Friday, July 25, 2008

Thank You!!


I would just like to take a moment to say "Thank You" for an amazing class. I hope you all did well, and I wish you the best in your future indevours, whatever they may be. Mr. Frolich, thank you so much for helping me see that Biology isn't just another science class, it's Fun!! I hope to see you guys around town or perhaps in other classes, but until then, stay safe and keep up the good work. And again, "Thank You!!!"

Unit 4 Self/ Unit Evaluation

REGARDING YOUR OWN PERFORMANCE


1. What were the three aspects of the assignments I've submitted that I am most proud of?
My formatting, my pictures, and my citing.


2. What two aspects of my submitted assignments do I believe could have used some improvement?
Timeliness of postings, and more thorough research.


3. What do I believe my overall grade should be for this unit?
I would have to say about 90 or 95%. I'm confident in my work.



4. How could I perform better in the next unit?
I can't, because the class is over.

REGARDING THE UNIT (adapted from Stephen Brookfield, University of St. Thomas "Critical Incident Questionnaire")


1. At what moment during this unit did you feel most engaged with the course?
I would have to say Fetal Development. As a mother, I find it all very intriguing.


2. At what moment in the unit did you feel most distanced from the course?
If I absolutely had to pick something, it would be Deep Time Evolutionary History. History is not my best subject. LOL.


3. What action that anyone (teacher or student) took during this unit did you find most affirming and helpful?
I most enjoyed the response time on our network forum. I always got an answer within 24 hours or less.


4. What action that anyone (teacher or student) took during this unit did you find most puzzling or confusing?
I honestly cannot think of one single thing. This section was a piece of cake.


5. What about this unit surprised you the most? (This could be something about your own reactions to the course, something that someone did, or anything else that occurs to you.)

My knowledge of most of the content in this section. I honestly thought this unit was going to be the toughest yet, but it wasn't.

Ethical Issue Essay 4- Who Should Reproduce?



