
         © 2020 Rwanda Basic Education Board
                    All rights reserved.
 This book is the property of the Government of Rwanda.
Credit must be provided to REB when the content is quoted.
                   © 2020 Rwanda Basic Education Board
  CONTENTS                    All rights reserved.
           This book is the property of the Government of Rwanda.
          Credit must be provided to REB when the content is quoted.
Glossary		                                                             148
Index		                                                                153
How to use this book
                       The learning
    The book is        objective says
    divided into       what you will
    units.             learn.
    The key
    competence
    is from the
    curriculum.                                                                                                                 Every unit has
                                                                                                                                activities and
    Cross-cutting                                                                                                               exercises.
    issues are
    dealt with.
    Checklist of
    learning.
                        Formal assessment
                        1.  a) A learner views a specimen using a microscope. The eyepiece objective lens
                               used is 10× magnification, and the nosepiece objective lens is 40× magnification.
                               What is the total magnification? Show your working out.                         (3)
                                                                                                                                   Formal
                            b) A learner draws a seed that measures 1,5 cm in length. Her drawing is
                               9 cm in length. What is the magnification of the drawing?
                        2. Complete the table below by filling in the missing information.
                                                                                                               (1)                 assessment
                                                  Plant cell                Animal cell
                                                                                                                                   with marks.
    Self-assessment          Shape
Outer covering
                             Organelles
                             Vacuoles
                                                                                                                 (10)
                        3.   a) Define each of these words.
                                i) tissue                   ii) organ                                      (2 × 2 = 4)
                             b) Identify the tissues in A and B.
                                 A                                      B
                                                                                                           (2 × 2 = 4)
                             c) Give one function of each tissue you gave in your answer to question b).           (4)
                        4.   Provide labels for parts 1 to 7 in the drawing of the respiratory system.
                                                                              5
                                              2
                                              3                               6
                                                                              4
                                                                              7
                                                                                                                  (7)
Sub-topic   Biodiversity
Unit 1      Introduction to Biology
Sub-topic   Classification of living things
Unit 2  Introduction to classification
Unit 3	The external structure and
        importance of flowering plants
                                                                                       1
     UNIT                1           Introduction to Biology
Key unit competence At the end of this unit, I should be able to:
Introductory activity
1. Around you, there are huge number of things. Suggest the ones which are living, are non-living. Which
   characteristics have helped you to group those things?
2. Name the two main groups of animals and give an example of each?
3. Among the sciences that deal with different studies, which one concerns the living things?
4. Observe the living things below. What are the possible interactions with their environment?
Activity 1.1
 1. Think about the world around us. Every day you see living things. Some of these living organisms are
    plants, such as trees, grasses and flowers. Others are animals, such as birds, insects and dogs. Where
    do they get their energy from? How do they move? What are they made of?
 2. Discuss the following
     a. What is biology?
     b. What are branches of biology?
The word Biology comes from two Greek words: bios, which means life, and logos, which means knowledge.
Biology therefore means the study of life, or living organisms.
Branches of Biology
Biology is a subject that covers many different aspects. Some examples of branches of Biology are shown
below.
    Taxonomy –                                   Cytology –                                          Microbiology –
                         Mycology –                                       Parasitology –
     study of the                               study of cells,                                   study of microscopic
                         study of the           which are the           study of parasittes
   classification of                                                                              living things (micro-
                            fungi             building blocks of                                   organisms), such as
 living things, how
 they are identified,                           all organisms                                      bacteria and viruses
   and what makes
them similar and/or
                                                                                                      Ecology –
       different
                                                                                                study of the interaction
                                                                                                 between living things
      Genetics –                                                                                and their environment
  study of how the                      Branches of Biology
  characteristics of
   living things are                                                                                Entomology –
  passed from one                                                                               study of insects and the
     generation to                                                                                impact they have on
        the next                                                                                     human lives
   Biotechnology –                                                                                    Physiology –
  study of the use of                                                                             study of how living
 biological processes                                                                                things and their
in research, industry,                               Anatomy –
                                                                                                different parts function.
    agriculture and                             study of the physical       Histology –
                          Bacteriology –                                                        Physiology explains how
 waste management                                 structure of living     study of tissues
                         study of bacteria                                                       all the systems of the
                                                        things
                                                                                                          body
                                                                                                      work together
                                             Figure 1.3: Branches of Biology
Questions
1. List four resources that humans get from plants.
2. Find out what the word ‘diversity’ means, and then explain it in your own words.
3. Which group of organisms is the greatest source of medicines?
4. Name any two plants and two animals that are used in Rwanda as food for humans.
5. The case study does not mention one very important group of organisms that can impact on human
   health. Which organisms would be in this group?
Figure 1.4: Scientists work in different fields of Biology to improve our lives.
1. Look at the picture, and write down all the characteristics of living organisms that you can see.
 2. Imagine some living things in your family or school garden. What do you consider to decide that
    such things are living things?
Scientists use main characteristics to decide whether something is living or not. A characteristic is something
that an object or organism can do. For example, many animals move. So, movement is one characteristic of
living things. Table 1.1 on the next page shows the seven characteristics of living organisms. We think of
something as being alive only when it shows all seven of these characteristics. A monitor lizard is used as an
example to help you understand.
                                                                                  Hint
                                                                                 You can remember the
                                                                                 main characteristics of
                                                                                 life, or life processes,
                                                                                 with the words
                                                                                 MRS NERG.
                                                                                 M – movement
                                                                                 R – respiration
                                                                                 S – sensitivity
                                                                                 N – nutrition
                                                                                 E – excretion
                                                                                 R – reproduction
                                                                                 G – growth
       Figure 1.5: A monitor lizard is an example of a living organism.
 1. Movement or         All living things change position and move from        The lizard can move very quickly to catch
    locomotion          one place to another in some way. In animals, this     food, to run away from predators or to swim
                        is easy to see. There are some parts of plants that    in water.
                        move to get more sunlight, for example.
 2. Respiration         Respiration is a chemical reaction that takes place    The lizard breathes in air, which contains
                        inside all living cells in an organism. During         oxygen. Oxygen is transported in the blood
                        respiration, food is broken down to produce energy     to the cells of the body, where respiration
                        that the organism can use. Oxygen is needed for        reactions take place. Respiration reactions
                        the process to happen. Carbon dioxide is produced      use oxygen and nutrients, such as glucose, in
                        during the respiratory process.                        the cells to make energy.
 3. Sensitivity or      All living things need to be able to respond to        The lizards has eyes, a nose and ears. It
    irritability        changes in their environment so that they can, for     uses these to pick up changes around it and
                        example, find food or seek shelter.                    respond to the changes.
 4.   Nutrition    or   All living things need to get energy to live. They     The lizard eats small insects to get enough
      feeding           get their energy from food, or nutrients. Different    energy to stay alive. Through the process of
                        organisms get food in different ways. Animals eat      digestion, the nutrients inside the lizard’s
                        plants or other animals, or both. Plants use the       food are slowly broken down until they are
                        energy from the Sun to make their own food, in a       small enough to travel in the blood to the
                        process called photosynthesis.                         cells of the body.
 5. Excretion           Excretion is the process that gets rid of waste from   The lizard produces carbon dioxide during
                        the body of a living thing. If these waste materials   respiration. This gas is excreted when the
                        are not removed, they will become toxic to the         lizard breathes out.
                        body.
 6. Reproduction        All living organisms must have offspring if they       The lizard lays eggs that hatch, and baby
                        are to survive as a species on Earth.                  monitor lizards are produced.
 7.    Growth or        All living things grow.                                The lizard hatches from an egg and then
      development                                                              grows bigger.
1. Identify the hazards shown in Figure 1.6. Why these are hazards.
Biology, like other science subjects, involves practical work that can be done in a laboratory, in a classroom,
or outside the classroom.
You will use a variety of materials, chemicals, pieces of apparatus and equipment. You will also use animals
and plants. To prevent accidents from happening when we work with these different items, we must take
certain safety precautions.
 1. Look at the list of safety rules on previous page, and then make a list of injuries that could result if
    these rules are not followed.
 2. Based on your list of injuries, think of first aid equipment that should be kept in the school
    laboratory.
There are many hazards in the laboratory; for example, chemicals, sharp objects, glass apparatus and
gas burners. Learners do not need to be trained in first aid, as one of your teachers will be trained. It is
important that there is a first aid kit available, in case someone is injured in the laboratory. The following
figure shows the components of the laboratory first aid kit.
Figure 1.8: Hold the burnt area under cool water Figure 1.9: Use water to flush out an object in a person’s eye.
1. Look at the pictures, and then write down which characteristic of life each one shows.
a. b. c.
d.
Introductory activity
Observe carefully the living things below and answer the following questions:
Fungi                                         Animals                                           Plants
Monera
Yeast
Protoctista
In the introductory activity, you talked about how many different organisms there are in Rwanda. No doubt
you realised that there are a large number of different living things in our country. In fact, there are more
than 2,000 different types of plants and 500 different types of animals in our country.
Scientists need to sort all living things into groups so that they can recognise and study them more easily. When
you were sorting the living things into plants and animals in the activity, you were classifying them. There
are so many different organisms on Earth that scientists need to sort them into groups. Classification means
sorting things into groups. Think back to how you sorted the living things. You put those that shared certain
characteristics into the animal group, and those that shared certain other characteristics into the plant group.
Sorting, or classifying, things into groups according to their similarities and differences is called classification,
or taxonomy.
Scientists sometimes change the way they classify an organism as they
learn more about it. Taxonomists use information from many branches of Biology to classify organisms; for
example, genetics, biochemistry and fossils.
      Self assessment 2.1
 1. Why is it necessary to group organisms?
 2. What do the scientists consider to do the taxonomy of oganisms?
 By considering the area of administrative entities in Rwanda like village, cell, sector, district, province and
 country and by estimating the number of people in each administrative entity in Rwanda:
 1. Which administrative entity has:
     a)The largest number of people
     b) The smallest number of people
 2. How can you compare this with hierarchy of classification?
In Activity 2.1, you grouped different living organisms into two groups:
animals and plants. However, there are thousands of different organisms
in these two groups, so scientists must classify them into smaller groups.
Taxonomists study more similarities and differences between different
organisms so that they can classify them into smaller and smaller groups.
This is called hierarchical classification.
      Self assessment 2.2
 1. Arrange the classification groups below into the correct order. Start with the group that contains the
    smallest number of organisms.
      family   species   order       genus       phylum   kingdom   class
 2. There are many organisms on earth. How difficult is to put in their hierarchical classes?
 By using internet and textbooks, search and explain the nomenclature by binomial system and explain
 how to write a scientific name of an organism.
Usually, we use an organism’s common name, for example, ‘cat’. However, the
word for ‘cat’ is different in different languages. So, people in different parts
of the world use different words to describe the same organism. This makes
it difficult for scientists to accurately communicate their findings about an
organism accurately.
