Exam 3: Chapters 11, 12, 13 – Flashcards

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question
Four types of prokaryotic reproduction other than binary fission
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1. budding=split off tiny piece 

2. fragmentation= done by cyanobacteria

3. viviparity= give birth to live young

4. spores= produced by actinomycetes at ends of filamentous cells

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Name/describe 7 shapes of prokaryotes
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cocci- sphere

coccobacillus- elongated sphere

bacillus- rod

vibrio- curved rod

spirillum- stiff spiral

spirochete- flexible spiral

pleomorphic- varies in shape/size

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1. How do all prokaryotic cells reproduce?

2. How do most reproduce?

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1. Asexually

2. Binary fission

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Can prokaryotes reproduce sexually?
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No, only asexual
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List and describe 6 arrangements of cocci
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1. diplococci- pairs

2. streptococci-chains

3. staphylococci- clusters

4. tetrads- groups of four (division in two planes)

5. sarcina- cube shaped (division in three planes)

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List/describe 5 arrangements of bacilli
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1. random- cells are separate

2. diplobacilli- pairs

3. streptobacilli-chains

4. Palisades- stacks

5. V-shape- V shaped

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What is an endospore? 

How are endospores different from spores?

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Endospores allow for defense against hostile conditions.

Spores are reproductive structures

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What kind of cell wall do archea have?
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Archea lack a peptidoglycan cell wall
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Describe the cell membrane of archea
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have branched hydrocarbon chains
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What is the initial amino acid in proteins of archea?
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methionine
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How do archea reproduce? (3 answers)
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binary fission

budding

fragmentation

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What kind of environments to archea normally live in?
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Moderate environments
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Name the two types of extremophiles
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Thermophiles and halophiles
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Compare thermophiles to halophiles
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thermophiles- require high temperatures

halophiles- require high salt

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Describe methanogens. 

 

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Obligate anaerobes that convert organic wastes into methane

 

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What are deeply branching bacteria? (4 parts)

What is an example?

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-Appear similar to earliest bacteria

-autotrophs

-live in hot/acidic/anaerobic environments

-can withstand UV radiation

-Example: Deinococcus

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Name 3 types of phototrophic bacteria
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cyanobacteria

green phototrophic bacteria

purple phototrophic bacteria

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What are two environmentally significant processes that occur in cyanobacteria?
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Oxygenic photosynthesis- reason why earths atmosphere has oxygen

Nitrogen fixation- take N and release Ammonia that other cells can use

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What are 4 important characteristics of green and purple phototrophic bacteria?
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1. bacteriochlorophylls instead of chlorophyll

2. anoxygenic- don't make O

3. Live in anaerobic sediments rich in H2S

4. Deposit sulfur either inside or outside of cell

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Which green/purple bacteria is a photoautotroph 

(sulfur or non-sulfur)?

Why?

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Green and purple sulfur bacteria, because they get electrons from inorganic sources
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Which green/purple bacteria (sulfur or non-sulfur) is a photoheterotroph? 

Why?

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Green/purple nonsulfur; because they get their electrons from organic compounds like sugar.
question

What is a G+C ratio?

What is it used for?

What is considered a low G+C ratio?

What is considered a high G+C ratio?

answer

Percentage of all base pairs in DNA that are guanine-cytosine base pairs.

This aids in the classification of bacteria.

low= below 50%

high= above 50%

 

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Name 8 major types of low G+C Gram positive bacteria
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Clostridia, Mycoplasmas, Bacillus, Listeria monocytogenes, Lactobacillus, Streptococcus, Enterococcus, Staphylococcus
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Describe clostridia/clostridium (4 parts).

Describe 4 examples

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rod shaped, obligate anaerobes, form endospores, produce potent toxins.

C. tetani- causes tetanus,

C. perfringens- gangrene

C. botulinum- botulism

C. difficile- severe diarrhea

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Describe mycoplasmas 3 parts
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lack cell walls

smallest of all prokaryotes

cause walking pneumonia and UTI's

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Why can mycoplasmas survive without a cell wall?

(3 reasons)

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live in osmotically protected environments, have tough cytoplasmic membranes, contain sterols in membrane that provide strength and rigidity
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Describe low G+C G-positive bacillus and describe the 4 basic examples
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Endospore-forming aerobes and facultative anaerobes

B. thuringiensis- Bt toxin

B. polymyxa- synthesizes the antibiotic polymyxin 

B. anthracis- causes anthrax

B. cereus- causes food poisoning from rice.

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Describe listeria monocytogenes
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contaminate unpasteurized milk/meat products

G+, low G+C bacilli

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lactobacillus (2 parts)
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organisms protect the body by inhibiting growth of pathogens

G+, low G+C bacteria

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What diseases are caused by streptococcus and enterococcus (5 parts)
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Produce diseases such as strep throat, scarlet fever, meningitis, pneumonia, necrotizing fasciitis
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Staphylococcus can cause___ (5 ailments)
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Bacteremia, pneumonia, wound infections, food poisoning, toxic shock syndrome.
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What are 5 high G+C Gram positive bacteria?
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Corynebacterium, mycobacterium, actinomycetes, nocardia, streptomyces
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How does the High G+C G+ bacteria Corynebacterium reproduce?
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snapping fission
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Describe mycobacterium (2 parts)

What are two examples?

