The laboratory portion of the College Board AP® Biology course is an essential part of preparing students for the AP Biology exam. For students, these hands-on experiences help connect course content to the real world while equipping them with the scientific inquiry, reasoning, and critical thinking skills for future success.

advanced biology teacher lab manual

Advanced Biology Through Inquiry Teacher Lab Manual

Engage students in the thrill of discovery with eighteen guided inquiry labs for AP Biology.

PASCO’s award-winning teacher guide, Advanced Biology Through Inquiry Teacher Lab Manual, includes eighteen guided inquiry labs that cover AP Biology concepts such as osmosis and diffusion, evolution, energetics, and system interactions.

AP Biology Course Alignment

Each investigation addresses at least one Learning Objective and Science Practice for Advanced Placement® Biology, as outlined in the College Board AP® Biology Course and Exam Description, published in 2020.

This page provides AP Biology alignment details for the labs inside PASCO’s Advanced Biology Through Inquiry Teacher Lab Manual. A complete list of applicable AP Biology Big Ideas, Learning Objectives, and Science Practices is provided for each lab.

Need a quick guide?

Biology Alignment Sheet

Download the AP Biology Alignment Sheet.

Equation Sheet for AP Biology

Download the Equation Sheet for AP Biology.

Advanced Biology Through Inquiry Teacher Lab Manual Lab Titles

1A-1C - Enzyme Activity (3 versions are provided to support multiple methods of analysis) 10 - Transpiration
2 - Diffusion 11 - Mitosis
3 - Osmosis 12 - Meiosis
4 - Plasmolysis 13 - Energy Dynamics
5 - Cell Size 14 - Artificial Selection
6 - Homeostasis 15 - BLAST Bioinformatics
7 - Cellular Respiration 16 - Population Genetics
8 - Photosynthesis 17 - Mathematical Modeling of Evolution
9 - Plant Pigments 18 - Animal Behavior
Multi-Step Model for Student Inquiry

Each experiment provides a multi-step model for student inquiry that can easily be segmented to fit your course scope and sequence. The components of this model include:

  1. Background: Each lab begins with the Background, which provides a brief introduction to the topic, reviews some prerequisite knowledge, and establishes the purpose of the investigation.
  2. Initial Investigation: The Initial Investigationserves two main purposes: (1) to give students experience using a sensor or laboratory technique, and (2) to encourage higher-level thinking about a biological topic, so that students can construct meaningful questions for their student-designed experiments.
  3. Design and Conduct an Experiment*: This section provides prompts for students to plan and carry out their own experiment. A “Design and Conduct an Experiment” worksheet is included for all labs that have a student-designed experiment option.
  4. Data Analysis and Synthesis Questions: Students analyze and present their data in various ways. They perform calculations to average data from trials, organize tables to summarize results, and create graphs to present their findings. Most of the Data Analysis section consists of free response questions, allowing students to practice evaluating the meaning and significance of their results.
* Some labs do not include a student-designed experiment. A few labs have a complex or lengthy Initial Investigation and the sections were re-ordered to account for this variation.
 

Enzyme Activity

Enzymes are vital to the chemical reactions performed by biological cells to sustain life. In this lab, students investigate the catalyzed decomposition of hydrogen peroxide by catalase or peroxidase using an oxygen gas sensor, a pressure sensor, or a Wireless Spectrometer (VIS). There are versions of this lab available for each of the three methods.

View Activities

Boilerplate Students use one of three analytical tools to investigate the catalyzed decomposition of hydrogen peroxide by catalase. Different versions of this lab are available for use with a Pressure Sensor, Oxygen Sensor, or Wireless Spectrometer (VIS).
Prerequisites
  • Enzymes are proteins and organic catalysts.
  • Enzyme function is determined by the shape/structure of the protein.
  • Chemical reactions proceed at a faster rate when an enzyme is present.
  • The induced fit model describes enzyme function.
  • Enzyme–substrate complexes must form to reduce the activation energy of the reaction.
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Energetics (ENE)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

EVO-2.B: Describe the fundamental molecular and cellular features shared across all domains of life, which provide evidence of common ancestry.

ENE-1.F: Explain how changes to the structure of an enzyme may affect its function.

ENE-1.G: Explain how the cellular environment affects enzyme activity

SYI-3.A: Explain the connection between variation in the number and types of molecules within cells to the ability of the organism to survive and/or reproduce in different environments.

Science Practices 3.A–3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.C, 6.E

Teaching Tools

Lab Station Biology Bundle

Looking for AP Biology lab equipment?

Perform all eighteen Advanced Biology Through Inquiry labs—plus many others—with our ready-made Biology Lab Stations.
 

