Bacillus (buh sil´ us) [L.: little rod] Any of various rod-shaped bacteria.
Bacteriophage (bak teer´ ee o fayj) [Gr. bakterion: little rod + phagein: to eat] One of a group of viruses that infect bacteria and ultimately cause their disintegration.
Bacteria (bak teer´ ee ah) (singular: bacterium) [Gr. bakterion: little rod] Prokaryote in the Domain Bacteria. The chromosomes of bacteria are not contained in nuclear envelopes.
Balanced polymorphism [Gr. polymorphos: having many forms] The maintenance of more than one form, or the maintenance at a given locus of more than one allele, at frequencies of greater than one percent in a population. Often results when heterozygotes are superior to both homozygotes.
Bark All tissues outside the vascular cambium of a plant.
Baroreceptor [Gr. baros: weight] A pressure-sensing cell or organ.
Barr body In mammals, an inactivated X chromosome.
Basal body Centriole found at the base of a eukaryotic flagellum or cilium.
Basal metabolic rate The minimum rate of energy turnover in an awake (but resting) bird or mammal that is not expending energy for thermoregulation.
Base (1) A substance which can accept a proton (hydrogen ion; H+) in solution. (Contrast with acid.) (2) In nucleic acids, a nitrogen-containing molecule that is attached to each sugar in the backbone. (See purine; pyrimidine.)
Base pairing See complementary base pairing.
Basic having a pH greater than 7.0 (having a hydrogen ion concentration lower than 10-7 molar).
Basidium (bass id´ ee yum) In fungi of the class Basidiomycetes, the characteristic sporangium in which four spores are formed by meiosis and then borne externally before being shed.
Batesian mimicry Mimicry by a relatively harmless kind of organism of a more dangerous one, by which the mimic enjoys protection from predators that mistake it for the dangerous model. (Contrast with Müllerian mimicry.)
B cell A type of lymphocyte involved in the humoral immune response of vertebrates. Upon recognizing an antigenic determinant, a B cell develops into a plasma cell, which secretes an antibody. (Contrast with a T cell.)
Benefit An improvement in survival and reproductive success resulting from a behavior. (Contrast with cost.)
Benign (be nine´) A tumor that grows to a certain size and then stops, uaually with a fibrous capsule surrounding the mass of cells. Benign tumors do not spread (metastasize) to other organs.
Benthic zone [Gr. benthos: bottom of the sea] The bottom of the ocean. (Contrast with pelagic zone.)
Beta-pleated sheet Type of protein secondary structure; results from hydrogen bonding between polypeptide regions running antiparallel to each other.
Biennial Referring to a plant whose life cycle includes vegetative growth in the first year and flowering and senescence in the second year. (Contrast with annual, perennial.)
Bilateral symmetry The condition in which only the right and left sides of an organism, divided exactly down the back, are mirror images of each other. (Contrast with biradial symmetry.)
Bile A secretion of the liver delivered to the small intestine via the common bile duct. In the intestine, bile emulsifies fats.
Binocular cells Neurons in the visual cortex that respond to input from both retinas; involved in depth perception.
Binomial (bye nome´ ee al) Consisting of two names; for example, the binomial nomenclature of biology which gives the name of the genus followed by the name of the species.
Biodiversity crisis The current high rate of loss of species, caused primarily by human activities.
Biogeochemical cycles Movement of elements through living organisms and the physical environment.
Biogeography The scientific study of the geographic distribution of organisms.
Biogeographic region A continental-scale part of Earth that has a biota distinct from that of other such regions.
Biological species concept The view that a species is most usefully defined as a population or series of populations within which there is a significant amount of gene flow under natural conditions, but which is genetically isolated from other populations.
Bioluminescence The production of light by biochemical processes in an organism.
Biomass The total weight of all the living organisms, or some designated group of living organisms, in a given area.
Biome (bye´ ome) A major division of the ecological communities of Earth; characterized by distinctive vegetation.
Biota (bye oh´ tah) All of the organisms, including animals, plants, fungi, and microorganisms, found in a given area.
Biotechnology The use of cells to make medicines, foods and other products useful to humans.
Biradial symmetry Radial symmetry modified so that only two planes can divide the animal into similar halves.
Blastocoel (blass´ toe seal) [Br. blastos: sprout + koilos: hollow] The central, hollow cavity of a blastula.
Blastodisc (blass´ toe disk) A disk of cells forming on the surface of a large yolk mass, comparable to a blastula, but occurring in animals such as birds and reptiles, in which the massive yolk restricts cleavage to one side of the egg only.
Blastomere A cell produced by the division of a fertilized egg.
Blastopore The opening from the archenteron to the exterior of a gastrula.
Blastula (blass´ chu luh) [Gr. blastos: sprout] An early stage in animal embryology; in many species, a hollow sphere of cells surrounding a central cavity, the blastocoel. (Contrast with blastodisc.)
Blood-brain barrier A property of the blood vessels of the brain that prevents most chemicals from diffusing from the blood into the brain.
Body plan A basic structural design that includes an entire animal, its organ systems, and the integrated functioning of its parts. Phylogenetic groups of organisms are classified in part on the basis of a shared body plan.
Bowman’s capsule An elaboration of kidney tubule cells that surrounds a know of capillaries (the glomerulus). Blood is filtered across the walls of these capillaries and the filtrate is collected into Bowman’s capsule.
Brain stem The portion of the vertebrate brain between the spinal cord and the forebrain.
Brassinosteroids Plant steroid hormones that promote the elongation of stems and pollen tubes.
Bronchus (plural: bronchi) The major airway(s) branching off the trachea into the vertebrate lung.
Brown fat Fat tissue in mammals that is specialized to produce heat. It has many mitochondria and capillaries, and a protein that uncouples oxidative phosphorylation.
Browser An animal that feeds on the tissues of woody plants.
Bryophyte (bri´ uh fite´) [Gr. bruon: moss + phyton: plant] A moss. Formerly was often used to refer to all the nontracheophyte plants.
Budding Asexual reproduction in which a more or less complete new organism simply grows from the body of the parent organism and eventually detaches itself.
Buffering A process by which a system resists change—particularly in pH, in which case added acid or base is partially converted to another form.