The three kingdoms that can be either unicellular or colonial.
What are bacteria, Protista, and Fungi?
The dominant generation of a moss.
What is the gametophyte generation?
Sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water are needed for this plant process.
What is photosynthesis?
Specialized respiratory organs of a fish used for the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide.
What are gills?
This word literally means double life.
What is amphibian?
Characterized by the following characteristics: prokaryotic, unicellular or colonial, and microscopic.
What are Archaebacteria and Eubacteria?
The spore producing structures found on the back side of a fern frond.
What is the sorus?
The movement of water through a plant that ends with water leaving through the stomata.
What is transpiration?
The skeletal structure of fish in the phylum Chondricthyes.
What is cartillagenous?
The sense that many reptiles have but snakes lack.
What is hearing?
The method of viral reproduction that results in the destruction of the host's cell.
What is the lytic cycle?
Mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
What are Bryophytes?
(or nonvascular plants)
These openings in a leaf are where gases are exchanged in a plant.
What are stomata?
Defining feature of the phylum Agnatha.
What is jawless?
What is Osteichthyes?
A special protein produced by the immune system to fight off foreign materials.
What is an antibody?
The phylum of plants that contains the flowering plants.
What is Anthophyta?
This type of leaf has multiple blades per petiole.
What is a compound leaf?
The sensory organ responsible for sensing vibrations in the water.
What is the lateral line?
How many chambers does an amphibians heart have?
What is two as tadpoles and three as adults?
Any organism or agent that produces a disease in an organism.
What is a pathogen?
The two types of vascular tissue in a plant.
What are xylem and phloem?
These stems contain loose vascular bundles for transporting water and are flexible and usually green.
What are herbaceous stems?
Structure used to maintain a fish's depth in the water.
What is the swim bladder?
A legless, wormlike organism in the phylum Amphibia.
What is a caecilian?