Diffusion

Biological systems rely on diffusion to transport materials quickly and efficiently. In this lab, students use a pH Sensor to investigate the diffusion of hydrogen ions through a semipermeable membrane.

In the Initial Investigation, students submerge a dialysis tubing bag filled with apple cider vinegar in a beaker of water. They use a Wireless pH Sensor to create a plot of pH vs. Time (s) and monitor the flow of hydronium ions through the membrane. Next, students repeat the process using a dialysis bag filled with pickle juice and compare results from both trials.

In the student-led portion, students design and conduct a similar experiment to test factors that affect dilution. Students can choose to change a variety of parameters such as the pH of the intracellular and extracellular environments, or the temperature of the solutions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a pH Sensor to investigate the diffusion of hydrogen ions through a semipermeable membrane and compare the rates of diffusion for two solutions that differ in their acidity.
Prerequisites
  • Diffusion is the movement of substances from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.
  • Biological membranes are mainly composed of phospholipids and proteins. Their hydrophobic and hydrophilic properties are responsible for the semipermeability of plasma membranes.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.C: Explain how specialized structures and strategies are used for the efficient exchange of molecules to the environment.

ENE-2.C: Explain how the structure of biological membranes influences selective permeability.

ENE-2.F: Describe the mechanisms that organisms use to transport large molecules across the plasma membrane.

ENE-2.I: Explain how osmoregulatory mechanisms contribute to the health and survival of organisms.

Science Practices 2.C, 3.A–3.D, 4.B, 5.D, 6.A–6.C, 6.E

Teaching Tools

Diffusion/Osmosis Kit

Diffusion/Osmosis Kit

Help students visualize osmosis and diffusion with our durable Diffusion/Osmosis Kit.
 

Osmosis

The flow of water across semipermeable membranes is an essential part of the form and function of animal cells. In this lab, students use a colorimeter to determine whether two unknown solutions are hypo- or hypertonic to a model cell (dialysis tubing bags).

In the Initial Investigation, students monitor osmosis in two model cells containing different “intracellular” solutions and blue food dye. They use a Wireless Colorimeter to determine the transmittance of green light through each intracellular solution before submerging them in beakers of water.

Next, students pipette samples from the model cells into cuvettes. They use a Wireless Colorimeter to measure the transmittance of green light through each sample, and use the data to determine whether the solutions were hypotonic or hypertonic. Students move on to calculate the percent change in transmittance and answer data analysis questions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a colorimeter to determine which extracellular fluid is hypertonic to a model cell and which solution is hypotonic.
Prerequisites
  • The terms isotonic, hypotonic, and hypertonic describe the relative amount of solutes in a solution that surrounds cells.
  • Osmosis is the net movement of water through a semipermeable membrane from a less concentrated solution to a more concentrated solution.
  • The amount of light transmitted through a colored solution depends on the concentration of the solution.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Information Storage and Transmission (IST)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.C: Explain how specialized structures and strategies are used for the efficient exchange of molecules to the environment.

ENE-2.C: Explain how the structure of biological membranes influences selective permeability.

ENE-2.F: Describe the mechanisms that organisms use to transport large molecules across the plasma membrane.

ENE-2.H: Explain how concentration gradients affect the movement of molecules across membranes.

ENE-2.I: Explain how osmoregulatory mechanisms contribute to the health and survival of organisms.

ENE-3.A: Describe positive and/or negative feedback mechanisms.

ENE-3.B: Explain how negative feedback helps to maintain homeostasis.

ENE-3.D: Explain how the behavioral and/or physiological response of an organism is related to changes in internal or external environment.

IST-3.A: Describe the ways that cells can communicate with one another.

IST-3.B: Explain how cells communicate with one another over short and long distances.

Science Practices 2.C, 2.D, 3.D, 4.A, 4.B, 6.B, 6.C

Teaching Tools

Wireless Colorimeter & Turbidity Sensor

Wireless Colorimeter & Turbidity Sensor

Enhance student studies of osmosis, water quality, and more with our low-cost Wireless Colorimeter & Turbidity Sensor.
 

Plasmolysis

In “Plasmolysis,” students practice different methods for determining the water potential of plant cells.

In the Initial Investigation, students use a microscope to compare onion cells suspended in water with onion cells suspended in unknown solutions. They practice making observations, draw representations of their work, and compare and contrast cells from each sample.

After learning that the unknown solutions contain different amounts of NaCl, students hypothesize which unknown is the most concentrated. They use a Wireless Conductivity Sensor to test their hypotheses and explain why they were correct or incorrect.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students learn about the gravimetric technique for determining the water potential of plant tissues. Next, they design an experiment that uses the technique to compare the water potentials of different plant tissues (e.g., sections from carrots, celery, or other vegetables).