In a world of increasing population, but low birthrates and fertility, who should reproduce? Should we set a limit or even stop producing all together? What is the answer to our problem? In this essay, I will give you two points of view on the situation, as well as my own.
According to http://www.vhemt.org/demography.htm, “Birth rates have dropped to nearly half of what they were in 1950: from an average of 5 offspring to 2.6. Our growth rate has also fallen significantly. Annual population increase likewise has improved from a high of 87 million in 1989 to around 74 million in 2005. Although couples are creating fewer of us, there are more couples creating those new people, which makes more of us. For example, China has one of the lowest birth rates in the world, and yet their natural increase is 10 million per year. This serves as an ominous warning. If cutting fertility rates in half hasn't stopped our increase, what will it take? How much better can we expect birth rates to get? Many regions have reached a plateau and aren't likely to go any lower unless conditions change. Campaigns to improve birth rates have succeeded somewhat and are worthy of additional support. "Stop at two" may have been a radical proclamation when Zero Population Growth* was founded in 1968, but it was barely adequate even then. So-called replacement level fertility of 2.1 offspring per couple wouldn't bring about true zero population growth until the middle of this century, due to momentum. Today the message is only slightly revised: "Consider having none or one, and be sure to stop after two." The notion that producing two descendants simply replaces a couple and creates no increased impact is specious. We aren't salmon - we don't spawn and die. Most of us will be around to see our progeny beget, and those begotten beget to boot. When a couple of us "replaces" ourselves, our environmental impact doubles - assuming our offsprings' lifestyles are as environmentally friendly as ours, and that they won't reproduce themselves. The "stop at two" message actually encourages reproduction by "qualified" couples. Although a wanted child is better than unwanted, intelligent (whatever that is) better than stupid, and well-cared-for better than neglected, each of us in the over-industrialized world has a huge impact on Nature, regardless of these factors. For example, in terms of energy consumption, when a North American couple stops at two it's about the same as an average East Indian couple stopping at 60, or an Ethiopian couple stopping at more than 600. Two is better than four, and one is twice as good as two, but to purposely set out to create even one more of us today is the moral equivalent of selling berths on a sinking ship. Regardless of how many progeny we have or haven't produced, rather than stop at two, we must stop at once.” A very good point with a lot to ponder, but are there other things that contribute to the problem?
According to Moses and Brown, "Although humans are highly unusual organisms in many respects, most characteristics of human physiology are predictable from scaling relationships observed in other mammals, particularly primates. For example, human metabolic rate can be predicted by allometric equations... the metabolic rate of a 60-kilogram human is 120 watts or 2500 calories per day. However, humans differ from other organisms in their social organization and ecology. The exploitation of supplemental energy sources has fueled 10 000 years of exponential human population growth (Cipolla 1972), the development of modern industrial–technological societies, and the rise of Homo sapiens to become the dominant species on earth, with major impacts on global biodiversity, biogeochemical cycles and climate (Vitousek et al. 1986, 1997). Biological metabolism is a small fraction of the total energy consumed by modern humans who utilize vast distribution networks to extract and deliver oil, gas, coal, electricity and other resources. Per capita consumption of this extra-metabolic energy varies from a few hundred watts in the poorest nations, to many thousands of watts in more industrial countries, which rely predominantly on fossil fuels (World Resources Institute 2000). The per capita energyconsumption rate in the United States is 11 000 W (World Resources Institute 2000) which is approximately 100 times the rate of biological metabolism and... is the estimated rate of energy consumption of a 30,000-kg primate." How’s that for something to think about? The energy consumption in the US alone is the same as the energy consumption of a 66,138.68 pound primate.
I have mixed feelings about the whole issue. On one hand, I feel that no one should be told whether they should be allowed or not allowed to have babies. There are already people who are unable to have children, which kind of helps with the problem. But on the other hand, I think it’s a huge issue that needs at least a happy medium solution. Maybe if they made adoption a little easier, people might go that route before having some of their own… that might help a bit. I also believe that if the world continues on the same path it’s traveling on now, that we will run out of natural resources and eventually trash the planet, causing Mother Nature to revolt and probably kill us all and start over from scratch. One thing I strongly believe is that things are meant to happen a certain way, and nothing we do can stop it. If we are meant to over populate, then we are. If we are meant to fix the problem, then we will. I guess we’ll just have to wait and see what happens.
So, who should reproduce? And what is the ultimate answer to this world wide problem?



Picture- http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/Movies/historic/HumanRep1947.jpg


Opinion 2- Moses and Brown (2003). Allometry of human fertility and energy use. Ecology Letters 6: 295-300.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Unit 4 Offline Lab Pictures

Tumbleweeds










Sterling Silver Rose










Desert Willow Tree













Wolf Spider









Bull or Gopher Snake









Western Honey Bee









Oldwife Underwing Moth













Texas Cichlid










Ball Python










Arizona Toad












Tumbleweed http://www.thirstyrock.com/Tumbleweed/tumbleweed2.jpg
Rose http://farm1.static.flickr.com/225/455952056_d31defee3b.jpg?v=0
Desert Willow http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b0/Chilopsis_linearis_foliage.jpg/632px-Chilopsis_linearis_foliage.jpg
Wolf Spider http://magickcanoe.com/spiders/wolf-spider-beige-regular.jpg
Gopher Snake http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/21/Bull_snake.jpg/800px-Bull_snake.jpg
Western Honey Bee http://lh6.ggpht.com/__Le_vMi7wPE/RoNAo5ILh9I/AAAAAAAABac/w5s37JPAcfE/Honeybee_landing_on_milkthistle02.jpg
Oldwife Underwing Moth http://mariewin.server304.com/marieblog/uploaded_images/OLDWIFE-757154.jpg
Texas Cichlid http://www.aquahobby.com/gallery/img/Herichthys_cyanoguttatus_4.jpg
Ball Python http://z.about.com/d/exoticpets/1/0/s/j/artiebp26.JPG
Arizona Toad http://www.reptilesofaz.com/Graphics/Turtles-Amphibians/herp-b-microscaphus-rb-03.jpg

