Introduction: What is a life cycle?
Science is an immense world full of different categories from very general to very specific. Students can learn about chemistry and biology to environmental and marine biology. This broadness allows students to examine and investigate many different areas within the science realm. Throughout this website, we have focused in on a unit of life cycles.
A life cycle is the continuous sequence of changes undergone by an organism from one primary form, as a gamete, to the development of the same form again. Life cycles include a series of stages, such as childhood and middle age, that characterize the course of existence of an individual, group, or culture.
Together, we are going to explore some familiar life cycles: butterflies, frogs,
plants, and water. We will focus on an essential question, looking at the
bigger picture: How do life cycles effect the environment?
A life cycle is the continuous sequence of changes undergone by an organism from one primary form, as a gamete, to the development of the same form again. Life cycles include a series of stages, such as childhood and middle age, that characterize the course of existence of an individual, group, or culture.
Together, we are going to explore some familiar life cycles: butterflies, frogs,
plants, and water. We will focus on an essential question, looking at the
bigger picture: How do life cycles effect the environment?