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a conductivity sensor to explain the effects of exposing plant tissue to different concentrations of salt water. Then they design an experiment to compare the water potential of different plant tissues.
Prerequisites
  • Plant cells have a cell wall and a cell membrane.
  • Plasmolysis occurs when the volume of the cytosol decreases, causing the cell membrane to pull away from the cell wall.
  • The concentration of solutes in a solution influences the movement of water into or out of a cell.
  • Solutions can be described as hypertonic, hypotonic, or isotonic relative to the cytosol of a cell.
  • Salts contain charged particles, called ions, that conduct electricity.
  • Water potential is affected by solute pressure and concentration. (Ψ = Ψs + Ψp)
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Learning Objectives

ENE-2.D: Describe the role of the cell wall in maintaining cell structure and function.

ENE-2.F: Describe the mechanisms that organisms use to transport large molecules across the plasma membrane.

ENE-2.H: Explain how concentration gradients affect the movement of molecules across membranes.

ENE-2.I: Explain how osmoregulatory mechanisms contribute to the health and survival of organisms.

Science Practices 3.A–3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.C
 

Cell Size

Why are cells so small? In this lab, students use a Conductivity Sensor and agarose-salt cubes to determine how cell size affects the rate of solute diffusion.

In the Initial Investigation, students create two sets of agarose-salt cubes: one large cube, and eight equally-sized cubes (total mass equals that of the large cube). Students record the mass of the large cube and a single, small cube; then calculate the surface area, volume, and surface-area-to-volume ratio for each. They use this information to answer analysis questions prior to moving forward.

In the next section, students dissolve the cubes in solution and use a Conductivity Sensor to create a live plot of Conductivity vs. Time (s). After organizing their data in a table, students perform calculations to determine the relationship between cell size, diffusion of salt, and measured conductivity.

Lastly, students design an experiment in which a variable other than cell size is varied and its effect on diffusion rate is measured. They analyze the results of their experiments to answer analysis questions, and make predictions about theoretical experiments.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a conductivity sensor and agarose-salt cubes to measure the effects of cell size on the rate of solute diffusion.
Prerequisites
  • Cells are the basic unit of structure and function for biological systems, and they must be small to carry out essential life-sustaining functions.
  • Diffusion of matter occurs along a concentration gradient, from high to low concentration.
  • How to calculate surface area and volume for a cube and other geometric shapes.
  • The concentration of salt dissolved in water correlates directly to ion conductivity.
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Energetics (ENE)
Learning Objectives

EVO-2.B: Describe the fundamental molecular and cellular features shared across all domains of life, which provide evidence of common ancestry.

ENE-1.A: Describe the composition of macromolecules required by living organisms.

ENE-1.B: Explain the effect of surface area-to-volume ratios on the exchange of materials between cells or organisms and the environment.

ENE-2.I: Explain how osmoregulatory mechanisms contribute to the health and survival of organisms.

Science Practices 2.C, 2.D, 3.A–3.E, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.D

Teaching Tools

Wireless Conductivity Sensor

Wireless Conductivity Sensor

Quantify the effects of cell size with real-time data from the Wireless Conductivity Sensor.
 

Homeostasis

The human brain and nervous system play an important role in regulating the body’s response to changes in external stimuli. In this lab, students use temperature sensors to investigate the human body’s ability to maintain homeostasis when exposed to a cold stimulus.

In the Initial Investigation, students work in pairs, so that one student is the test subject and the other is the data recorder. Fast Response Temperature Probes are attached to the subject’s hands and data is collected to determine their baseline temperature. In the first trial, the subject begins at rest; then submerges their right hand in an ice bath. After sixty seconds, the subject’s hand is removed from the bath and the partner continues collecting data until the recovery period ends (about five minutes). The results of the experiment are analyzed and used to answer analysis questions.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students design a method for investigating whether a different variable, or stressor, affects the maintenance of homeostasis. Students compare results from both the initial and student-designed investigations before moving on to the post-lab questions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use multiple temperature probes simultaneously to investigate the body’s ability to maintain homeostasis when subjected to a cold stimulus.
Prerequisites
  • Basic nervous system structure, as well as the function of the hypothalamus.
  • Homeostasis is the interplay between external factors and internal regulatory mechanisms that keep biological systems stable within a very narrow range.
  • Feedback loops are an example of a regulating mechanism.
  • Thermoregulation strategies in animals, including ectothermy and endothermy.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Information Storage and Transmission (IST)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.M: Describe the strategies organisms use to acquire and use energy.