Unit 4 Offline Lab- List of Species

The purpose of this lab was to make a list of 20 species that we interact with over the period of a day. We are to give a common name, scientific name, describe our interactions according to ecological principles, and tell whether we think it is domesticated. Here is my list:

1. Chicken- Gallus domesticas- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild
2. Horse- Equus caballus- Mutualistic- Domesticated and Wild
3. Fire Ant- Solenopsis geminata- Parasitic- Wild
4. Tumbleweed- Amaranthus albus- Commensal- Wild *
5. Rose- Rosa ‘Sterling Silver’- Mutualistic- Domesticated and Wild *
6. Onion- Allium cepa- Parasitic/ Predator/Prey- Domesticated and Wild
7. Desert Willow- Chilopsis linearis- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild *
8. House Fly- Musca domestica- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild
9. Southern House Mosquito- Culex quinquefasciatus- Parasitic- Wild
10. Plaque- Fusobacterium nucleatum- Parasitic- Wild
11. Wolf Spider- Rhabidosa rabida- Mutualistic- Wild *
12. Bull or Gopher Snake- Pituophis melancoleucus- Mutualistic- Domesticated and Wild *
13. Western Honey Bee- Apis mellifera- Mutualistic- Wild *
14. Oldwife Underwing Moth- Catocala neogama- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild *
15. Texas Cichlid- Herichthys cyanoguttatus- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild *
16. Betta- Betta splenderis- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild
17. Bearded Dragon- Pogona vitticeps- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild
18. Long Haired Chihuahua- Canis familiaris- Mutualistic- Domesticated and Wild
19. Ball Python- Python regius- Commensal- Domesticated and Wild *
20. House Cat- Felis catus- Mutualistic- Domesticated
21. Arizona Toad- Bufo microscaphus- Mutualistic- Wild *
22. Human- Homo sapien- Symbiotic- Domesticated

*= see photo

I think that humans have been co-evolving with these species and/or their ancestors for millions of years. We may not like some or even all of them, but we learn to live together.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Unit 4 Online Lab 2- Demographics

Low Fertility










High Fertility











1. What was your high fertility rate country and what was its fertility rate?

My high fertility rate country was Africa, with a fertility rate of 5.90.

2. What was your low fertility rate country and what was its fertility rate?

My low fertility country was Europe, with a fertility rate of 1.60.

3. The initial demographic "shape" of your high fertility rate country should have been a pyramid, with high population in young age groups. Explain why high fertility rate results in a high percentage of young people in the population. How does this affect future population growth?

More women are entering the reproductive years then older women leaving them, resulting in a higher population of younger people. Unfortunately, this results in a very high population in the future.

4. Your low fertility rate country might have had a more oval-shaped curve with high population in middle age groups. This is especially exaggerated if the fertility rate is below 2.00. Explain why low fertility rate leads to lots of middle-aged people.

If not as many people are having kids, there are lower amounts of younger people, resulting in more middle aged people.

5. Write ten adjectives or descriptive phrases for what you might expect life, people's attitudes, conditions on the streets, etc. will be like in each of those situations. Imagine a situation with lots of middle-aged and older people in the population and write ten quick "brain-storm" descriptors for you think it would be like (Prescott, Arizona?). Then do the same for a situation with lots of children in the population.

low fertilization high fertilization

1. strict 1. crazy
2. lazy 2. fast paced
3. nice 3. mean
4. laid back 4. uptight
5. slow paced 5. urban
6. suburban 6. messy
7. movie like 7. helpless
8. peaceful 8. overload
9. beautiful 9. obese
10. helping 10. loud

