Required Practicals (Paper 1) Flashcards

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1
Q

Describe an investigation for drawing plant cells?

A
  • Place a tissue sample on a microscope slide.
  • Add a few drops of a dilute iodine solution stain to make certain structures visible
  • Lower coverslip onto the tissue to remove bubbles that would obstruct image
  • Place the slide on the microscope stage and focus on the cells using the low power.
  • Change to higher powered lens and refocus
  • Observe plant cell
  • Draw any types of cells that can be seen in the field of view (scientific drawing)
  • Add a magnification scale to the diagram.
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2
Q

The epidermis can be peeled from a leaf. The stomata can be seen using a light microscope. How may have the student collected data for the number of stomata open on the upper and lower surface of the leaf for 5 different leaf areas?

A
  • mount epidermis on a slide
  • count stomata in one area
  • repeat in four more areas
  • repeat method on other surface of leaf
  • calculate mean
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3
Q

Describe a method to investigate the effect of a range of concentrations of salt solutions on the mass of plant tissue.

A
  • Cut some same size cylinders of potato tissue and measure their mass using measuring balance
  • Place the cylinders in different concentrations of salt
  • After 30-60 min, remove the cylinders, dab them dry, and reweigh them
  • Calculate the change in mass or length

May need to mention control variables - drying is a important one, length if time

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4
Q

How would you use a graph to calculate the concentration of solution inside the potato cell?

A
  • Calculate percentage change.
  • Plot percentage change on graph
  • draw line of bets fit
  • Determine concentration where line crosses zero percentage change (x-axis)
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5
Q

How would you test for sugars?

A

Add blue benedict’s solution to food solution and heat it (using water bath at high temo, if it turns green, yellow, orange or brick red, it indicates a positive result, thus sugars are present (colour based on concentration with red indicating high concentration)

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6
Q

How would you test for starch?

A

Add orange-brown iodine solution to food sample, if it turn blue-black, it indicates a positive result, thus starch is present

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7
Q

How would you test for protein?

A

Add blue biuret reagent to food solution, if it turns purple, it indicates a positive result and thus protein is present

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8
Q

2 needed

What mistakes may have been made during the chemistry food test?

A
  • contamination
  • results are subjective
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9
Q

Why might someone calculate the percentage change as well as the change in mass in RP2?

A

To allow results to be compared as [the potato tissues] had different starting masses

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10
Q

exhaustive

What may have caused an anomalous result in the osmosis experiment?

A
  • not drying (though this may lead to variable amounts fo water being removed from the potato tissue)
  • potato cylinders left in salt/sugar solution for different length of time
  • accuracy of balance
  • concentration of solutions incorrect
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11
Q

What improvement could you make to the osmosis experiment?

A

Smaller concentration intervals

other suggestions, e.g. stated CVs

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12
Q

How could someone see if an experiment is repeatable?

A

Repeat and see if results are similar

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13
Q

What is the purpose of a control?

A

for comparison

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14
Q

4 marks - 6 points

Describe how you would test a sample of food to show if it contains protein?

Give a safety precaution and the reason for this

A
  • Grinding up the food (by pestle and mortar)
  • Add biuret reagant to food
  • Protein turns solution from blue to purple
  • Wear goggles to protect eyes
  • clean up spills immediately
  • Biuret is an irritant

change as appropriate for sugar and starch

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