ENE-3.A: Describe positive and/or negative feedback mechanisms.

ENE-3.B: Explain how negative feedback helps to maintain homeostasis.

ENE-3.D: Explain how the behavioral and/or physiological response of an organism is related to changes in internal or external environment.

IST-3.A: Describe the ways that cells can communicate with one another.

SYI-3.D: Explain how the genetic diversity of a species or population affects its ability to withstand environmental pressures.

Science Practices 2.B, 2.C, 3.A–3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.C
 

Cellular Respiration

The presence of cellular respiration is a key differentiator between dormant and germinating seeds. In this lab, students use a carbon dioxide gas sensor to investigate the rate of cellular respiration in germinating seeds.

In the Initial Investigation, students set up two test chambers: one containing dormant seeds and the other containing germinating seeds. They use a Wireless CO2 Sensor to monitor the concentration of carbon dioxide gas (ppm) in each chamber over time; then perform graphical analysis to compare results from both trials and answer the analysis questions.

In the next section, students use the results from the initial investigation to develop a driving question for their own inquiry. If students are not quite ready to propose their own investigation, they can choose from several questions within the lab such as, “Do different animals respire at different rates when at rest?” and “Do monocot and dicot seeds respire at different rates?”

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a carbon dioxide gas sensor to investigate the rate of cellular respiration in germinating seeds.
Prerequisites
  • Structure and role of mitochondria in aerobic respiration (cellular energetics)
  • Chemical equation for cellular respiration
  • Introductory understanding of the aerobic respiration pathways (glycolysis, Krebs cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation)
  • Role of enzymes in biochemical pathways and the variables that can affect enzyme-catalyzed reactions
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Energetics (ENE)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

EVO-2.B: Describe the fundamental molecular and cellular features shared across all domains of life, which provide evidence of common ancestry.

ENE-1.H: Describe the role of energy in living organisms.

ENE-1.K: Describe the processes that allow organisms to use energy stored in biological macromolecules.

SYI-1.E: Explain how subcellular components and organelles contribute to the function of the cell.

SYI-1.F: Describe the structural features of a cell that allow organisms to capture, store, and use energy.

Science Practices 1.B, 3.A–3.D, 4.A, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.C

Teaching Tools

Wireless C O 2 Sensor

Wireless CO2 Sensor

Engage students in the exploration of cellular respiration and photosynthesis with our easy-to-use Wireless CO2 Sensor.
 

Photosynthesis

Chloroplasts, and other photosynthetic pigments, absorb some wavelengths of light better than others. In this guided-inquiry lab, students investigate whether light color affects the rate of photosynthesis in green leaves using a Wireless Carbon Dioxide Gas Sensor.

In the initial investigation, students measure the concentration of carbon dioxide gas inside two chambers containing spinach leaves: one placed under red light and the other under green light. They use a Wireless CO2 Sensor to track the concentration of carbon dioxide gas over time and perform graphical analysis to interpret their results.

In the next section, students design an experiment to determine whether a different variable affects photosynthesis in green leaves.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a carbon dioxide gas sensor to determine whether light color affects the rate of photosynthesis in plants.
Prerequisites
  • Sunlight is a mixture of different wavelengths of light.
  • Leaves contain pigment molecules that absorb light.
  • The color of an object is the result of light interacting with the pigments it contains.
  • Chlorophyll is not the only pigment present in leaves.
  • Plants absorb carbon dioxide as a source of carbon for the sugars and other compounds made during photosynthesis.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.A: Describe the composition of macromolecules required by living organisms.

ENE-1.I: Describe the photosynthetic processes that allow organisms to capture and store energy.

ENE-1.J: Explain how cells capture energy from light and transfer it to biological molecules for storage and use.

ENE-1.O: Explain how the activities of autotrophs and heterotrophs enable the flow of energy within an ecosystem.

SYS-3.A: Explain the connection between variation in the number and types of molecules within cells to the ability of the organism to survive and/or reproduce in different environments.

Science Practices 2.C, 3.A–3.E, 4.A, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.D

Teaching Tools

Wireless Oxygen Gas Sensor

Wireless Oxygen Gas Sensor

Monitor oxygen production or consumption in real time with the Wireless Oxygen Gas Sensor.
 

Plant Pigments

In this multi-part investigation, students use spectrometry, colorimetry, and paper chromatography to answer three driving questions:
1) What pigments are present in spinach leaves?
2) What colors of light are absorbed by these pigments?
3) What role do pigments play in the light-dependent reactions of photosynthesis?

Note: This experiment is designed in segments, so that it can be completed over the course of multiple class periods.