Unit 4 Compendium 2 Pictures

Protocell












Evolution













Darwin Evolution









Hominids










Ecosystem













Biotic Components








Energy Flow








Water Cycle











Carbon Cycle












Nitrogen Cycle











Phosphorus Cycle













Hunam Population Growth









Resources and Pollution













Biodiversity








Sustainable Society














Protocell http://genome.nasa.gov/MediaLib/cell_model.gif
Evolution http://www.bordalierinstitute.com/images/animalsEvolution.jpg
Darwin Evolution http://www.starlarvae.org/SL_graphics/evolutionchart.jpg
Hominids http://www.uiowa.edu/~bioanth/ergaster.jpg
Ecosystem http://www.nrri.umn.edu/worms/forest/images/ecosystem_fig3.gif
Biotic Components http://www.bcgrasslands.org/understanding/eco_biotic.jpg
Energy Flow http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=6536&rendTypeId=4
Water Cycle http://www.usgcrp.gov/usgcrp/images/ocp2003/WaterCycle-optimized.jpg
Carbon Cycle http://www.kidsgeo.com/images/carbon-cycle.gif
Nitrogen Cycle http://www.h2ou.com/h2images/NitrogenCycle-lgr-F.jpg
Phosphorus Cycle http://vincejtremante.tripod.com/images/phosphorus.jpg
Human Population Growth http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange2/current/lectures/human_pop/worldpop.jpg
Resources and Pollution http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2275/2333105291_d8dbbcaa97_o.jpg
Biodiversity http://www.scq.ubc.ca/wp-content/uploads/2006/08/Biodiversity.jpg
Sustainable Society http://www.nec.co.jp/eco/en/annual2005/03/images/3-4-01-01.jpg

Unit 4 Compendium 2- Human Landscapes

Table of Contents

I. Human Evolution
A. Origin of Life
B. Biological Evolution
C. Classification of Humans
D. Evolution of Hominids
E. Evolution of Humans
II. Global Ecology and Human Interferences
A. The Nature of Ecosystems
B. Energy Flow
C. Global Biochemical Cycles
III. Human Population, Planetary Resources, and Conservation
A. Human Population Growth
B. Human Use of Resources and Pollution
C.Biodiversity
D. Working Toward a Sustainable Society


