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Biology!!
Biology is the
branch of science dealing with the study of life. It is concerned
with the characteristics, classification, and behaviors of
organisms, how species come into existence, and the interactions
they have with each other and with the environment. Biology
encompasses a broad spectrum of academic fields that are often
viewed as independent disciplines. However, together they address
phenomena related to living organisms (biological phenomena) over
a wide range of scales, from biochemistry to ecology.
Biology studies the variety of life (clockwise from top-left) E.
coli, tree fern, gazelle, Goliath beetleAt the organism level,
biology has explained phenomena such as birth, growth, aging,
death and decay of living organisms, similarities between
offspring and their parents (heredity) and flowering of plants
which have puzzled humanity throughout history. Other phenomena,
such as lactation, metamorphosis, egg-hatching, healing, and
tropism have been addressed. On a wider scale of time and space,
biologists have studied domestication of animals and plants, the
wide variety of living organisms (biodiversity), changes in living
organisms over time (evolution), extinction, speciation, social
behaviour among animals, etc.
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While botany
encompasses the study of plants, zoology is the branch of science
that is concerned about the study of animals and anthropology is
the branch of biology to study human beings. However, at the
molecular scale, life is studied in the disciplines of molecular
biology, biochemistry, and molecular genetics. At the next level,
that of the cell, it is studied in cell biology. At the
multicellular scale, it is examined in physiology, anatomy, and
histology. Developmental biology studies life at the level of an
individual organism's development or ontogeny. Moving up the scale
towards more than one organism, genetics considers how heredity
works between parent and offspring. Ethology considers the
behaviour of groups of organisms. Population genetics looks at the
level of an entire population, and systematics considers the
multi-species scale of lineages. Interdependent populations and
their habitats are examined in ecology and evolutionary biology. A
speculative new field is astrobiology (or xenobiology), which
examines the possibility of life beyond the Earth.
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