In Part 1, students extract pigments from spinach leaves and begin separating them using paper chromatography.

As the pigments separate, students use a Wireless Colorimeter to analyze a dilute sample of spinach extract. Then they perform a similar analysis using the Wireless Spectrometer (VIS) to collect a full spectrum of absorbance data and compare the results from both processes.

In Part 2, students use a colorimeter and DPIP to measure the photosynthetic activity of spinach chloroplasts. To do so, they fill three cuvettes with dilute spinach extract and expose them to different lighting conditions. They use a colorimeter to record each sample’s transmittance or absorbance over time and generate a graph to represent the results of their DPIP study.

Students can pursue their own investigations in the next section, or move on to the post-lab data analysis and synthesis questions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students analyze spinach pigments and chloroplasts using paper chromatography, a colorimeter, and a spectrometer to understand how plants capture light for photosynthesis.
Prerequisites
  • The color of a leaf is determined by the color of light reflected by its pigments.
  • Pigments are molecules that absorb certain wavelengths of light, thereby providing the energy that drives photosynthesis.
  • The light reactions of photosynthesis involve electron transport chains (ETC) that accept “excited” electrons.
  • Chromatography is the process of separating molecules based on their differential affinity for a substrate or solvent.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.A: Describe the composition of macromolecules required by living organisms.

ENE-1.I: Describe the photosynthetic processes that allow organisms to capture and store energy.

ENE-1.J: Explain how cells capture energy from light and transfer it to biological molecules for storage and use.

ENE-2.A: Describe the roles of each of the components of the cell membrane in maintaining the internal environment of the cell.

ENE-2.K: Describe the membrane-bound structures of the eukaryotic cell.

ENE-4.C: Explain how community structure is related to energy availability in the environment.

SYI-1.F: Describe the structural features of a cell that allow organisms to capture, store, and use energy.

SYS-3.A: Explain the connection between variation in the number and types of molecules within cells to the ability of the organism to survive and/or reproduce in different environments.

Science Practices 1.A, 2.A–2.C, 3.A–3.D, 4.A, 4.B, 5.D, 6.A–6.D

Teaching Tools

Wireless Spectrometer

Wireless Spectrometer

Empower students to explore plant pigments, Beer’s law, and more with our award-winning Wireless Spectrometer.
 

Transpiration

The rate of transpiration in plants is affected by several environmental factors. In this lab, students set up a pair of potometers to investigate whether humidity affects the rate of transpiration in plants.

They use a Wireless Pressure Sensor and Wireless Weather Sensor to generate live graphs of Pressure (mmHg) versus Time (min), Barometric Pressure (mmHg) versus Time (min), Relative Humidity (%) versus Time (min) and Temperature (°C) versus Time (min).

After collecting data from both the control and humid potometer, students create a data table to compare their results. They use graphical analysis to answer post-lab questions and hypothesize about the results of similar experiments.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students design an independent investigation to further explore an aspect of transpiration or plant anatomy.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a Pressure Sensor and a Weather Sensor to investigate the rate of transpiration in plants under normal and humid conditions.
Prerequisites
  • Properties of water: cohesion, adhesion, and hydrogen bonding.
  • The relationship between volume and pressure is an inverse relationship.
  • Water potential is the driving force behind transpiration.
  • Plants have vascular structures specialized for water transport.
  • Plants must balance their requirements for water and carbon dioxide with the risk of excessive water loss through evaporation.
  • Gas exchange is regulated through the opening and closing of leaf stomata.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.A: Describe the composition of macromolecules required by living organisms.

ENE-2.H: Explain how concentration gradients affect the movement of molecules across membranes.

ENE-2.I: Explain how osmoregulatory mechanisms contribute to the health and survival of organisms.

ENE-3.A: Describe positive and/or negative feedback mechanisms.

ENE-3.D: Explain how the behavioral and/or physiological response of an organism is related to changes in internal or external environment.

SYS-3.D: Explain how the genetic diversity of a species or population affects its ability to withstand environmental pressures.

Science Practices 1.C, 2.B, 3.A–3.D, 4.A, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.D

Teaching Tools

Wireless Pressure Sensor

Wireless Pressure Sensor

Bring live data to student studies of transpiration, enzyme activity, and more with the Wireless Pressure Sensor.
 

Mitosis

In this lab, students use a microscope to study the phases of mitosis in onion root tips and practice calculating chi-square values.

Students begin by collecting fresh root tips from an onion and preparing them for microscope analysis. They learn how to stain and crush their samples; then place their sides under the microscope to search for cells in interphase and mitosis, tallying occurrences of each as they go.