To solve this problem, the biologist Linnaeus developed a system accurately
give an organism two Latin names. Using two names is called the binomial
system. The first word in the name is the genus to which the organism
belongs. So for a cat, this would be Felis. The second name is the species to
which the organism belongs. A species is a group of closely related organisms
that are able to breed with one another and produce offspring that can also
reproduce. The species name for a cat is domesticus. So the scientific name
for a domestic cat is Felis domesticus.                                             Figure 2.5: Yellow commelina,
                                                                                       or Commelina africana
Order
                         Family
                                                            Contains only
                         Genus                              closely related
                                                            organisms
                         Species
    A
                                                                   Kingdom       Plantae
                                                                                      Spermatophyta /Angiospematophyta
                                                                        Phylum
Class Dicotyledonous
Order Urticala
Family Moraceae
Genus Ficus
Species carica
                                                                                        Scientific
                                                                                                      Ficus carica
                                                                                          name
Phylum Chordata
                                                                                  Mammalia
                                                                          Class
                                                                                      Carnivora
                                                                         Order
                                                                                        Felidae
                                                                             Family
                                                                                          Felis
                                                                             Genus
Species domesticus
                                                                                   Scientific
                                                                                     name     Felis domesticus
Figure 2.4 The classification hierarchy for a fig tree (A) and a cat (B)
                                                                                                     forest cobra
 Plantae     •	The organisms’ cells have a cell wall.                                       Moss, fern, maize, fig tree
             •	The organisms contain a green substance called chlorophyll and make
                their own food through photosynthesis.
fern
                                                                                             paramecia
Monera           •	The organisms are single cells that do not have a membrane-bound        Bacterium
                    nucleus; they are prokaryotic.
                 •	They are the smallest and simplest of all organisms.
                 •	Most reproduce by binary fusion.
bacteria
Phylum Chordata
Class Mammalia
Order Carnivora
Scientists use identification keys to help them to identify unknown organisms. A key is a list of characteristics.
Scientists compare the characteristics of the unknown organism with the descriptions on the key, and so can
classify the organism. You will use a dichotomous key in the next activity (‘di’ means ‘two’). A dichotomous
key consists of pairs of statements about a characteristic of a particular organism.
     There are many different organisms on Earth, and scientists classify them into groups.
     There are five groups, called kingdoms, which each have many organisms; the kingdoms are:
     Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protoctista and Monera.
     The kingdoms are further divided into smaller and smaller groups; this is called hierarchical
     classification.
     The groups in the kingdoms are: phyla, classes, orders, families, genera and species.
     Organisms have two names in the binomial system: a genus name and a species name.
     Animals have cells without a cell wall, are multicellular, can move around, and feed on other
     organisms.
     Plants have cells with cell walls, contain chlorophyll and can make their own food through
     photosynthesis.
     Fungi reproduce by spores instead of seeds and do not photosynthesise.
     Protoctista are single-celled organisms.
     Monera are single cells without a membrane-bound nucleus.
     To appreciate the need for classification of organisms.
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Mammalia
Order Carnivora
A.
B.
D.
     C.
    b) Discuss the dichotomous keys that you constructed.
Introductory activity
1. In unit 1, you have seen that plants are not able to move from one place to another. In your groups,
   choose one of the plants in school garden and observe its structure that cause inability for the plant to
   move. What are parts of the plant that help it to survive though it cannot move for running after food
   and water.
2. Describe how some plants, such as avocado, maize and cassava reproduce?
A B C
Figure 3.1: The flowering plants maize (A), sorghum (B) and cassava (C) are important food crops
                                                                                                           stem
There are two main types of flowering plants:
monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plants. All                                                            lateral roots
flowering plants have seeds with cotyledons, or seed
leaves. Some plants have just one cotyledon and others
have two. Table 3.1 shows the main differences between
these two groups.
Table 3.1. Differences between monocotyledonous
and dicotyledonous plants
                                                                                                        tap root
 Monocotyledons             Dicotyledons                    root system
                                             Experiment 3.1
                                       Work on your own.
 D                                     You will need: specimens or photographs of the following: a rhizome of
                                       ginger, a canna lily, couch grass or potato; a creeping stem of oxalis; a corm
                                       of coco yam; a stolon of a strawberry; a hand lens
                      corm             Procedure
                                       1. Examine the different types of stems provided. Note the main features
                                          of each stem.
                                       2. Suggest the function of each stem and note how it is suited to its
Figure 3.3: Examples of                   function.
modified stems: strawberry (A),        3. Make a drawing of each different stem type, and label the drawings
ginger (B), potato (C), yam (D)           carefully.
 Exercise
 Work out the following:
 1. Collect at least three different types of leaves.
 2. Draw a table to show the differences between the leaves.
 3. Make a labelled drawing of any one of the leaves, showing its main
    parts.
Venation
This is the arrangement of veins in the leaf. There are two types of venation:
(i)Reticulate venation: the veins are arranged in a network (E.g.: Dicot plants)
(ii)Parallel venation: there are several main veins running parallel to one another and connected by short
cross branches (E.g.: grass, maize or other monocot plants)
The root system of a flowering plant develops from the radicle of the embryo                 A
in the seed. Most roots are white, cream or brown in colour. They do not
contain chlorophyll and so cannot photosynthesise.
There are two main types of root systems.
 • A tap root system consists of a single main root with smaller lateral, or side,
    roots branching from it. Tap root systems are found in dicotyledonous
    plants, for example black jack, carrot and bean. See Figure 3.8A.
 • A fibrous root system is made up of many roots that grow from one
    point and that have side roots branching from them. Monocotyledonous
    plants, such as maize and elephant grass, have a fibrous root system. See
    Figure 3.8B.                                                                                 Figure 3.8. A: Root
Functions of roots                                                                               systems: a tap root
                                                                                        B
The main functions of roots are to:
 • hold the plant firmly in the soil
 • absorb water and minerals from the soil
 • transport water and minerals to the stem.
Modified roots
Roots can also be modified to carry out other functions. While most roots are
underground, sometimes roots grow above the ground for extra support, for
example maize and sugarcane. These are called prop roots. Aerial roots grow                 Figure 3.8. B: Fibrous root
above the ground and are used for gaseous exchange. This is the exchange
of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the inside and outside of the root.
Many plants that grow in mangroves have aerial roots. Prop roots can grow
from aerial roots to give the plant extra support; for example, maize and
                                                                      storage
                                                                      root
 1. List the importance of flowering plants in your own home and community.
 2. Try to find examples of plants in Rwanda that their flowers are used with economic purpose?
 3. Research the growing of plants using hydroponics. Find out how this practice works, and explore its
    advantages and disadvantages.
C D
E F
G H
                                                     Formal assessment   35
        KEY
        1. Animal has four legs �������������������������������������������� See 3
            Animal has fewer or more than four legs ��������������������������� See 2
        2. Animal has two long legs ������������������������������������ Blue crane
            Animal has eight legs and two pincers ��������������������������� Scorpion
        3. Animal has horns ������������������������������������������ See 4
            Animal does not have horns ���������������������������������� See 5
        4. Horns are straight and pointed ������������������������������� Duiker
            Horns are large and curved ���������������������������������� Buffalo
        5. Animal is covered with fur ����������������������������������� See 6
            Animal is covered with scales ����������������������� Nile monitor lizard
        6. Animal has speckled fur all over its body ��������������������� Mongoose
            Animal has dark fur on some parts of its body �������������������� See 7
        7. Animal has dark fur on its legs �������������������������� Bat-eared fox
            Animal has dark fur on its back and tail �������������� Black-backed jackal
        										                                                                       (8)
     2. What type of plant structure is each of the following?
            an onion
        a)		                  b) ginger              c) cassava                         (3)
     3. Complete the table by filling in the missing information.
          Kingdom         Features                                        Example
36    Formal assessment
TOPIC
Figure 4.1: Cells are the simplest unit of life; we can see them by using a microscope.
                                                                                                      37
      UNIT              4          Magnifying instruments and biological drawings
Key unit competence At the end of this unit, I should be able to:
                                   Introductory activity
                                   Observe the figure 4.2 and answer the following questions:
                                   1. Give two reasons why scientists need to observe things using instruments
                                      that make these things bigger.
                                   2. Work out a definition of the word ‘magnify’.
                                   3. Discuss whether you have ever used a magnifying instrument.
                                      If you have, then describe what you used it for and what you saw.
Biologists make many observations when they work. Observations enable them to see the details of living
things. Many things are too small for us to see using only our eyes, so they need to be made bigger, or
magnified. There are two instruments that biologists use for this. When they work outside the laboratory,
they can use a hand lens. Inside the laboratory, they can use a microscope.
Hand lenses
A hand lens is a magnifying instrument that is held in the hand. We use it to look at small things, such as
insects, flowers and animal parts, that are too big to put on a microscope slide.
Microscopes
The first microscope was invented by Robert Hooke in 1665. He used it to look at cells. Today, we can use
powerful microscopes to see viruses, bacteria and cells. There are many types of microscopes.
Figure 4.3: Hand lens Figure 4.4: The first microscope, invented by Robert Hooke, in 1665
In the following experiment, you will learn about the different parts of a light microscope and what the
function of each part is.
                                                                                             compound eye
                                                pad with grooves
proboscis
                                     flesh
  scar where fruit joined
  tree
               large stone containing seed
                                      Figure 4.7: Examples of biological drawings
4.5. Magnification
The magnification of a specimen is a measure of how much bigger it is when viewed with a hand lens or a
microscope compared with its actual size.
The magnification of a hand lens is usually written on it. Hand lenses can magnify specimens between 2 and
6 times.
For a light microscope, the magnification of each lens is written on its side. It can be written in the form
of ‘×40’, or ‘40×’ or simply ‘40’. There are two lenses: the eyepiece lens and the objective lens. The total
magnification of an image through a microscope is calculated as follows:
Total magnification of microscope = eyepiece magnification× objective lens magnification
                                                                 E                          F
                                      D
                        Figure 4.6: Preparing a specimen for viewing under a microscope
     5×                           25×
     10×                                                           100×
 6. Look at the drawing of a bee. If the                    Provide labels for the microscope
    bee’s actual length is 1,5 cm, how                      parts A to E.
    many times has it been magnified
    in the drawing?
                                                                                  A
                                                                                  B
                                                                                  C
                                                                                  D
                                                                                  E
Introductory activity
Observe well the following structures and think about what you learnt in the previous unit and try to work on given
questions
                                     cell wall
                                     cell membrane
                                     cytoplasm
                                                                   cell
                                     large vacuole                 membrane
                                     containing cell sap
                                                                                                         mitochondrion
                                                               nucleus
                                     nucleus
                                                                                                          small vacuole
                                     mitochondrion
                                                                                                    cytoplasm
                                     chloroplast
A                                                          B
                                                      Figure 5.1
1. Between the above cells suggest the animal cell and the plant cell
2. Use a Venn diagram to compare the two cells provided in this activity
                                                                                   Unit 5: Plant and animal cells   47
5.1. The cell
                                                                                 Hint
Activity 5.1
                                                                                 Microscopes are
                                                                                 useful for identifying
 Think about what you learnt in the previous unit and earlier grades. Then,
                                                                                 organisms that cause
 brainstorm the answers to these questions.
