Multiple Choice Questions - really good practice for OCR A A-level Biology
Read moreChallenging Questions with lots of Data Analysis and Application - A-level Biology past paper questions
Good practice if you are struggling with data analysis questions
Pack of challenging past paper questions with lots of Data Analysis and application - A-level Biology past paper questions - good for OCR and AQA specifications
Read moreAutosomal linkage and Chi-squared - Nail Patella ... Only for the brave ! A-level Biology
Terrific exam question - combining autosomal linkage and Chi-Squared. Give it a go if you have ambition.....
Read moreNitrogen Cycle - a quick guide to understanding the concept, and a pack of questions - for A-level Biology
How to understand the Nitrogen Cycle
Nitrogen Cycle : A few tips
Start with dead plants and animals or faeces.
Remember that decomposers are just heterotrophes respiring dead stuff and producing ammonia from the deamination of amino acids (the keto acid that remains following deamination is respired).
Ammonia then gets oxidised to nitrite and oxidised to nitrate by nitrifying bacteria - Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter , both aerobic chemoautotrophes.
Nitrates are actively transported into the roots, by a carrier protein which uses ATP from the mitochondria, then via the xylem to the leaves. In the leaves the nitrate is reduced to ammonia and then used to make (with carbon from photosynthesis) amino acids and nucleic acids and hence more plant !.
Growing a crop removes protein and nucleotides from a field (and sells it in Tesco !). To maintain fertility you need to make an input of nitrogen - this can be organic (dead things and faeces), which feed the decomposers. Or inorganic - made by joining nitrogen and hydrogen in the Haber process to make ammonia (applied to fields as ammonium nitrate), lightening also make nitrogen oxides - but is harder to arrange.
Rhizobium, a symbiotic bacteria, living in root nodules of legumes, benefits from an anaerobic environment, the legume makes Leghaemoglobin, a protein with a high affinity for oxygen which therefore prevents oxygen from poisoning the nitrogen reducing enzyme of the bacteria.
Rhizobia use sucrose from the plant for respiration. Rhizobia make ammonia (and hence amino acids) from nitrogen gas, the plants use these amino acids for growth. When legumes die, the nitrogen in the proteins of the dead plant is made available to other non-leguminous plants by decomposers.
Decomposers and nitrifying bacteria are aerobes so ploughing - which increases the availability of oxygen in the soil - will raise the concentration of nitrates and hence the ability of the plants to make more protein.,
Pseudomonas denitrificans is an anaerobe so thrives in waterlogged soil. Denitrification uses nitrate as an electron acceptor, the nitrate is reduced to Nitrogen gas, thus farmers drain fields to maintain fertility of the soil.
Read moreInsulin and Blood Sugar Question - #synoptic A-level Biology
Respiration and Enzymes/Protein structure ... Hard Synoptic A-level Biology Question
This is an outstanding synoptic question from a Pre-U Biology Paper. Covers Protein Synthesis, Enzymes, Heart Disease, Respiration ....
Read moreParthogenesis in Lizards...Another Synoptic A-level Biology Question from the archives
Osmosis A-level Biology Past Paper Exam Questions
Pack of past paper questions on Osmosis and Water potential - I have tried to include one question of each type
Read moreChallenging Multiple Choice questions for A-level Biology - Part 2
As promised last week - here is the second half of the terrific Pre U multiple choice questions
good luck ! and here is the markscheme
Challenging Multiple Choice questions for A-level Biology great for OCR - not easy !
Pre-U is a fine source of wonderfully written multiple choice questions - now making a reappearance in OCR assessment.
PDF of 18 multiple choice questions
Will post the other half of them next week - will give you time to recover .....
Radioactive Phages - Good Synoptic A-level Biology Question #ocrbiology
Cats, Manx ! Phenotype and Siamese and Genetic Crosses #alevelbiology question
Naked Mole rats and Anti-oxidants ... Another synoptic A-level Biology Question
Honey Bees, Sucrose and Chi squared ?? Challenging Synoptic #A-level Biology Questions
Tips and Practice Questions for the Practical component of the Theory papers - A-level Biology
How to improve your answers to questions about practicals in A-level Biology exam questions.
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Read moreNeurones and Action Potentials - A level Biology Questions - by topic - with the markschemes
Neurones and Action Potentials give an opportunity for examiners to get you to explain a graph (in terms of the flow of Sodium and Potassium ions through voltage gated channel) and to link that explanation to first year concepts of facilitated diffusion and active transport.
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Kidney Questions with markschemes -A level Biology Questions by topic
A level Biology Questions by topic - Kidney Questions with markschemes, useful for OCR, AQA, Eduqas
Here are lots of good questions on the kidney. I expect the kidney to appear frequently in the new style papers as they are very synoptic, give opportunities to require calculation and get students to analyse and explain data.
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Read moreAutosomal linkage - Try with 3 Alleles ...- Genetics and A-level Biology
Students find autosomal linkage a challenge ... I suspect this is because they mentally disconnect Meiosis from gamete formation.
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Read moreLeaf discs in a Syringe - Another Synoptic Question #alevelbiology
Photosynthesis, Enzymes, Pigments, Leaf Buoyancy and more experimental design.
Think about how starch is made and what it is made from ......
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Read moreA level Biology Questions by Topic with Markschemes - Aerobic and Anaerobic
A level Biology Questions by Topic with Markschemes - Aerobic respiration and Anaerobic Respiration
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