Next, students perform data analysis to determine the mean and standard deviation of their recorded values. They learn about the importance of chi-square tests, p-values, and the Law of Probability before applying these statistics to their own data sets and answering analysis questions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate After learning the technique for growing roots and preparing root tip squashes for microscope analysis, students observe the root tips for evidence of mitosis and statistically analyze the data.
Prerequisites
  • Foundational understanding of the purpose of mitosis and its phases: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.
  • Understanding of the cell cycle and its component phases: G1, S, G2, mitosis, and cytokinesis.
  • Ability to view cells under a microscope.
  • Ability to differentiate between cells in interphase and cells in mitosis.
Big Ideas Information Storage and Transmission (IST)
Learning Objectives

IST-1.B: Describe the events that occur in the cell cycle.

IST-1.C: Explain how mitosis results in the transmission of chromosomes from one generation to the next.

IST-1.D: Describe the role of checkpoints in regulating the cell cycle.

IST-1.K: Describe the structures involved in passing hereditary information from one generation to the next.

Science Practices 1.C, 2.A, 2.D, 3.A-3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.C, 5.D, 6.A-6.D
 

Meiosis

In this lab, students use model chromosomes to explore meiosis and genetic variation in sexually reproducing organisms.

In the Initial Investigation, students use model male and female Drosophila chromosomes to answer questions about haploid and diploid cells, phenotypes, and inheritance. They simulate independent assortment and reproduction, recording both the genotype and phenotype of the first five offspring.

Next, students expand their investigation of meiosis using pop beads. They work as a group to make a table-top model cell and four pop-bead chromosomes, which they use to answer questions about the phases of meiosis.

The following section introduces students to meiosis in haploid cells using the reproductive cycle of Sordaria, a type of fungus. Students then use a set of chromosome cards or prepared microscope slides to search for instances of crossing-over in Sordaria. They record their observations and use the resulting data table to answer data analysis and synthesis questions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use physical models of chromosomes to explore meiosis and genetic variation. They use crossover rates observed in Sordaria to calculate gene distance from the centromere.
Prerequisites
  • Diploid cells (2n) are cells that contain two sets of chromosomes, one maternal set and one paternal set. In animals, all cells are diploid except gametes.
  • Haploid cells (n) are cells that contain half the number of chromosomes as a diploid cell from the same species.
  • Meiosis produces haploid cells.
  • Sexually reproducing species produce non-identical offspring. Sexual reproduction is an important part of generating genetic variation in populations.
  • The genotype is the combination of genes an organism inherits; the phenotype is a result of gene expression. (the appearance of the organism).
  • Chromosomes exist in the “X” shape only during some phases of cell division. X-shaped chromosomes are composed of identical sister chromatids formed when DNA replication occurs prior to cell division beginning.
  • Crossing over is the exchange of genetic material between non-sister chromatids during meiosis.
Big Ideas Information Storage and Transmission (IST)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

IST-1.F: Explain how meiosis results in the transmission of chromosomes from one generation to the next.

IST-1.G: Describe similarities and/ or differences between the phases and outcomes of mitosis and meiosis.

IST-1.H: Explain how the process of meiosis generates genetic diversity.

IST-1.I: Explain the inheritance of genes and traits as described by Mendel’s laws.

IST-1.K: Describe the structures involved in passing hereditary information from one generation to the next.

IST-4.A: Explain how changes in genotype may result in changes in phenotype.

SYI-3.C: Explain how chromosomal inheritance generates genetic variation in sexual reproduction.

Science Practices 1.B, 1.C, 2.A-2.D, 3.B, 3.D, 5.A, 6.A-6.C
 

Energy Dynamics

Energy flow and material cycling is a central theme in ecosystem science. In this lab, students set up and study EcoZones containing different combinations of detritus and decomposers to better understand the flow of energy in food webs.

In the initial investigation, students work in groups to prepare control and experimental EcoZones. They record the mass of the detritus material prior to decomposition and set up the Wireless CO2 Sensor to record the concentration of carbon dioxide gas over time. Over the next few days, students continue to monitor their systems, recording the concentration of carbon dioxide gas and the mass of dry matter in each EcoZone, so that they can be used in energy calculations.

The Design and Conduct an Experiment section challenges students to alter their model system, so that they can study factors that affect decomposition rates in ecosystems.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use EcoChamber containers and a carbon dioxide gas sensor to estimate energy flow and carbon cycling within a variety of detritus-based ecosystems.
Prerequisites
  • The role of photosynthesis, cellular respiration, and fermentation in energy transfer and material cycling in ecosystems.
  • Trophic level pyramids and food web illustrations represent energy flow through ecosystems.
  • A percentage of energy is lost each time it moves through the food chain.
  • Decomposers and detritivores are typically not shown in these illustrations because energy can enter this trophic level from any of the others.
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Systems Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

ENE-1.A: Describe the composition of macromolecules required by living organisms.