                                                                                 diseases in Rwanda
 1. Arrange these structures in the correct order, starting with the smallest
     structure: tissue, organ, cell, organism.
 2. What different types of microscopes are available for biologists to use
     to view cells?
 3. How would a biologist choose the type of microscope he or she should
     use to view a cell?
Cells are the basic units of all living organisms. Cells are made of molecules
such water, proteins, carbohydrates and fats. These molecules are made up of
atoms such as carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Cells are the building blocks of
living organisms.
Some organisms, such as bacteria, are made up of only one cell. These are
called unicellular organisms (‘uni’ means ‘one’). Other organisms, such as
humans and trees, are made up of many cells. They are called multicellular
organisms (‘multi’ means ‘many’).
Because cells are too small to be seen with the naked eye, scientists use
microscopes to see the structure of cells. Sometimes they use powerful
microscopes called electron microscopes to view structures that are too
small to be seen with a light microscope.
Structures found in plant and animal cells
All cells have the same basic structure. Cells contain cytoplasm and
organelles. The cytoplasm is a living, jelly-like substance in which the
organelles are found. Many chemical reactions take place inside the
cytoplasm. It is made mainly from water, in which substances such as
sugars and gases are dissolved. The organelles in the cytoplasm carry out
special functions inside the cell. Examples of organelles include the nucleus,
chloroplasts and mitochondria. A cell membrane surrounds the cytoplasm.
                                    cell wall
                                    cell membrane
                                    cytoplasm
                                                                  cell
                                    large vacuole                 membrane
                                    containing cell sap
                                                                                                           mitochondrion
                                                              nucleus
                                    nucleus
                                                                                                           small vacuole
                                    mitochondrion
                                                                                                      cytoplasm
                                    chloroplast
A                                                         B
                            Figure 5.2: A generalised plant cell (A) and an animal cell (B)
        Experiment 5.1
 Work out the following:
 You will need: a microscope; prepared slides of onion epidermis and human cheek cells; drawing paper
 Procedure
 1. Look at Activity 4.1, on page 43, to remind yourself how to use a microscope to view specimens.
 2. View the prepared slides that your teacher will give you.
 3. Make careful drawings of the two different types of cells using. Figure 5.3, below, to help you. Only
    draw the structures that you
    can see on the slide.
 Questions
 1. Mention two things that you did to ensure that you avoided any injuries whilst doing this activity.
 2. How do the two types of cells differ in shape?
 3. Which structures are present in the onion cells but absent in the cheek cells?
 4. What was the total magnification that you used to view these specimens?
    A                                                              B
 Figure 5.3: A micrograph of an onion epidermis                     Human cheek cells, as seen under a light microscope
nuclear membrane
                                                                          pore
                                                                          nucleoplasm
                                                                          nucleolus
                                                                          chromatin network
             Figure 5.4 The nucleus, as seen using an electron microscope, is the control centre of the cell.
The nucleus plays an important role when the cell divides to make new cells. It contains the hereditary, or
genetic, information that is passed from parents to their offspring during reproduction.
Mitochondria
Mitochondria (singular = mitochondrion) are the organelles inside plant and animal cells where the reactions
of cellular respiration take place. Energy that the cell can use is made in the mitochondria. Some cells,
depending on their function, have more mitochondria than others. For example, muscle cells (which need a
lot of energy to work) have several thousand mitochondria.
Vacuoles
Vacuoles are organelles that usually contain fluid. They are surrounded by a membrane. Animal cells have
small vacuoles or no vacuoles. The fluid in animal vacuoles often contains substances such as enzymes, or
stored food or waste products. Plant cells have large vacuoles that take up a lot of space inside the cell. Plant
vacuoles usually contain water and dissolved substances, such as mineral salts and food molecules. Plant
vacuoles are important for keeping the cell rigid.
 Observe again the animal & plants cells on figure 5.2 in previous page and answer the following questions:
 a. What are the common parts they have.
 b. What are the parts specific to plant cell?
 c. Establish a comparison between the two cells.
Key unit competence At the end of this unit, I should be able to:
                                                    Introductory activity
                                                    Think back to what you learnt in the last two units. Then,
                                                    brainstorm the answers to these questions.
                                                    1. Why is the cell referred to as the ‘basic unit of life’?
                                                    2. Are all cells the same? If not, in what ways are they
                                                        different?
                                                    3. What structures do plant cells have to help them carry out
                                                        photosynthesis?
                                                    4. Are all organisms made up of many cells? What do we call
                                                        single-celled organisms? What do we call organisms that
                                                        consist of many cells? Give an example of an organism
Figure 6.1. Red blood cells are part of blood and       that has many cells in its body.
      are specialised to transport oxygen.
Side view
                                                      Sperm cells
                                                      Sperm cells are male sex cells. They are made inside the
                                                      male reproductive system in structures called the testes.
                       flagellum                      Sperm cells are specialised for joining, or fusing, with the
                                                      female sex cell, the egg. Sperm cells have a tail, called a
                                                      flagellum, which they use to swim. Because sperm cells can
            middle piece                              move, we say that they are motile. There are large numbers
            containing                                of mitochondria in the middle region of a sperm cell. These
   head     mitochondria
                                                      mitochondria make energy to help the flagellum to move.
                                                      The flagellum enables the sperm cell to swim towards the
                                                      egg when it is inside the female reproductive system.
            nucleus                                   In the head of the sperm, there are special enzymes inside
acrosome                                              the acrosome. These enzymes break down the membrane
     Figure 6.5: A sperm cell is a male sex cell      around the female egg cell. The sperm nucleus contains
                                                      genetic material. The nucleus enters the egg cell and fuses
                                                      with the nucleus of the female egg during fertilisation.
root hair
                                                                                                 holes in
Phloem cells                                                                                     cell walls
Most cells inside a leaf are found between the upper and lower surfaces. (see
Figure 6.9). This region of the leaf is called the mesophyll. Mesophyll cells
are specialised for photosynthesis, which is their main function. Look at the
                                                                                               water and food
diagram below, which shows the inside of a leaf.
There are two types of mesophyll cells and they are found in different places
in the mesophyll. These cells are called palisade mesophyll cells and spongy                   two-way flow
mesophyll cells. Palisade mesophyll cells are long, thin cells which are full
of chloroplasts. They are found near the upper surface of the leaf. It is easy
for them to trap lots of light in this position. Spongy mesophyll cells also
have lots of chloroplasts and they are loosely packed in the leaf. This makes
it easy for gases, such as carbon dioxide, which is needed for photosynthesis,
to move into and out of these cells.                                                            Figure 6.8: Difference between
                                                                                                   Xylem and phloem cells.
air space
           Figure 6.9: Palisade and spongy mesophyll cells are leaf cells specialised for photosynthesis.
                                                           Unit 6: Levels of organisation in multicellular organisms   59
      Self assessment 6.1
 1. Give the meaning of each of these words.
    a) specialised                  c) neurons
    b) cilia                        d) haemoglobin
 2. a) What is the function of ciliated cells?
     b) List two ways in which ciliated cells are adapted to
         their function.
 3. a) What is the function of red blood cells?
     b) List two ways in which red blood cells are suited to
         their function.
     c) Make a neat, labelled drawing of some red blood cells.
 Structures of similar level in an organisms may be grouped togother. What will be the relationship
 between
 a) Cells and tissues?
 b) Tissues and organs?
 c) Organs and organ systems?
There are four levels of organisation in multicellular organisms such as plants and animals: cells, tissues,
organs and organ systems. An organism is made up of many organ systems which enable it to function for
life.
Cells
These are the most basic units of life. There are many different types of cells in a multicellular organism. They
are specialised to do a certain function.
Tissues
In multicellular organisms, similar cells are grouped together to form tissues. A tissue is a group of specialised
cells that have a similar structure and function. For example, muscle tissue is composed of muscle cells,
which function to help the animal move, by contracting and relaxing. Examples of tissues in plant leaves
are xylem, phloem and mesophyll. As you have learnt, xylem is made up of xylem cells, which are able to
transport water. Phloem transports food in the plant. Xylem and phloem are found in leaf veins. Mesophyll
tissue is made up of mesophyll cells and makes food.
stomach
                                          Notice that muscle cells look the same as one another and
                           muscle cells   epithelial cells look the same as one another
Figure 6.10: Levels of organisation of a human being: cell, tissue, organ, system
leaf
                                                 Organ – leaf
                                                                                 stem
                                            vein
                                                                                  root
                                           leaf blade
                midrib                                         Tissues
                                                                         epidermal tissue
Cells
Figure 6.11: Levels of organisation of a multicellular plant organism: cell, tissue, organ, organ system
 2. Keep a journal of the food that you eat over a week. Bring the list to school, and discuss it with your
    partner.
     a) Is your list of foods similar to your partner’s list? If it is not, how is it different?
     b) Did your list of foods change during the week? If it did, explain why?
     c) Were any of the food nutrients missing from your lists?
Nutrients are chemical substances that organisms need to live. In Unit 1 you learnt that all living things need
nutrition in order to live. Animals get their nutrients from the food they eat. Plants get their nutrients from
the air, water and soil.
Food nutrients give organisms:
 • energy for daily activities
 • the building blocks for growth and cell repair
 • substances that enable the organisms to function properly and stay healthy.
There are six types, or classes, of food nutrients: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids (fats and oils), vitamins,
mineral salts and water. Food nutrients are made up of elements such as carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, and
sometimes nitrogen, phosphorus and sulphur.
                            Sources of nutrients.
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are nutrients made up of the elements carbon (C), hydrogen
(H) and oxygen (O). Some carbohydrates, such as glucose, are small, simple
molecules. Other carbohydrates, such as starch and cellulose, are large,
complex molecules.
Simple sugars such as glucose are the basic units of all carbohydrates. We
call these units sugars, or monosaccharides (‘mono’ means ‘single’ and
‘saccharide’ means ‘sugar’). Examples of monosaccharides include glucose
and fructose. Monosaccharides can join together to form disaccharides;
for example, sucrose. Polysaccharides, such as starch, are made up of many
single units (‘poly’ means ‘many’).
Combine to form
Figure 7.5 Proteins consist of long molecules of amino acids joined together.