I. Human Evolution
A. Origin of Life
1. Data suggests that a chemical produced the first cell (Protocell).
a. Using an outside energy source, small organic molecules were produced by resctions between early Earth's atmospheric gases.
b. Macromolecules evolved and interacted.
c. The RNA- first hypothesis- only macromolecule RNA was needed for the first cell(s).
d. The protein- first hypothesis- amino acids join to form polypeptides when exposed to dry heat.
e. The protocell, a heterotrophic fermenter, lived on preformed organic molecules in the ocean.
2. The protocell eventually became a true cell once it had genes composed of DNA and could reproduce.
B. Biological Evolution
1. Biological evolution explains both the unity and diversity of life.
a. Descent from a common ancestor explains the unity (sameness) of living things.
b. Adaptation to different environments explains the great diversity of living things.
c. Fossil evidence supports evolution- the fossil record gives us the history of life in general and allows us to trace the descent of a particular group.
2. Darwin discovered much evidence for common descent.
a. Biogeographical evidence- the distribution of organisms on earth is explainable by assuming that organisms evolved in one locale.
b. Anatomical evidence- the common anatomies and development of a group of organisms are explainable by descent from a common ancestor.
c. Biochemical evidence- all organisms have similar biochemical molecules.
3. Darwin developed a mechanism for adaptation known as natural selection.
a. The result of natural selection is a population adapted to its local environment.
C. Classification of Humans
1. The classification of humans can be used to trace their ancestry.
a. Humans are primates.
b. A primate evolutionary tree shows that humans share a common ancestor with African apes.
D. Evolution of Hominids
1. The first hominid, including humans, most likely lived about six to seven million years ago.
2. Certain features, such as bipedal posture, flat face, and brain, identify fossil hominids.
3. Ardipithecines were most likely hominids.
4. Evolution of Australopithecines: The evolutionary tree of hominids resembles a bush, not a straight line of fossils leading to modern humans.
a. Australopithecines, a hominid, lived about three million years ago.
b. They could walk erect, but they had a small brain.
c. This testifies to a mosaic evolution for humans (not all advanced features evolved at the same time).
E. Evolution of Humans
1. Fossils are classified as Homo with regard to brain size (over 600 cm³), jaws and teeth (resemble modern humans'), and evidence of tool use.
a. Homo habilis made and used tools.
b. Homo erectus was the first Homo to have a brain size of more than 1,000 cm³.
c. Homo erectus migrated from Africa into Europe and Asia.
d. Homo erectus used fire and may have been big-game hunters.
2. Evolution of Modern Humans: Two hypotheses of modern human evolution are being tested.
a. The multiregional continuity hypothesis suggests that modern humans evolved separately in Europe, Africa, and Asia.
b. The out-of-Africa hypothesis says that Homo sapiens evolved in Africa but they migrated to Asia and Europe.
3. Neandertals and Cro-Magnons
a. The neandertals were already living in Europe and Asia before modern humans arrived.
b. They had a culture, but did not have the physical traits of modern humans.
c. Cro-Magnons are the oldest fossil to be designated Homo sapiens. Their tools were sophisticated, and they had a culture.
II. Global Ecology and Human Interferences
A. The Nature of Ecosystems
1. Ecology is the study of the interactions of organisms with each other and with the physical environment.
a. Organisms interact with the physical and chemical environment, and the result is an ecosystem.
b. Terrestrial ecosystems are forrests (tropical rain forrests, coniferous, temerate deciduous), grasslands (savanna and prairie), and deserts, which includes the tundra.
c. Aquatic ecosystems are either saltwater (seashores, oceans, coral reefs, estuaries) or freshwater (lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams).
2. Biotic Components of an Ecosystem
a. In a community, each population has a habitat (residence) and a niche (its role in the community).
b. Autotrophs (producers) produce organic nutrients for themselves ant others from inorganic nutrients and an outside energy source.
c. Heterotrophs (consumers) consume organic nutrients.
d. Consumers are herbivores (eat plants/algae), carnivores (eat other animals), and omnivores (eat both plants and animals).
e. Decomposers feed on detritus, releasing inorganic substances back into the ecosystem.
3. Ecosystems are characterized by energy flow and chemical cycling.
a. Energy flows through the populations of an ecosystem.
b. Chemicals cycle within and among ecosystems.
B. Energy Flow
1. Various interconnecting paths of energy flow are called a food web.
a. A food web is a diagram showing how various organisms are connected by eating relationships.
b. Grazing food webs begin with vegetation eaten by a herbivore that becomes food for a carnivore.
c. Detrital food webs begin with detritus, food for decomposers and for detritivores.
d. Members of detrital food webs can be eaten by aboveground carnivores, joining the two food webs.
2. Trophic Levels- all the organisms that feed at a particular link in a food chain.
a. Ecological pyramids illustrate that biomass and energy content decrease from one trophic level to the next because of energy loss.
C. Global Biochemical Cycles
1. Chemicals circulate through ecosystems via biogeochemical cycles, pathways involving both biotic and geological components. Biogeochemical cycles:
a. Can be gaseous or sedimentary.
b. Have reservoirs (Ex: ocean sediments, the atmosphere, and organic matter) that contain inorganic nutrients available to living things on a limited basis.
c. Exchange pools are sources of inorganic nutrients.