ENE-1.H: Describe the role of energy in living organisms.

ENE-1.I: Describe the photosynthetic processes that allow organisms to capture and store energy.

ENE-4.B: Explain how interactions within and among populations influence community structure.

SYI-1.G: Describe factors that influence growth dynamics of populations.

Science Practices 2.B, 2.C, 3.A-3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A-6.D

Teaching Tools

EcoZone System

EcoZone System

Track energy flow through three different microhabitats with our sensor-friendly EcoZone System.
 

Artificial Selection

Artificial selection plays a central role in both the past and future of biology. In this lab, students study artificial selection in Wisconsin Fast Plants over the course of a few weeks.

They monitor and record the occurrence of milestones as the plants grow, track changes in several variables, and determine if limiting cross-pollination to plants with a desired trait affects the frequency of that trait in the second generation.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students create a procedure to study how an environmental factor, such as acid rain or planting density, affects the plants’ growth over several generations.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students follow the growth and development of Wisconsin Fast Plantsand determine if limiting cross-pollination to certain plants with a desired trait affects the frequency of that trait in the second generation.
Prerequisites
  • Genotype gives rise to phenotype. Only traits that are heritable can be reliably transmitted to the next generation.
  • With genetic variation comes the potential for mutations.
  • Artificial selection is a type of selection in which individuals with a desired trait are selectively bred in order to increase the occurrence of that trait.
  • Under natural selection, environmental conditions influence the differential reproductive success of populations best suited for a particular environment.
  • Natural selection over a long period of time is a mechanism of evolution.
  • Fossil fuel contaminants such as carbon dioxide, sulfur oxides, and nitrogen oxides react with water in the atmosphere to yield acidic precipitation.
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Learning Objectives

EVO-1.C: Describe the causes of natural selection.

EVO-1.D: Explain how natural selection affects populations.

EVO-1.E: Describe the importance of phenotypic variation in a population.

EVO-1.F: Explain how humans can affect diversity within a population.

EVO-3.A: Explain how evolution is an ongoing process in all living organisms.

Science Practices 1.C, 2.B, 3.A-3.D, 4.A, 5.A, 5.B, 5.D, 6.A-6.C

Teaching Tools

Greenhouse Sense & Control Kit

Greenhouse Sense & Control Kit

Design, study, and optimize a plant habitat with the award-winning Greenhouse Sense & Control Kit!
 

BLAST Bioinformatics

Much of today’s biological research involves DNA sequencing. In this activity, students employ the same tools used by research scientists all over the world – online databases that allow comparison of DNA and protein sequences across species.

In the Initial Investigation, students compare 100-nucleotide sequences of the Hemoglobin B gene (HBB) to determine the relatedness of five different mammals. They learn how to navigate the BLAST website, locate relevant data, and run analyses using site tools.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students use their new understanding of BLAST to investigate the evolutionary relationship among different species.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students analyze the DNA and protein sequences of beta globin from five mammalian species to determine their evolutionary relatedness.
Prerequisites
  • DNA structure and function, including a basic understanding of exons, introns, and nucleic acids.
  • Protein structure and function, including familiarity with hemoglobin.
  • Evolutionary relationships are inferred by comparing physical features as well as molecular sequences between species.
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Learning Objectives

EVO-1.H: Explain how random occurrences affect the genetic makeup of a population.

EVO-1.M: Describe the types of data that provide evidence for evolution.

EVO-1.N: Explain how morphological, biochemical, and geological data provide evidence that organisms have changed over time.

EVO-2.B: Describe the fundamental molecular and cellular features shared across all domains of life, which provide evidence of common ancestry.

EVO-2.C: Describe structural and functional evidence on cellular and molecular levels that provides evidence for the common ancestry of all eukaryotes.

EVO-3.A: Explain how evolution is an ongoing process in all living organisms.

EVO-3.B: Describe the types of evidence that can be used to infer an evolutionary relationship.

EVO-3.C: Explain how a phylogenetic tree and/or cladogram can be used to infer evolutionary relatedness.