 2. Set up your test tubes in a test tube rack. For each test, you need to test all your food samples. Use the
    marker pen to label each test tube with the number that matches the table.
dropper
iodine solution
                                                    food sample
                                                    white tile
                                                      dropper
                                                  sodium                 copper
                                                  hydroxide              sulphate
                                                  solution               solution
                              test tube                                     (shake)
                              water
                              food
                              sample                       blue colour         purple colour
                                                                               indicates the
                                                                               presence of protein
dropper
water
                                                  (shake)                   (shake)
                                        ethanol
                                        food
                          contents clear/           contents clear/         contents milky;
                          transparent               transparent             indicates the
                                                                            presence of lipids
                non-dairy
                proteins                                                                  dairy foods
                                                    foods high in sugar
                                                    or fat
Figure 7.9. A balanced diet includes foods from all five food groups.
You have learnt about the groups of food nutrients your body needs to stay healthy. Your body needs different
amounts of each food nutrient. The ‘pie chart’ in Figure 7.9 shows the relative amounts of each food group
that we need for a balanced diet. Water is also an essential part of a balanced diet.
Table 7.3 describes the importance of each food group and gives the proportion each group should make up
in the diet.
Table 7.3. Food groups and their percentages in the diet
Food group       Importance                                                Examples                               % of diet
Carbohydrates    Provide energy for growth and development.                Bread, maize and cassava               33%
                 Wholegrain forms are best because they provide
                 extra fibre.
Fruits and       These foods provide vitamins and minerals needed          Bananas, spinach and tomatoes          33%
vegetables       for a healthy immune system. They also provide
                 fibre. You should aim to eat five portions of these
                 foods per day.
Dairy foods      These foods provide fat for energy, protein for           Milk, yoghurt and sour milk            15%
                 muscle and nerve development, calcium for bone
                 development and vitamins for fighting infections.
 Exercise
 Work in pairs.
 The amount of energy different people need is shown in the bar chart in Figure 7.10. Look at the chart,
 and then answer the questions.
                                         7,000
                                         6,000
                 Amount of energy (kJ)
                                         5,000
                                         4,000
                                         3,000
                                         2,000
                                         1,000
                                             0
                                                    Child     Woman      Pregnant    Woman     Male office     Male
                                                   aged 10    aged 35     woman      aged 70    worker        athelete
Starvation
Starvation occurs when a person does not eat enough food. There are two
forms of starvation: marasmus and kwashiorkor.
Marasmus is caused by not eating enough of almost all nutrients, but especially
energy-rich foods such as carbohydrates, fats and proteins. Marasmus causes
extreme loss of body fat and muscle. A sufferer of marasmus is very thin. Other            Figure 7.13: A child with
symptoms of marasmus include lack of energy, severe hunger and swelling of                        marasmus
the hands and feet.
Kwashiorkor occurs when a person’s diet does not include enough proteins,
vitamins and minerals. Mainly children are affected. Sufferers have a swollen
stomach, while the rest of their body is very thin and has little muscle. Other
symptoms of kwashiorkor include changes in hair colour, skin rashes, swollen
hands and feet, and loss of appetite.
Case study
 Work in pairs. Read the case study and then discuss how soya milk can improve children’s health.
 Life-saving soya milk
 Soya milk contains all the proteins necessary to replace meat and milk. In a village in eastern Rwanda,
 women have learnt how to extract soya milk from soya beans. Soya milk contains more proteins than
 cow’s milk and many adults and children prefer it. Malnutrition amongst children in this area has
 decreased in the last few years since the women’s soya milk production has started. There has also been
 a decrease in the number of childhood illnesses in this area.
Constipation
Constipation occurs when a person does not eat enough fruits and vegetables. Their stools become hard and
difficult to pass. We can prevent constipation by eating food rich in fibre and by drinking plenty of water.
10. Name the reagents that are used to test for the presence of the following in a food sample:
     a) proteins
     b) starch.
11. A family has four members: an 80-year-old grandfather, a 35-year-old father, and 28-year-old
    pregnant mother, and a 2-year-old boy.
      a) Between the boy and the grandfather, who should be given more milk?
      b) Why?
12. Miss Umutoni visited a doctor as her gums were bleeding and she complained that she was always
    tired. The doctor told her to eat two oranges, spinach and plenty of red meat every day for one
    month. After two weeks, Miss Umutoni felt better and went
    to thank the doctor.
    Discuss the causes of Miss Umutoni’s symptoms, and explain why her treatment
    was successful.
Introductory activity
Table 8.1 describes the functions of the different parts of the human gas exchange system.
Table 8.1. Functions of parts of the human gas exchange system
 Part                Functions
 Nasal passages      •    Hairs in the nostrils trap dust and other small particles
                     •    Mucus lining the nasal passages traps germs
 Pharynx             Warms and moistens the air entering the lungs as the air passes over blood vessels
 Epiglottis          Stops food and liquids from going into the trachea during swallowing
 Trachea and         •    Provide an open passage for air to enter and leave the lungs
 bronchi             •    Mucus lining the inside walls traps dust and germs
                     •    Move mucus, which contains dust and germs, to the pharynx, using hair-like structures (cilia)
                          that line the inside walls
 Alveoli             Enable the exchange of gases between the blood passing through the lungs and the air in the lungs
blood capillaries
alveolus
                         pulmonary
                         arteriole                                            pulmonary venule
       Experiment 8.2
 Make a model to demonstrate breathing.
 You will need: rubber bands or string; a glass rod; a rubber sheet of a size that will cover the bottom of a
 bell jar; a bell jar; two balloons; a Y-shaped tube; a rubber bung or cork
 Procedure
 1. Using a rubber band, tie the glass rod to the rubber sheet. Secure the rubber sheet around the open
    end of the bell jar using rubber bands. The rubber sheet represents the diaphragm.
 2. Tie a balloon around each arm of the Y-shaped tube. Push the other end of the tube through a
    rubber bung or a cork. The balloons represent the lungs and the Y-shaped tube represents the
    trachea and bronchi. Assemble the apparatus as shown in Figure 8.6, below.
 3. Pull the rubber sheet downwards using the glass rod. This represents an inhalation. Note what
    happens to the balloons when the rubber sheet is pulled downwards. Explain what happens.
 4. Push the rubber sheet upwards using the glass rod. This represents an exhalation. Note what happens
    to the balloons when the rubber sheet is pushed upwards. Explain what happens.
        A							           Air in B                                                       Air out
      glass tube (trachea)
        balloon (lung)
                                                     rubber sheet (diaphragm)
             glass rod
                                 Pull down                                                  Push up
 A                                                     B.
                   Figure 8.7: Micrographs showing alveolar cells (A) and ciliated epithelium (B)
Key unit competence At the end of this unit, I should be able to:
                             Introductory activity
                             Think back to the structure of a flowering plant. Then, talk about these
                             questions.
                             1. What do you do when you see a fierce dog charging at you? Why and
                                 how?
                             2. When you touch a hot object, you directly remove the hand from it.
B
                                 Why?
                             3. Look at the plants A and B on the left. According to you, what caused
                                 the plant in picture A to bend? Why? The next picture shows a
                                 germinating seed, why the shoot and radical grown as you see it in the
                                 picture? How do we call these kinds of responses? Do you now have
                                 an idea what this unit is about?
In Unit 1, you learnt that all living things need to respond to their environment.
This response is known as sensitivity. It is one of the characteristics of living
organisms. Organisms are sensitive to a stimulus (plural = stimuli). Light
is an example of a stimulus. When we go into bright light, the pupils of our
eyes get smaller, to protect the eye. The response to a stimulus involves many
different parts of an organism, such as the sense organs and nervous system.
Animal responses to stimuli are easy to see, as they are quick. The animal’s
sense organs and nervous system are involved. Plants do not have sense
organs or a nervous system, but they still need to respond to changes in
their environment. For example, they need to grow towards light and water.
Although plants cannot move from one place to another, they can move
their stems, roots, leaves and flowers towards or away from a stimulus. This
movement takes place by growth. For example, shoots grow upwards towards
light, and roots grow downwards towards water.
The word ‘tropism’ refers to plant growth towards or away from a stimulus.
When part of a plant grows towards a stimulus, this is called a positive
tropism. When a plant part grows away from a stimulus, this is called a
negative tropism.
In this unit, you will learn about two types of tropisms: phototropism and
gravitropism.
      Stimulus                      Tropism
      Light                         Phototropism
      Gravity                       Gravitropism or geotropism
      Chemical                      Chemotropism
      Water                         Hydrotropism
      Touch                         Thigmotropism
Phototropism
‘Photo’ means light. Plants can respond to the stimulus of light. This is called
phototropism. Their shoots grow towards the light. For example, if you leave
a plant near a window, the stem will start to bend towards the light. We say
that the plant is positively phototropic.
There exist two types of phototropism:
    - Positive Phototropism: Stem tip growing toward the light
    - Negative Phototropism:Root tip growing away from the light                     Figure 9.1: Plants grow
                                                                                         towards light.
      Experiment 9.1
 Demonstrate phototropism in plants.
 You will need: two bean plants; cotton thread; ink; a ruler; a cardboard
 box; a pair of scissors
 Procedure
 1. Mark the stem of both plants at two-millimetre intervals using cotton
    that has been dipped in ink. See Figure 9.3.
 2. Put one plant in a place where it can get light on all sides. Or, place it            ink marks
    on a clinostat, if your school has one.                                               2 mm apart
 3. Make a slit in the cardboard box so that light can get in. Place the
    second plant inside the box.
 4. Make sure the plants are watered and leave them for a few days.
 Questions
 1. Examine the plants. In which direction did the plant grow that had
    received:
      a) light on all sides                                                             Figure 9.2: Mark the bean
      b) light from one side?                                                           plants at two-millimetre
 2. Describe the growth of a stem using the words ‘phototropic’ and                     intervals.
    ‘positive’.
                                                                                             shoot              radicle
Gravitropism (Geotropism)
Gravitropism also called geotropism is the response of plants’ stems and
roots to the effect of gravity. Gravity is a downward pull towards the centre
of the Earth. Plant stems grow upwards, against gravity. They are negatively
                                                                                       Figure 9.3: Plant roots grow
gravitropic. However, plant roots grow downwards, in the same direction in
                                                                                       downwards, in the same direction
which gravity acts. We say that they are positively gravitropic.                       as gravity.
If a seedling is planted on its side, the radicle, or first root, will start to grow
downwards and the shoot will grow upwards.
The importance of gravitropism is that it pulls roots down to anchor a plant
and roots can get needed water and minerals.
      Experiment 9.2
 Demonstrate gravitropism in plants.
 You will need: bean seeds that have been soaked in water overnight; paper
 towels; elastic bands; marker pens; four glass jars; a pot plant
                                       Questions
                                       1. What did you notice about the direction in which the seedlings’
                                          roots and stems grew?
                                       2. Describe the seedlings’ root and stem growth using the words
                                          ‘gravitropic’, ‘positive’ and ‘negative’.
                                       3. a) What happened to the growth of the pot plant?