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produce waxy mycolic acids in cell walls which protects it.

High G+C G+ bacteria

M. Tuberculosis and M. leprae (leprosy)

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Describe actinomycetes (3 parts)
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form branching filaments like fungi

some produce reproductive spores

high G+C G+ bacteria

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Describe Nocardia (2 parts)
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High G+C G+ bacteria

degrades pollutants

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Describe Streptomyces (4 parts)
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High G+C G+ bacteria

Produce most important antibiotics

degrade lignin in wood, chitin in insects, latex, aromatic chemicals, and keratin

gives soil its smell

 

 

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What are the five classes of Gram-negative proteobacteria?
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Alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon
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Describe alphaproteobacteria and name the three major examples
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they are aerobes that can grow at very low nutrient content. Some have cell extensions called prothecae that allow for nutrient absorption.

Nitrogen fixers, rickettsia, brucella

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What purpose do Nitrogen fixers serve?  What kind of bacteria are they?
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Important in agriculture because they grow along with roots

alphaproteobacteria

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What is rickettsia? (3 parts)

What kind of bacteria is it?

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small rod that lives inside mammalian cells, causes typhus and Rocky Mountain spotted fever

alphaproteobacteria

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What is brucella? 3 parts
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coccobacilus

causes brucellosis which causes spontaneous abortions/sterility

found in unpasteurized milk

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Name and describe one pathogenic betaproteobacteria
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Neisseria= G-, diplococcus, causes gonorrhea, meningitis, pelvic inflammatory disease
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Describe gammaproteobacteria

list three major bacteria

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largest and most diverse group of proteobacteria

leigionella, glycolytic facultative anaerobes, pseudomondads

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Legionella (4 parts)
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type of gammaproteobacteria

intracellular pathogen

Causes legionnaires' disease

thrive inside phagocytes

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describe Glycolytic facultative anaerobes (2 parts)
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largest group of gammaproteobacteria

includes E Coli 

 

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pseudomonas aeruginosa

(4)

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causes UTIs, swimmers' ear

extremely resistant

produces green pigment

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What are the three types of deltaproteobacteria?
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desulfovibrio, Bdellovibrio, myxobacteria
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Describe desulfovibrio (4)
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makes H2S gas and corrodes iron 

important in sulfur cycle

deltaproteobacteria

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Bdellovibrio

(2)

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deltaproteobacteria

attacks G- bacteria

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Myxobacteria (2)
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differentiate reproductive structures

deltaproteobacteria

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What are two types of epsilonproteobacteria?
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Campylobacter and helicobacter pylori
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What is campylobacter?
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an epsilonprotebacteria that causes inflammation of the intestinal tract and food poisoning
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What is helicobacter pylori?
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an epsiloproteobacteria that causes ulcers and some stomach cancer
question

where does Chlamydia reproduce?

What does it cause (3)?

Is it G+ or G-?

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only reproduce in cells

causes blindness, pneumonia, and an STD

 G-

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Spirochetes causes what two diseases?

Is it G+ or G-?

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G-

causes syphillis and lyme disease

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Describe bacteroids

G+ or G-?

oxygen requirement?

where does it live?

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G- bacteria

obligate anaerobes

most common anaerobic pathogen

inhabits digestive tract

question
What are 4 ways reproduction of eukaryotes is more complicated than that of prokaryotes?
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1. DNA+histones=chromosome, all chromosomes are chromatin, found in mitochondria and chloroplasts

2. asexual reproduction

3. sexual reproduction= form gametes that fuse to become a zygote

4. Algae, fungi, and some protozoa reproduce both sexually and asexually

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What is a diploid?
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2 sets of chromosomes
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define haploid
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1 set of chromosomes, most fungi, many algae, and some protozoa are haploid
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describe mitosis. do prokaryotes or eukaryotes undergo mitosis?
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nuclear division

eukaryotes

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meiosis

Is meiosis particular to eukaryotes or prokaryotes?

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diploid cell produces 4 haploid cells, this is necessary for sexual reproduction

in eukaryotes

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cytokinesis

cytokinesis is particular to prokaryotes and eukaryotes?