d. Nutrients cycle among the biotic communities (producers, consumers, decomposers) of an ecosystem.
2. The Water Cycle
a. The reservoir is freshwater that evaporates from the ocean.
b. Water that falls on land enters the ground, surface waters, or aquifers and evaporates again.
c. All water returns to the ocean.
3. The Carbon Cycle
a. The reservoirs are organic matter (forests and dead organisms for fossil fuels), limestone, and the ocean (calcium carbonate shells).
b. The exchange pool is the atmosphere.
c. Photosynthesis removes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
d. Respiration and combustion add carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.
4. The Nitrogen Cycle
a. The reservoir is the atmosphere.
b. Nitrogen gas must be converted to a form usable by plants.
c. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria, in root nodules, convert nitrogen gas to ammonium, a form producers can use.
d. Nitrifying bacteria convert ammonium to nitrate.
e. Denitrifying bacteria convert nitrate back to nitrogen gas.
5. The Phosphorus Cycle
a. The reservoir is ocean sediments.
b. Phosphate in ocean sediments becomes available through geological upheaval, which exposes sedimentary rocks to weathering.
c. Weathering slowly makes phosphate available to the biotic community.
d. Phosphate is a limiting nutrient in ecosystems.
III. Human Population, Planetary Resources, and Conservation.
A. Human Population Growth
1. Populations have a biotic potential for increase in size.
2. Biotic potential is normally held in check by environmental resistance.
3. Population size usually levels off at carrying capacity.
4. The More Developed Countries versus the Less Developed Countries.
a. The MDCs have a 0.1% growth rate since 1950.
b. The LDC growth rate is presently 1.6% after peaking at 2.5% in the 1960s.
5. Age-structure diagrams can be used to predict population growth.
a. MDCs are approaching a stable population size.
b. LDC populations will continue to increase in size.
B. Human Use of Resources and Pollution.
1. Five resources are maximally used by humans:
a. Land, water, food, energy, and minerals.
2. Resources are either nonrenewable or renewable.
a. Nonrenewable resources are not replenished and are limited in quantity (Ex: land, fossil fuels, and minerals).
b. Renewable resources are replenished but still are limited in quantity (Ex: water, solar energy, and food).
3. Land
a. Human activities, such as habitation, farming, and mining, contribute to erosion, pollution, desertification, deforestation, and loss of biodiversity.
4. Water
a. Industry ans agriculture use most of the freshwater supply. Water supplies are increased by damming rivers and drawing from aquifers. As aquifers are depleted, subsidence, sink hole formation, and saltwater intrusion can occur. If used by industries, water conservation methods could cut world water consumption by half.
5. Food- comes from growing crops, raising animals, and fishing.
a. Modern farming methods increase the food supply, but some methods harm the land, pollute water, and consume fossil fuels excessively.
b. Genetically engineered plants increase the food supply and reduce the need for chemicals.
c. Raising livestock contributes to water pollution and uses fossil fuel energy.
d. The increased number and high efficiency of fishing boats have caused the world fish catch to decline.
6. Energy- Fossil fuels (oil, natural gas, coal) are nonrenewable sources. Burning fossil fuels and burning to clear land for farming cause pollutants and gases to enter the air.
a. Greenhouse gases include CO2 and others. Greenhouse gases cause global warming because solar radiation can pass through, but infrared heat cannot escape back into space.
b. Renewable resources include hydropower, geothermal, wind, and solar power.
7. Minerals- nonrenewable resources that can be mined. These raw materials include sand, gravel, phosphate, and metals. Mining causes destruction of the land by erosion, loss of vegetation, and toxic runoff into bodies of water. Some metals are dangerous to health. Land mined can take years to recover.
a. Hazardous Wastes- billions of tons of solid waste are discarded on land and in water.
b. Heavy metals (lead, arsenic, cadmium, chromium).
c. Synthetic organic chemicals include chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which are involved in the production of plastics, pesticides, herbicides, and other products.
d. Ozone shield destruction is associated with CFCs.
e. Other synthetic organic chemicals enter the aquatic food chain, where the toxins become more concentrated (biological magnification).
C. Biodiversity- the variety of life on Earth.
1. The five major causes of biodiversity loss and extinction are:
a. Habitat loss, introduction of alien species, pollution, overexploration of plants and animals, and disease.
2. Direct values of biodiversity are:
a. Medicinal value (medicines derived from living organisms).
b. Agricultural value (crops derived from wild plants; biological pest controls and animal pollinators).
c. Consumptive use values (food production).
3. Biodiversity in ecosystems contributes to:
a. Waste disposal, through the action of decomposers and the ability of natural communities to purify water and take up pollutants.
b. Freshwater provision through the water biogeochemical cycle.
c. Prevention of soil erosion, which occurs naturally in intact ecosystems.
d. Function of biogeochemical cycles.
e. Climate regulation (plants take up carbon dioxide).
f. Ecotourism- human enjoyment of a beautiful ecosystem.
D. Working Toward a Sustainable Society
1. A sustainable society would use only renewable energy sources, would reuse heat and waste materials, and would recycle almost everything. It would also provide the same goods and services presently provided and would preserve biodiversity.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Unit 4 Online Lab- Embryonic and Fetal Development