                                            b) Can you explain why the pot plant grew like this?
                                            c) Explain why the pot plant was put into a dark cupboard.
 Work in pairs.
 1. Your teacher will show you a plant that shows another type of tropism: the plant responds to touch.
     a) How does the plant respond when something touches it?
     b) Make a drawing to show how the plant responds.
 2. Research other types of plant responses, for example, hydrotropism, chemotropism and
    thigmotropism. Write up your findings using these headings: Stimulus; Name of tropism; Positive
    response of plant part; Negatice response of plant part.
Key unit competence At the end of this unit, I should be able to:
Introductory activity
Think back to what you have already learnt about skeletons and answer the following questions:
1. What structures support our bodies?
2. What is attached to these structures that help us to move?
3. Which organs in our bodies need to be protected?
4. Do all organisms have bones? If not, how are their bodies supported?
5. Are different animals able to move differently? If so, how do they move? Are their skeletons adapted for
    this movement? If so, think of ways in which they are adapted.
Figure 10.1: Humans have a strong skeleton that helps them to move.
                                      All animals need a support system that can help them stay upright and move.
                                      This support system is the skeleton. Animals in water need less support than
Muscles squeeze                       animals on land because the water supports them as well. On land, animals
the fluid inside the                  need to overcome the force of gravity to be able to move. They also need
body
                        layers of
                                      protection for the soft tissues and organs inside their bodies.
                        muscle        A skeleton is a structure on the inside or the outside of the body that
                         gut          gives support to the body and protects the softer parts of the organism.
                        coelom        There are three types of skeletons: hydrostatic skeletons, exoskeletons and
                        filled with   endoskeletons.
                        fluid         Hydrostatic skeletons
 cross-section of an                  Hydrostatic skeletons are found in animals that have soft bodies. Such
 earthworm                            skeletons are not made up of hard structures such as bones. Instead, these
 Figure 10.2: Soft-bodied             animals have a liquid skeleton. There is fluid inside their bodies. Muscles in
 animals have hydrostatic             the animal’s body can work against the fluid that keeps their bodies firm.
 skeletons.                           Examples of animals with hydrostatic skeletons include earthworms, slugs,
                                      snails, jellyfish, leeches and flatworms.
                                      Exoskeletons
                                      Some animals have a skeleton on the outside of their bodies. This is called an
                                      exoskeleton (‘exo’- means ‘outside’). This type of skeleton is found in insects,
                                      crabs, spiders and scorpions.
                                      These are some of the features and functions of an exoskeleton.
                                       • An exoskeleton lies outside the muscles of an animal’s body.
                                       • It is made by the animal’s skin.
                                       • It protects the internal body parts from injury.
                                       • It provides protection against predators.
 Figure 10.3: Insects moult so         • Its colour may help the animal to hide or to attract a mate.
 that they can get bigger.             • It is waterproof, and it prevents the animal from losing too much water.
Insects have hard exoskeletons.   Crabs have an exoskeleton       Spiders have a leathery    Scorpions have an exoskeleton
                                  that is shaped like a shield.   exoskeleton.               similar to that of insects.
Activity 10.2
The human endoskeleton is made up of 206 bones. The human skeleton is different to all other animal
skeletons because humans walk on two legs and other animals usually walk on four legs. The bones in the
skeleton are made from living cells. They can break and grow.
                             scapula
                                                                                sternum
                                 rib
                                                                                thoracic
                                                                                vertebra
                            humerus                                             lumbar
                                                                                vertebra
                                ulna
                               pelvis
                                                                                sacrum
                              radius                                            coccyx
carpals
                        metacarpals
                                                                                femur
                                      phalanges
                                                                                patella
tibia
fibula
                                 tarsals
                                                        metatarsals
                               phalanges
ribs
            tibia
            fibula
   phalanges
   (toes)
                   tarsals
     metatarsals              Figure 10.11. Bones of the pelvic girdle and legs
                                                                  B
                                                                  D
Questions
1. What can you do to make sure that you have strong bones.                    The body makes vitamin D when
2. Talk about your diets, the amount and type of exercise that you do,         the skin is exposed to sunlight.
   and the amount of time you spend outside in the sun.
      a) What do you notice about the relationship between the amount of calcium a person eats
           and their bone density?
      b) Name and explain two other factors that affect a person’s bone density.
 10. Give functions of the human skeleton.
 11. a) What is synovial joint?
      b) What function does each of the following havein a joint.
      (i) A tendon                 (ii) A ligament                (iii) Synovial membrane.
      (iv) Synovial fluid.         (v) A cartilage.
                                                                               	     (2 × 2 = 4)
     c) Give one function of each tissue you gave in your answer to question b).       (4)
4.   Provide labels for parts 1 to 7 in the drawing of the respiratory system.
                                               5
                2
                3                              6
                                               4
                                               7
		                                                                      (7)
5. The table below shows the amount of food nutrients in 100 g of breakfast cereal.
     Food nutrient          Amount per 100g
     Protein                15,9 g
Figure 11.1: Rwandans need to grow up fit and healthy so that they can become strong adults that help Rwanda grow.
                                                                                                              107
     UNIT           11            Classification of diseases
Introductory activity
Some people are healthy, but others are sick. Sometimes sick people need to go to hospital. In groups, talk
about these questions.
1. What is good health?
2. Name some diseases that occur in your community.
3. Discuss whether or not people get these diseases from other people.
4. Talk about ways to prevent sick people from spreading disease.
5. Work out a definition for the terms ‘disease’ and ‘good health’.
Figure 11.2: Many people go to the local clinic when they are sick.
 You may have heard the saying ‘prevention is better than cure’. Describe five good practices that can
 prevent a person from getting a disease.
When we say that a person is in ‘good health’, we mean that the person
is in a good mental, physical and social state.
The word ‘disease’ refers to a physical or mental disorder or malfunction
that has a particular set of signs and symptoms. A person that has a
disease is sick and may need to be treated by a health worker.
Some diseases do not cause symptoms, so we may not know that the
person is sick. However, other diseases cause a clear set of signs and
symptoms.
                                                                             Figure 11.3: A nurse taking care of
Practices that promote good health                                                  a patient in hospital
1. What is an infection?
2. a) Find out the names of at least five infectious diseases.
   b) Research how each of these diseases is transmitted,
       and then suggest preventive measures for each one.
            tuberculosis          malaria       Ebola fever      HIV/AIDS
 You will need: sugar (table sugar); table salt; two teaspoons; a clean one-litre bottle with a lid; boiled
 water; a clean measuring cylinder or any suitable container; soap
 Procedure
 1. Wash your hands with soap and water. Wash the teaspoons, bottle and measuring cylinder with soap
    and clean water and leave them to dry.
 2. Put 750 ml of boiled water into the bottle.
 3. Measure out one level teaspoonful of table salt. Remove half of the salt from the spoon. Add the
    remaining half (2,5 ml) to the water in the bottle.
 4. Measure out one level teaspoon of sugar (use the other teaspoon to level the sugar with the edge of
    the spoon). Add the teaspoonful of sugar (about 5 ml) to the 750 ml of water in the bottle.
 5. Repeat step 4 until you have added six level teaspoonsful (30 ml) of sugar.
 6. Put the lid on the bottle and shake it until all the sugar and salt have dissolved. You have now
    prepared an oral rehydration solution (ORS). Taste it; it should be no more salty than the tears from
    your eyes.
Kalisa and Nyirasafari still have their grandparents, who are 90 years old. They like to visit their grandparents.
One day, their grandmother fell and broke her arm. The doctor said that her arm broke because of osteoporosis,
which is an age-related disease.
1. Do research in the library or on the Internet, and then explain the words ‘ageing’ and ‘osteoporosis’.
2. What are the signs of ageing?
3. Is ageing a non infections disease? Explain
4. With examples, what do we call non infections disease?
Non-infectious diseases cannot be passed from one person to another by living organisms. They develop
because the body does not work properly, or they may be caused by a person’s lifestyle. Examples include sickle
cell anaemia, allergies, ageing, osteoporosis, cancer, cardiovascular diseases, eating disorders, deficiency
diseases and mental illnesses.
                                                           sickle-shaped red
                                                           blood cells
       Figure 11.8: Sickle-shaped red blood cells and normal red blood cells
Sickle cell anaemia is caused by a change in a gene that makes haemoglobin,
the molecules that give your blood its red colour. Haemoglobin helps red
blood cells to carry oxygen from the lungs to all the cells in the body.
The sickle cell gene is passed from one generation to the next. If both a
mother and father have the sickle cell gene and pass it to their child, then
their child will have sickle cell anaemia. If only one parent has the sickle
cell gene and it is passed to his or her child, then the child will be able to
make both normal and sickle cell haemoglobin. This child will be a carrier
of the sickle cell gene. There are tests available to find out if a child has
sickle cell anaemia. Although
there is no cure for sickle cell anaemia, medications can relieve
the symptoms.
Allergies
An allergy is a reaction by the immune system to a substance in the
environment. A substance that causes an allergy is called an allergen.
Some people are allergic to certain foods, for example, nuts or shellfish, or
to substances in the environment, for example, dust, pollen or pesticides.
When someone is allergic to something, they sneeze, get itchy eyes, get a
rash or have swelling on their body. There are different medicines available
to treat allergies.
Ageing
                                                                                        Figure 11.9: As you get older,
Ageing is the process of becoming older. Many physical, mental and social
                                                                              organs and systems are likely to
changes take place. For example, older people do not walk or think as fast as suffer from age related diseases.
younger people do. Ageing is a natural process that we will all go through. Nelson Mandela lived to a very old
                                                                                      age of 95, and then he passed on
                                                                                         due to age related diseases.
cancers
cardiovascular disease
diabetes
digestive diseases
Introductory activity
In groups, talk about these statements.
1. What do you see on following figures?
2. How does a female getpregnant?
3. What is the importance of reproduction?
 When you observe the boy and the girl, directly you see or you imagine some of their parts that make
 the difference between them.
 1. List the parts that make the differences between boy and girl.
 2. In the reproductive system, the male and female organs play their role. Which one involves more
     than another and why?
The reproductive organs in humans are structures that are involved in reproduction. You learnt in Unit 1 that
reproduction is a characteristic of living things. In this unit, you will learn about the structure and functions
of the male and female reproductive systems.
The reproductive organs are important for:
 • producing male and female sex cells, or gametes
 • transporting the male sex cells to the female sex cell
 • producing chemicals called hormones
 • enabling a baby to grow inside the female’s body.
The male and female human reproductive systems have external and internal parts.
 Structure                   Description
 Epididymis                  A tightly coiled tube 5 to 6 metres in length. It stores sperm, and it is the place where sperm
                             cells mature.
 Seminiferous tubules        Long, coiled tubes inside the testes. They contain germinal cells that can divide to produce
                             sperm cells.