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cell division

eukaryotes

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cell plate
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cell wall material, cleavage furrow of plants, when cell wall splits
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cleavage furrow
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cell wall splitting in two
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What eukaryotic cells experience budding?
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yeast cells
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What are coenocytes
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big multinucleate cells
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schizogony
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multiple mitoses forming a schizont, which is multinucleate, then many uninucleate daughter cells (merozoites) are released when cytokinesis occurs
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merozoites
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uninucleate daughter cells that come from schizogony
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What is classification of eukaryotes based on? (2 things)
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nucleotide sequences and cellular ultrastructure
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Where are protozoa found?
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moist environments
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Morphology of protozoa----

what is a macronucleus?

 

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contains as many as 50 copies of a genome
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Morphology of protozoa----

micronucleus (3 parts)

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involved in a genetic recombination, sexual reproduction, and regeneration of macronucleus
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Morphology of protozoa----

trophozoite

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motile feeding stage
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Morphology of protozoa-----

cyst

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dormant, resting stage that only occurs in some protozoa
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Are most protozoa chemoheterotrophic or photoautotrophic?
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chemoheterotrophic
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Describe chemoheterotrophic protozoa (4)
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phagocytize bacteria, decaying organic matter, tissues of a host, or other protozoa
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2 types of photoautotrophic protozoa
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dinoflagellates and euglenids
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What are the 6 taxons of protozoa?
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parabasala, diplomonadida, euglenozoa, alveolates, rhizaria, amoebozoa
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describe parabasala and give an example
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protozoa, lack mitochondria

trichomonas- sexually transmitted disease that causes infections/sterility

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describe diplomonadida and give an example
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protozoa, no mitochondria, golgi bodies, and peroxisomes. 2 equal sized nuclei and multiple flagella

Giardia- diarrhea causing pathogen from streams

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describe euglenozoa (8) and give two examples
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protozoa, photoautotrophic, chlorophyll, no starch, lack cell walls, have flagella, chemoheterotrophic in dark, squirming movement

trypanosoma and leishmania- cause sleeping sickness and leishmaniasis, carried by flies

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Describe alveolates

What are the three taxons of these?

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protozoa, contain alveoli, have 3 subgroups

apicomplexans, ciliates, dinoflagellates

 

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what is balantidium (3)
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protozoa, ciliate, only pathogenic ciliate for humans
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plasmodium (4)
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protozoa, alveolate, all pathogenic, one causes malaria
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Pfiesteria (3)
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protozoa, dinoflagellate, neurotoxin in fish that can affect humans
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Describe rhizaria

What are two kinds, what are their shells made of

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amoebae that use threadlike pseudopodia

foraminifera- calcium carbonate and radiolarians- shell of silica

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amoebozoa (4)
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protozoa, lobe shaped pseudopodia, no shell, causes diseases in swimmers
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Naegleria
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protozoa, amoebozoa, infects brain
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Acanthamoeba
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amoebozoa, infects eyes of swimmers
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Slime molds (3)
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protozoa, amoebozoa, important for research in developmental/molecular biology
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What are the benefits (3) and risks of fungi (1)
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decompose dead organisms

form mycorrhizae that help plants absorb nutrients

source of drugs

But form mycoses-fungal diseases

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what is a thallus
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vegetative body of fungus
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describe the thallus of yeast
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single cell
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what is the thallus of molds

describe hyphae

give two examples of dimorphic fungi

answer

mycelium

hyphae- long, branched, tubular structures of mycelium

histoplasma capsulatum-histoplasmosis, a respiratory disease

coccidioides immitis- causes coccidiomycosis or valley fever

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How do fungi acquire nutrients? (4 different kinds)
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saprobes- eat dead things

some trap/kill nematodes

haustoria-modified hyphae that penetrate living tissue

 

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are fungi aerobic, anaerobic, or both? (3 answers)
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molds are aerobic, yeasts are facultative anaerobes, some anaerobic fungi
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is fungi reproduction sexual or asexual?
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all fungi are asexual, most also reproduce sexually
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How do yeast reproduce?
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typically budding
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Describe 3 types of asexual spores
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1. sporangiospores- form inside sac

2. chlamydospores- form with thickened wall hyphae

3. conidiospores- produced a tips of hyphae, not within a sac

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What are the three major groups of fungi based on sexual spores?
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zygomycota, ascomycota, basidiomycota
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describe zygomycota (3)
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fungi, make sexual zygospores, black bread mold,
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ascomycota

name 4 examples

answer

fungi, form ascospores in sac, 

aspergillus, penicillium, saccharomyces, truffles

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basidiomycota (6)
answer
mushrooms, puffballs, stinkhorns, jelly fungi, bracket fungi, bird's nest fungi
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