For this lab, we were to pick what we thought were the ten (10) most important stages in embryonic/ fetal development, and then explain why we think it's important. Here are my ten:

Stage 1- 1 day post ovulation (po)- sperm penetrates an Oocyte (egg) and it ends with the creation of a Zygote- important because without fertilization, there would be no Zygote.








Stage 6- 13 days po- placenta and stalk form, and primitive streak, gastrulation, and ectoderm appear- important because without the placenta, the embryo could not survive.









Stage 10- 21 to 23 days - somites appear, neural folds begin to fuse, and heart folds begin to fuse, forming the beginning of a heart which begins to contract- important because the heart is a major part of the body, it keeps it going and things working.








Stage 13- 26 to 30 days- the first thin surface layer of skin appears covering the embryo- important because skin holds the body all together and helps keep things out of the body.









Stage 20- 51 to 53 days- the brain is connected to muscles and nerves which enable the embryo to make spontaneous movements, the nose is formed, and the reproductive organs are forming- important because the nervous system is imperative for movement, the nose for the sence of smell and for taste, and the reproductive organs for obvious reasons.









Week 14- Fetal sexual organs are now clearly visible- for me, this is important for ultrasound purposes. I like to plan ahead. It's good to remember though, that ultrasounds, especially at 14 weeks, are not always acurate.










Week 16- Finger prints and toe prints begin to develop, and circulation is completely functional- important because finger and toe prints are unique, no two are alike, and because the circulatory system is imperative for a functioning body.












Week 20- Bone marrow starts to make blood cells- WBCs are needed for the immune system, RBCs are needed for transport of O2, CO2, and other wastes, and platelets form plugs in damaged vessels for repair. All three being important in their own way.










Week 26- Lungs begin to produce Surfactant and are capable of breathing air- important because lungs are needed for O2 CO2 exchange in RBCs.














Week 32- The fetus begins to develop an immune system- important because a strong immune system is needed to fight of foreign bodies in the body (Ex: viruses and bad bacteria).












It was really heard to narrow it down to just 10, because I think all stages of development are important, but this is what I ended up with.

Stage 1 http://www.thekeytoislam.com/en/assets/images/g_fertilization_1.jpg

Stage 6 http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/medicine/images/day16hp.jpg

Stage 10 http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/wwwhuman/Stages/Images/CSt10bL.gif

Stage 13 http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/wwwhuman/Stages/Stage13L.htm

Stage 20 http://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/wwwhuman/Stages/Stage20L.htm

Week 14 http://www.c2g.ca/images/14weeks.jpg

Week 16 http://www.health.state.mn.us/wrtk/images/wk16.jpg

Week 20 http://www.hss.state.ak.us/dph/wcfh/informedconsent/images/18-weeksSUB.jpg

Week 26 http://assets.babycenter.com/i/m/stages/popups/26/index.jpg

Week 32 http://www.c2g.ca/images/32weeks.jpg