 Sperm ducts                 A sperm duct transports sperm from the epididymis to the urethra. The sperm duct is also
                             called the vas deferens. There are two sperm ducts, one from each testis, that open into the
                             urethra.
 Cowper’s glands             Secrete mucus that lubricates the urethra.
 Seminal vesicles            Produce and release seminal fluid into the sperm duct. This fluid helps to neutralise the
                             acidity that the sperm will meet inside the female’s reproductive structures. There are also
                             nutrients in the seminal vesicle secretion that provide energy for the sperm.
 Prostate gland              The prostate gland surrounds the urethra. It also secretes a fluid into the urethra as the
                             sperm passes through during ejaculation. This fluid helps to neutralise the acidity of urine
                             residue that the sperm will meet inside the urethra. The secretions of both the seminal
                             vesicles and the prostate gland improve the motility, or movement, of the sperm.
 Urethra                     A passage for both urine and semen, at different times. Semen is a fluid that contains
                             sperm, neutralising chemicals and nutrients.
seminal vesicle
urethra
epididymis
                                     testis
                                                                               penis
                                              scrotum
                                                        Front view
                                 Figure 12.3: The internal male reproductive structures
The female reproductive organs include the vulva, ovaries, oviducts, uterus, cervix and vagina. The female
reproductive system produces female gametes, called ova (singular = ovum) inside the ovaries. The ovaries
also produce the female sex hormones oestrogen and progesterone.
External organs
 Labia minora                                An inner fold of skin that protects the openings of the urethra and
                                             vagina.
 Clitoris                                    A female erectile organ that is important during sexual intercourse.
 Vaginal opening                             The opening into the vagina is important during sexual intercourse and
                                             during childbirth. The vaginal opening in a virgin girl is covered by a
                                             membrane called a hymen. During sexual intercourse, the hymen is
                                             broken.
                                                                                                uterus
                                                                        oviduct
                                                                                                                  ovary
womb
(uterus)                               oviduct
bladder                                  ovary
                                                                                                         ligament which
                                                                   muscular wall                         holds ovary in
                                        cervix                                                           position
                                                                   of womb
                                     rectum
                                                                            cervix
                                anus
   urethra                                                                                          vagina
              vagina                             		
           Side view			                                                      Front view
                            Figure 12.4: The internal organs of the female reproductive system
Introduction
Gametogenesis is the process involved in the formation of gametes. In human being, the formation of female
gametes is known as oogenesis or ovogenesis and occurs in the ovaries while the formation of male gametes
is called spermatogenesis and occurs in the testes.
Table 12.4 lists the differences between the processes that produce sperm and ova. cell division as it is shown
here below
Table 12.4. Differences between the processes that produce sperm and ova
 Production of sperm                   Production of ova
 Occurs in the testes of the male      Occurs in the ovaries of the female
 Many sperm per germinal cell are      One egg cell per germinal cell is produced
 produced
 Sperm are small but motile            Ova are large but non-motile
 Starts at puberty and does not stop   Starts in the embryo and stops at menopause
 Sperm can survive for about four      An egg cell can survive for about two days inside the female's body
 days inside the female's body
 1. Why some persons may reproduce at very early age and other at late age?
 2. Is it possible to accelerate the time of reproduction? How?
Work in pairs, and role play how a person’s sex is determined by chromosomes. Show how male and female
gametes from a couple determine the sex of their baby.
You could use different coloured cards. Females would have two cards of the same colour and males would
have two cards with different colours. Place two different coloured cards in one bag and cards of the same
colour in another bag. Randomly pick one card from each bag. Do you have a male or female? Work out the
chance of having a male or female baby.
Looking at the outside of the body, a person’s sex, is indicated by his or her external reproductive organs.
These include the penis and testes of males and the vagina of females. However, the sex of a person is actually
controlled by chromosomes in the sex cells, or gametes. Chromosomes are structures that are found in the
nucleus of all cells. They give an organism its characteristics. A person’s sex is determined when fertilisation
takes place.
In human cells, there are 22 pairs of non-sexual chromosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes. It is the sex
chromosomes that determine the sex of an individual. Girls have two X chromosomes in all their cells while
boys have one X and one Y chromosome. There is only one sex chromosome in the sex cells.
Parents
egg sperm
Gametes
12.5. Influence of culture, tradition and religion on sex, gender and reproduction
Activity 12.5
1. Give examples of characteristics and behaviours that are seen as ‘male’ and ‘female’ in your community.
   Discuss whether these characteristics and behaviours are biological or social.
2. In African families, girls and boys often grow up together. However, they have different tasks to do and
   they are treated differently by others. The table below lists different attitudes towards boys and girls.
   Copy the table and complete it by putting a tick ( ) next to a statement when it applies to boys or girls
   and a cross ( ) when it does not.
Most societies expect people of a particular gender to perform certain tasks. This happens for cultural reasons
or as a result of customs, traditions and religious views. For example, hunting was traditionally assigned to
men and mourning to women. As our society has changed, the role of the different genders has also changed.
Gender equality means that males and females are equal. In the activity you will discuss this important issue.
     A                                                B
                 4                                         10
                 3
                                             5
                                             6
                 2                                                 9
                  1                                                                        11
                                             7
                                                                                            12
                                         8
2. On your own, write a paragraph in which you discuss how cultural, traditional and religious
   practices influence peoples’ ideas about sex, gender and reproduction. Hand it in to your teacher
   for evaluation.
Introductory activity
Think about changes that occur in boys and girls during their teenage years. Then, answer these questions.
1. Are teenagers treated differently to people of other ages? If so, talk about ways in which they are treated
    differently.
2. Are girls and boys treated differently from one another when they are teenagers? If so, how?
3. Are there educational opportunities for teenagers in Rwanda? How do these compare to opportunities
    that were available ten years ago?
4. Do teenagers have any responsibilities? If so, what does society expect of them?
Figure 13.1: The teenage years are fun filled, but teenagers also have responsibilities.
Puberty is the time when boys and girls become sexually mature. Biological changes take place in the person’s
body in preparation for reproduction. Puberty involves both physical and emotional changes. Some changes
can be stressful, but it helps to realise that puberty is a natural step in the development of every person.
Puberty occurs at different times for different people, and it has different effects on boys and girls. Puberty
occurs sometime between the ages of nine and sixteen.
All organisms have features or characteristics that make them male or female. Primary sexual characteristics
are physical characteristics that indicate whether a person is male or female. These characteristics are present
from birth, for example a penis or vagina. Secondary sexual characteristics develop only at puberty.
In males, the testes begin to produce the hormone testosterone during puberty. It brings about the development
of male secondary sexual characteristics. In females, the ovaries begin to produce the hormone oestrogen
during puberty. It brings about the development of female secondary sexual characteristics.
                                                                                                 Adulthood
                                        Adulthood
                          Puberty                                                  Puberty
Childhood Childhood
				Females                                                 Males
   Figure 13.2: Puberty brings about physical changes in girls and boys.
The picture alongside shows the menstrual cycle. Analyse the picture, and then answer the questions.
1. How many days does one menstrual cycle last?
2. What happens on the first day of the menstrual cycle?
3. According to the diagram, how many days does menstruation last?
4. What happens during ovulation?
5. On which days can a female fall pregnant if she has unprotected sexual intercourse? Explain your
    answer.
6. What happens if the egg cell is not fertilised?
The menstrual cycle is a series of changes that the female body goes through to prepare for possible
pregnancy. It is a pattern of changes
in the ovaries and the secretion of different hormones over about
28 days. Different people have menstrual cycles of different lengths.
The menarche is the first menstrual cycle that occurs at puberty when the ovaries begin to release ova. The
menstrual cycle continues until menopause, when the ovaries gradually become inactive between 40 and
54 years of age.
                                                                                 uterus lining
                              Day 1                    Day 4              Day 14                                                    Day 28
                                                           Figure 13.3: The events of the menstrual cycle
Phases of the menstrual cycle
The menstrual cycle can be divided into different phases, based on events that occur within the female
reproductive system. These phases are the menstrual phase, follicular phase, ovulation phase and
luteal phase.
Menstrual phase
The menstrual phase, or menstrual period, starts from the first day of menstrual bleeding. On day 1 of the
phase, the thickened lining, or endometrium, of the uterus begins to pass out of the body through the vagina.
A normal menstrual period can last from three to seven days.
Follicular phase
During the follicular phase, one of the ovaries gets ready to release an egg. At the same time, the uterus starts
producing a new lining to prepare for a possible pregnancy.
                                                                                                                            Last day
                                                                                                                              28
                                                                                                                   27
Ovulation phase
                                                                                                         26
                                                                                                                                       Day 1
During this phase, an ovary releases an egg into                                                                                                     2
                                                                                                                                                              3
                                                                                                 25
the oviduct. This is called ovulation. 		                                                                                               Menstruation
                                                                                                                                                                       4
The egg then moves down the oviduct towards                                                 24
                                                                                                       Uterus lining
the uterus. Immediately after ovulation, a                                                             continues to
                                                                                                       thicken
                                                                                                                                                                                5
                                                                                       23                                                         Uterus
woman can fall pregnant by having unprotected                                                                                                     lining shed
                                                                                                                                                                                        6
sexual intercourse.                                                                  22
Luteal phase 7
                                                                                      21
During this phase, the lining of the uterus                                                                                      Ovulation
                                                                                                                                                                  Uterus
                                                                                                                                                                  lining                8
                                                                                                  Egg dies if
becomes thicker. If an egg is fertilised by a                                          20         not fertilised
                                                                                                                                                                  starts
                                                                                                                                                                  to grow
sperm it then attaches to the uterus lining and                                                                                                                   again             9
                                                                                            19
a pregnancy begins. If the egg is not fertilised                                                                                        A mature egg
                                                                                                                                                                           10
At puberty, boys and girls can produce a baby if they have unprotected sexual intercourse. However, they
are too young to manage the responsibilities of having a child. They will lose out on many educational and
career opportunities, which could affect their future lives negatively. The unintended pregnancy will also
cause family disruption. Rwandan society prepares boys and girls for their gender responsibilities. Adults
warn girls and boys about avoiding unintended pregnancies.
     Self assessment 13.3
 Discuss how an unintended pregnancy can disrupt the life of a teenage boy and girl.
2. A girl starts her period on 2 July. Her menstrual cycle is 29 days long. Work out when her next
   period will be.
                                     By using internet and textbooks, search and explain the processes of sexual
                                         intercourse and fertilization.
                                     The male sex cells, or sperm, are produced in the testes of the male
                                     reproductive system. So the sperm need to be transferred to the inside of the
                                     female body to enable one of them to fuse with the ovum. This takes place
                                     during sexual intercourse.
                                     Sexual arousal occurs when a man and a woman interact and their senses
                                     are stimulated. The pulse rate, breathing rate and blood pressure increases.