Science Practices 1.C, 2.A, 2.C, 2.D, 3.A-3.D, 5.B, 5.D, 6.A-6.C
 

Population Genetics

In this experiment, students determine their phenotypes for the PTC (phenylthiocarbamide) tasting trait and use class data to derive allele frequencies for a population. Based on their phenotype and predicted genotype, students use “allele cards” to simulate the next generation and determine if allele frequencies change over time in the absence of selection, non-random mating, mutations, and migration.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students are asked to devise a way to model the effect of violating one of the Hardy-Weinberg conditions in a simulated population and to determine whether the population remains in equilibrium or evolves under the new conditions.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students determine their phenotype for the PTC (phenylthiocarbamide) tasting trait and use class data to derive allele frequencies for a population.
Prerequisites
  • Genetics vocabulary: alleles, heterozygous, homozygous, genotype, and phenotype.
  • Evolution by natural selection: natural selection acts on phenotypes, but only heritable variations can be acted upon by selection forces.
  • Genetic drift is a mechanism of evolution that can lead to speciation and changes in biodiversity over time.
  • New alleles are introduced into a gene pool through mutations or migrations.
  • Basic math skills: percentages and frequencies, solving for an unknown, taking a square root of a number/squaring a number.
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Learning Objectives

EVO-1.C: Describe the causes of natural selection.

EVO-1.H: Explain how random occurrences affect the genetic makeup of a population.

EVO-1.I: Describe the role of random processes in the evolution of specific populations.

EVO-1.K: Describe the conditions under which allele and genotype frequencies will change in populations.

EVO-1.M: Describe the types of data that provide evidence for evolution.

Science Practices 1.C, 2.B, 2.D, 3.A–3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.D
 

Mathematical Modeling of Evolution

One way to study if a population is evolving is to monitor the frequencies of alleles in a population over time, from generation to generation. In this lab, students work with a mathematical model and computer simulation to explore how inheritance patterns and gene frequencies change in a population.

In the initial investigation, students use the model to explore parameters that affect allele frequencies including population size, selection, and initial allele frequency.

In the Design and Conduct an Experiment section, students apply the mathematical model used in the Initial Investigation to simulate multiple generations of a population that has been exposed to a disturbance.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students work with a mathematical model and computer simulation to explore how inheritance patterns and gene frequencies change in a population.
Prerequisites
  • Mendelian genetics
  • Hardy-Weinberg equation and conditions
  • How natural selection can alter the allele frequencies in a population
  • Basic understanding of spreadsheets (Microsoft Excelor Google Sheets™)
Big Ideas Evolution (EVO)
Learning Objectives

EVO-1.C: Describe the causes of natural selection.

EVO-1.E: Describe the importance of phenotypic variation in a population.

EVO-1.H: Explain how random occurrences affect the genetic makeup of a population.

EVO-1.K: Describe the conditions under which allele and genotype frequencies will change in populations.

EVO-1.L: Explain the impacts on the population if any of the conditions of Hardy-Weinberg are not met.

EVO-3.A: Explain how evolution is an ongoing process in all living organisms.

Science Practices 2.A, 2.B, 2.D, 3.A–3.D, 4.A, 5.D, 6.A–6.E
 

Animal Behavior

Some of the simplest behaviors are those related to an organism’s reaction to environmental factors such as light, sound, or moisture. In this lab, students test the response of Drosophila melanogaster (fruit flies) to different stimuli and determine if there is a significant change in their behavior.

In the Initial Investigation, students construct choice chambers from drinking straws and cotton swabs. They expose the flies in the chamber to two environments, which they place at each end of the straw. Students then conduct a chi-square test to determine if the flies display taxis and are indeed favoring one environment over another.

View Experiment

Boilerplate Students use a choice chamber to test the response of fruit flies to different stimuli and determine if there is a significant change in their behavior.
Prerequisites
  • Learned vs. innate behaviors
  • Null hypothesis
  • Chi-square analysis and its applications
  • Natural Selection
  • General understanding of the genetic basis of behavior and the role of taxis
  • The role of phototaxis, chemotaxis, thermotaxis, and geotaxis in animal behavior
  • The impact of abiotic and biotic factors on the taxis of animal behavior
Big Ideas Energetics (ENE)
Information Storage and Transmission (IST)
System Interactions (SYI)
Learning Objectives

ENE-3.D: Explain how the behavioral and/or physiological response of an organism is related to changes in internal or external environment.

ENE-4.B: Explain how interactions within and among populations influence community structure.

IST-5.A: Explain how the behavioral responses of organisms affect their overall fitness and may contribute to the success of the population.

SYI-1.G: Describe factors that influence growth dynamics of populations.

Science Practices 2.D, 3.A–3.D, 4.B, 5.A, 5.C, 5.D, 6.A–6.D

Perform all eighteen Advanced Biology Through Inquiry labs—plus many others—with our ready-made Biology Lab Stations.

Learn More

* AP, AP Biology, and Advanced Placement are registered trademarks of the College Board, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this product.