                                     The male penis fills with blood and becomes erect. The external female
                                     reproductive parts become sensitive to touch and the vagina secretes mucus
                                     for lubrication during intercourse.
                                     The erect penis is placed inside the vagina. In the male, the movement of
                                     the penis inside the vagina stimulates a reflex and causes ejaculation. This is
                                     a rhythmic muscular contraction of the male reproductive system from the
sperm tail left outside the ovum
                                     testes to the penis. It results in the release of semen from the urethra. Male
                     male nucleus    orgasm happens at the same time as ejaculation. In the female, the movement
                                     of the penis to and from vaagina leads to orgasm. An orgasm is the peak of
                                     sexual arousal and is a combination of pleasurable physical and emotional
                                     sensations.
                                     Fertilisation
                                     During sexual intercourse, the male ejaculates between two and six millilitres
                                     of semen that contains about 300 million sperm. Semen is deposited inside
                                     the female vagina near the cervix. Sperm in the semen swim upwards into
           female nucleus
                                     the oviducts. If an ovum is in an oviduct, the sperm can reach it within five
 Figure 14.2: Fertilisation is the
fusion of a sperm and an ovum to     minutes.
          form a zygote.
By using internet and textbooks, search and explain the processes of Foetal development in placenta during
pregnancy.
After fertilisation, the zygote continues to divide. It divides into two cells, then four, then eight, and so on.
Eventually a ball of cells is formed. After about seven days, it develops into a fluid-filled cavity surrounded by
a single layer of cells.
The cilia move the ball of cells down the oviduct towards the uterus. After about ten days, the ball of cells
burrows into the wall of the uterus. This process is called implantation. There it continues to divide into
more specialised cells and an embryo is formed. From the eighth week until birth (around 40 weeks), the
developing organism is called a foetus.
                                                                   ball of cells
                                                                   attached to
                                                                   the uterus
                                                                   wall
     zygote   2-cell   4-cell     8-cell stage 16-cell     ball of cells   foetus –     feotus –   foetus –      foetus – 40
b.            stage    stage                   stage                       8 weeks      12 weeks   20 weeks      weeks
Figure 14.4: a) Implantation of the ball of cells, b) Development of the foetus over 40 weeks
The placenta
Part of the embryo forms a structure called the placenta.
The functions of the placenta are:
 • to provide the foetus with nutrients
 • to remove waste products from the foetus’ blood
 • exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide between the foetus’ blood and the mother’s blood
 • act as a filter for harmful substances, although some substances, such as nicotine, drugs and alcohol, as
    well as viruses such as HIV, can pass through it and reach the foetus
 • to secrete hormones.
There is no direct contact between the mother’s blood and the blood of the foetus. The umbilical cord
transports substances between the placenta and the embryo. The umbilical cord contains blood vessels and
it extends from an opening in the foetus’ stomach to the placenta.
placenta
                                 umbilical cord
                                                                                   uterus wall
Signs of pregnancy
Pregnancy starts on the day of fertilisation. There are no signs of pregnancy at this time, but as time passes
the following signs appear:
 • there is no menstrual period
 • slight bleeding or cramping as the embryo implants in the uterus
 • tender breasts
 • extreme tiredness
 • backache
 • nausea or sickness
 • needing to urinate more often
 • headaches, due to the sudden rise of hormones in the body
 • darkening of the skin around the nipples
 • food cravings or aversions
 • emotional sensitivity and outbursts, due to high hormone levels.
14.3. Process of childbirth
Activity 14.3
By using internet and textbooks, search and explain the process of Childbirth
Childbirth, which is also known as labour or parturition, brings pregnancy to an end. It results in one or
more newborn infants being expelled from a woman’s uterus. There are three stages of labour.
First stage (about 12 hours)
The cervix dilates, or widens, and the uterus begins to contract. Fluid called amniotic fluid is released. This
is sometimes called ‘breaking
of the waters’ and it signals that the second stage of labour is about
to begin.
Second stage (20 minutes to 1 hour]
The muscles of the uterus and abdomen contract to push the baby out of the uterus, cervix and vagina. This
is known as delivery of the baby. In normal childbirth, the head of the baby comes out first. The umbilical
cord is cut.
  foetus                                                                                          uterus
                                 uterus
cervix vagina
                                                                                                                     vagina
                                                                                                       dilated cervix
                                          umbilical cord                                               umbilical cord
foetus                                                                                                cervix
                                    uterus
                                                                                                               umbilical
                                                                                                               clamp
           umbilical cord
                                                    The head
                                                    appears first                                          vagina
                                                                        placenta    umbilical cord
                                            Figure 14.6 Stages of childbirth
Problems during birth
If the mother or the baby experience difficulties during the birth, then a Caesarian section may be done.
This is a surgical procedure during which the doctor cuts through the abdominal wall and uterus to deliver
the baby.
According to the World Health Organization, every day worldwide 800 women die of causes related to
pregnancy or childbirth. This is called maternal mortality. Nearly all maternal deaths occur in developing
countries, and the incidence is higher in rural areas and among poorer communities.
Women die as a result of complications such as:
 • severe bleeding after childbirth
 • infections
 • high blood pressure during pregnancy
 • complications from delivery
 • unsafe abortion.
Inadequate health care, lack of information, poverty, distance to travel to health clinics and cultural practices
are some of the reasons why women do not receive help during their pregnancy.
 Design a poster for a clinic in Rwanda to display in their waiting room. Show the steps a pregnant
 woman should take for a healthy pregnancy and childbirth.
Teenage pregnancy is pregnancy in girls under the age of 20. A girl can fall pregnant after puberty if she
has unprotected sexual intercourse. Every day in developing countries, 20 000 girls under the age of 18 give
birth.
Health risks associated with teenage pregnancy
Pregnant teenagers face many of the same problems as other pregnant women. However, teenage
pregnancy results in greater health risks to both the mother and baby. These include the risk of:
 • the baby having a low birth weight
 • the mother going into premature labour
 • the mother dying as a result of complications during pregnancy or childbirth.
Other consequences of teenage pregnancy
As well as health risks, there are also emotional and socioeconomic consequences of teenage pregnancy. For
example, a girl may be excluded from her family and community after she falls pregnant. Teenage pregnancy
also affects girls’ education and income potential as they may be forced to drop out of school. This threatens
future opportunities and economic prospects.
              Figure 14.7: Teenage pregnancy has health, emotional and socio-economic consequences.
Steps to promote safe pregnancies and childbirth
Antenatal, or prenatal, care refers to looking after and protecting a pregnant woman and her foetus during
pregnancy and childbirth. The first few months of pregnancy are the most critical for the developing infant
because major steps in foetal development take place at this time.
A woman should take these steps to care for herself and her unborn child during pregnancy:
 • As soon as she finds out that she is pregnant, she should see a doctor or health worker. She will be
    given vitamins to take, such as folic acid, to reduce the risk of birth defects.
 • She should rest often.
 • She should eat a healthy, balanced diet.
 • She should avoid foods that can cause food poisoning, for example, shellfish, as food poisoning can
    cause miscarriage.
 • She should avoid caffeine, alcohol and cigarettes. Cigarette smoking has been linked to a low birth
    weight.
 • She should not change cats’ litter boxes as she could get toxoplasmosis, which is a very serious illness.
 • She should eat only well cooked meat as undercooked meat can contain harmful pathogens.
 • She should arrange for a health worker to assist at the birth or arrange to go to a hospital for the birth.
Figure 1
         A						B
                                                                             1
                                    1
6 2
                                            8
                                        7                                5
                                    6
                                                                                             3
         2
                                    5                                                        4
                   3            4
Figure 2
9 28 severe bleeding
11 infections
labour difficulties
                                                                   abortion complications
                       14
                                                27                 blood clots
acrosome – the part of a sperm cell that makes        chromosomes – long coiled structures made from
    enzymes                                               special molecules called DNA; they carry
adapted – modified or changed to do a particular          genetic information
   function                                           cilia – hair-like extensions on the membrane of
alveoli – small sacs that enable the exchange              some animal cells
    of gases                                          circumcision – a surgical procedure that is
amino acids – the building blocks of proteins             performed to remove the foreskin
backbone – a column of bones that is found in         clinostat – a motorised machine that turns
   the back of an animal; also called a vertebral     clitoris – a sensitive area in the female external
   column                                                  sex organs
balanced diet – a diet that contains a combination    communicable disease – a disease that can be
    of the food nutrients needed for healthy             transmitted from one person to another
    living, in the right amounts                      conception – the fusion of the nuclei of the male
breathing – the movement of air into and out of          and female sex cells
    the lungs, in mammals                             Cowper’s gland – a gland that produces seminal
bronchi – tubes that branch from the trachea             fluid
bronchioles – smaller tubes that branch from the      deficiency diseases – diseases caused by a
   bronchi                                                shortage of a food nutrient, such as a
Caesarian section – a type of birth, when a               particular vitamin
   surgical procedure is done                         density – how hard or compact a substance is
carbohydrates – nutrients made from carbon,           diffusion – the movement of molecules
    hydrogen and oxygen, e.g. simple sugars and           from a high concentration to a
    starch                                                lower concentration
cartilage – a type of tissue that is found in some    disease – a disorder in structure or function in a
    places in an endoskeleton                             person’s body
cervix – a narrow opening at the top of               diversity – variety
    the vagina                                        ejaculation – a reflex action in which semen is
characteristics – features of something, such as an       released from the body
    organism                                          elements – the simplest substances on Earth; they
chlorophyll – a green pigment molecule in leaves          cannot be made smaller
    that is important for photosynthesis              embryo – an unborn human during the first eight
                                                         weeks after fertilisation
148 Glossary
endometrium – the lining of the uterus                  germinal cells – special cells that line the ovaries
endoskeleton – a support system that is found              and the seminiferous tubules
   inside an organism’s body                               and are able to make the female and male sex
                                                           cells
enzymes – special molecules that take part in
   chemical reactions in cells                          gravitropism – the response of plants to the effect
                                                            of gravity
epidermis – a single layer of cells on the outside of
    some organisms                                      haemoglobin – a molecule found in red blood
                                                           cells that helps to transport oxygen
epididymis – a coiled tube inside the testes that
    stores sperm until they are released                health – a person’s physical, mental and
                                                            social state
erectile (tissues) – tissues that can fill with blood
    and become hard                                     hereditary – something that is passed on from
                                                            one generation to another; inherited
exoskeleton – a support system that is found on
    the outside of an organism’s body                   hip bones – large flat bones to which the leg bones
                                                            are attached
fertilisation – the fusion of male and female sex
     cells to form a zygote                             hydrostatic skeleton – a support system found
                                                           inside an organism’s body; the muscles work
fibre – substances in the diet that help food to           against fluid that is trapped inside spaces in
    move through the digestive system                      the body
flagellum – a tail on a cell that enables it            hymen – a membrane over the opening
    to move                                                of the vagina that is broken during
foetus – an unborn human from the ninth week               sexual intercourse
    after fertilisation until birth                     hypophysis – a part of the brain that
gametogenesis – the process by which sex cells             secretes some hormones; also called the
   are made                                                pituitary gland
gas exchange – the movement of oxygen and               immune system – a system in the body that fights
    carbon dioxide across a membrane in opposite           substances that should not be inside the body
    directions                                          implantation – the process during which the ball
gender – being masculine or feminine                       of cells burrows into the wall of the uterus
gender equality – when males and females are            infection – when a person has an organism inside
   considered to be equal                                   their body that makes them sick
gene – a unit that can be passed from parents to        insulate – to keep at a constant temperature
   their children                                       joint – a structure found where bones
                                                            come together
                                                                                              Glossary   149
labia majora – an external skin fold near the         neutralise – to keep the level of
    opening of the vagina                                acidity constant
labia minora – a skin fold that protects the          nostrils – two openings in the nose
    openings of the urethra and vagina                nutrients – food substances that organisms need
labour – the process during which the foetus,             to live and grow
    membranes, umbilical cord and placenta is         oestrogen – a female hormone that is secreted
    expelled from the uterus                              by the ovaries and stimulates the production
lipids – food nutrients made up of carbon,                of secondary sexual characteristics; it is also
    hydrogen and oxygen; their molecules consist          involved in the menstrual cycle
    of one molecule of glycerol joined to three       organ – a group of tissues that form a structure
    fatty acids                                           that performs a function, e.g. the heart
magnification – how many times bigger an image        organ system – a group of organs that work
   is compared to the actual object                       together to perform a function, e.g. the
magnified – made larger using a scientific                digestive system
   instrument or by drawing                           organelles – structures found inside cells; they
malnutrition – when a person does not                     perform different functions
   eat enough, or eats too much, of a                 ova – female sex cells
   food nutrient
                                                      ovaries – the female sex organs that produce
menopause – the time in a woman’s life when she           female sex cells and hormones
   stops menstruating
                                                      oviducts – tubes that lead from each ovary to the
menstrual cycle – a series of events that prepares        uterus; the pathway for the female
   the uterus for pregnancy                               sex cells
monosaccharides – simple sugars, such                 ovulation – the release of an ovum from an ovary
   as glucose                                            into an oviduct
motile – able to move                                 palisade mesophyll cells – long thin cells found
motility – the ability to move                            in leaves; they are specialised
moulting – shedding an outer covering of the              for photosynthesis
   body                                               pathogens – disease-causing organisms, such as
mucus – a sticky substance that is made by some           bacteria
   animal cells                                       penis – the part of the male reproductive system
multicellular – multi-celled; refers to an organism      that is used to place sperm in the female
   that consists of many cells                           vagina during intercourse
nerve impulses – a signal transmitted along a         permeable – a structure that lets molecules pass
   nerve fibre in the body                               through it
150 Glossary
photosynthesis – a life process that happens in        selectively permeable – a structure that allows
   green plants and that uses sunlight, carbon             only certain molecules to pass through it
   dioxide and water to make food molecules,           seminal vesicles – structures that produce and
   such as glucose                                        release seminal fluid into the
phototropism – the reaction of a plant to light           sperm duct
placenta – an organ that develops in                   seminiferous tubules – long coiled tubes in which
    the uterus                                            sperm are produced
pleural membranes – two membranes found                sensitivity – being able to respond to a change in
    inside the chest: one covers the outside of the        the environment
    lungs; the other lines the inside of               skeleton – a structure on the inside or the outside
    the chest                                              of the body that gives support to the body and
polysaccharides – nutrients made from many                 protects the softer parts
    simple sugars joined together                      specialised – changed, to do a
porous – a substance that has holes in it                  special function
progesterone – a female hormone that prepares          sperm duct – a tube that transports sperm out of
   the uterus for pregnancy                                the testes
proportion – the different sizes of objects relative   spinal cord – part of the nervous system; an
   to one another                                          extension of the brain in the backbone
prostate gland – a gland that produces seminal         spongy mesophyll cells – cells in leaves that
    fluid                                                 contain lots of chloroplasts and have air spaces
proteins – food molecules made up of carbon,              between them
    hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and sometimes          stimulus – something that causes a reaction
    sulphur                                            support system – a system that gives strength and
puberty – a time during which secondary sexual            holds the body upright
   characteristics develop in males and females        surface area – the area on the outside of
reagents – chemicals used for                              a structure
    testing substances                                 taxonomy – the classification of things, especially
respiration – a chemical process for the making of         organisms, into groups based on their
    energy using food molecules and oxygen                 similarities and differences
ribs – the thin bones that protect the lungs and       testicles – a male reproductive structure in which
    heart                                                   male sex cells are made; also
scrotum – a sac that covers the testes                      called testes
                                                       testosterone – a male hormone that is important
                                                           in the development of sperm and secondary
                                                           sexual characteristics
                                                                                            Glossary   151
thorax – the scientific name for the
    chest cavity
tissue – a group of similar cells that perform a
    function; e.g. muscle tissue
toxic – poisonous
toxins – poisons
trachea – a tube that leads from the throat into
    the lungs
tropism – a movement of a plant in a certain
    direction in response to a stimulus
umbilical cord – the organ that connects the
  foetus to the placenta
unicellular – single-celled; refers to an organism
    that consists of a single cell
urethra – a tube that is a passage for urine from
    the bladder to the outside of
    the body; it also transports sperm
    during intercourse
uterus – the place where a baby develops;
    also called the womb
vagina – the birth canal
vertebrae – bones that make up the backbone
zygote – a single cell that forms when the nucleus
   of a sperm cell fuses with the nucleus of an
   ovum
152 Glossary
    Index
A                                                         E
acrosome 57                                               ejaculation 120, 137, 144
adaptation 56-60, 67, 98, 100                             elements 65-68,78
alveoli 80-86                                             embryo 31,125, 138, 139, 140, 142, 144, 146
amino acids 68, 78                                        endometrium 122, 133
B                                                         endoskeleton 95, 96, 102, 104
                                                          enzymes 50, 53, 57, 69
backbone 95, 99, 101, 104                                 epidermis 44, 49
balanced diet 65, 73, 78, 74, 75                          epididymis 119, 120, 129
breathing 81, 84, 86                                      erectile (tissue) 121
bronchi 80-85                                             exoskeleton 93-96, 102, 104
bronchioles 80, 81, 85, 86                                F
C
                                                          fertilisation 57, 122,126,129,136-138,140,144-146
Caesarian section 141                                     fibre 73, 77
carbohydrates 65-79, 144                                  flagellum 57, 63
cartilage 81, 83, 95, 104                                 flexible 95, 99
cervix 121, 122                                           foetus 138, 139, 141-144,146
characteristics 12, 14, 15, 19, 21, 30, 88, 93, 96,126,   G
127, 131-135
chlorophyll 19, 22, 26, 27, 28, 31, 51, 91                gametogenesis 118,123,124,129
chromosomes 126, 127, 129                                 gas exchange 80-86
cilia 56-60, 63, 82, 83, 86, 122, 138                     gender 65,74,78,103,118,,128,129,134,135,136
circumcision 119                                          gender equality 128
clinostat 89                                              gene 113
clitoris 121                                              germinal cells 120
communicable disease 111, 145, 147                        gravitropism 87,88,89,92
conception 138, 140                                       H
Cowper’s gland 119, 120, 129
D                                                         haemoglobin 57, 60,69,79,109,113
                                                          health 4,5,56,77,107,108,109,111
deficiency diseases 67,75-78,106,108,112,114-116          hereditary 50,52,53
density 103, 104                                          hip bones 104
diffusion 81, 84-86                                       hydrostatic skeleton 93,94,104
disease 76, 77, 106-117                                   hymen 121
diversity 1, 2, 4, 13, 130                                hypophysis 126, 132
                                                                                                 Index   153
I                                                    P
immune system 73,113,144                             palisade mesophyll cells 59
implantation 138, 139,144                            pathogens 110, 143, 144
infection 11, 69,73,74,77,110,111,112,141,146        penis 119-145
J                                                    permeable 50-64
                                                     photosynthesis 7, 13, 19, 22, 26, 28, 33-34,51-59,
joint 69,95,100-104                                      63-64, 89-92
L                                                    phototropism 87-89,91,92
                                                     placenta 138-140,141-144
labia majora 121                                     pleural membranes 82, 86
labia minora 121                                     polysaccharides 67, 68
labour 140, 142, 144, 146                            porous 114
lipids 65-70, 72, 78                                 progesterone 121, 126,132
M                                                    proportion 65, 73-75
                                                     prostate gland 119,120,129
magnification 38, 40-49, 85, 105                     proteins 48, 65-79, 144
magnified 39, 43, 46                                 puberty 125-135, 142
malnutrition 65, 75, 77                              R
menopause 114, 125, 132, 134
menstrual cycle 126,130, 132, 133 135, 136           reagents 65,70,78,79
monosaccharides 67                                   respiration 2, 6, 7, 12, 13, 50, 80, 84, 85
morula 146                                           ribs 95,99, 101, 102, 104
motile 57, 63, 125                                   S
motility 120
moulting 95, 96                                      scrotum 119, 120
mucus 59, 81-83, 120, 122, 137                       selectively permeable 50
multicellular 19, 22, 37, 48, 51,52, 55, 60-63       seminal vesicles 119, 120, 129, 145
N                                                    seminiferous tubules 120, 124
                                                     sensitivity 2,6, 7, 12, 13, 88, 92, 140
nerve impulses 57                                    skeleton 93-104
neutralise 10, 120                                   specialised 55-60, 63, 86, 106, 138
nostrils 81, 82, 85                                  sperm duct 119, 120, 129
nutrients 7,37,57,58,65-79, 105-106, 115, 120, 139   spinal cord 99, 102
O                                                    spongy mesophyll cells 59
                                                     stimulus 88, 91,92
oestrogen 121, 126, 131, 132                         support system 94
organ 5, 24, 25, 27, 30, 34, 48, 55-145              surface area 27,57, 58, 81, 86
organ system 55, 60-63                               T
organelles 48-64, 105
ova 30,58,112,121,124,-129                           taxonomy 3, 15
ovaries 58, 121,-133                                 testicles 119
oviducts 121-129, 137                                testosterone 119,126, 131, 132
ovulation 122, 126, 132-135                          thorax 84, 96, 99
154 Index
tissue 3, 41, 44, 48, 55, 56, 59-64, 69, 74,
     94,95,97, 105, 132
toxic 7, 13
toxins 110
trachea 80-86
tropism 87-92
U
umbilical cord 139-141
unicellular 20,48,51,52,60,63
urethra 119-122, 129, 137
uterus 121-123, 129, 133, 138-145
V
vagina 121-145
vertebrae 97, 99, 102, 114
Z
zygote 58, 137-146
Index 155