This type of cell wall stains purple.
What is gram-positive?
These are three forms of genetic recombination.
What is transformation, transduction, and conjugation?
This domain contains hyphae and mycelium.
What is Fungi?
This is a virus that infects bacteria.
What is a bacteriophage?
Prokaryotes that can't live in oxygenated environments.
Bacteria use this for motility.
What is Flagella?
This structure is commonly used to exchange DNA in prokaryotes.
What is pili?
Theory about the development of the eukaryote.
What is endosymbiosis?
This type of virus uses RNA as genomic material.
What is a retrovirus?
This is a unicellular fungus.
What is yeast?
Prokaryotic bacteria reproduce using this method.
What is binary fission?
Transduction uses this to transfer DNA.
What is a bacteriophage?
This domain uses both asexual and sexual reproduction, and is mostly free living or parasitic to other organisms.
What is Protozoa?
What is a prion?
Archaea tend to live in environments that classify them in this general term.
What are extremophiles?
This type of bacterial cell wall structure consists of a double membrane.
What is gram-negative bacteria?
This form of recombination intakes DNA from its environment.
This type of hyphae grows around plant root surfaces.
What is Ectomychorrizal fungi?
This is the structure on a bacteriophage that encloses the bacterial genome.
What is a capsid?
Amoebas are part of this domain.
What is protozoa?
This domain of prokaryotes has a cell wall that lacks peptidoglycan.
What is Archaea?
Pili are used to transfer DNA in this method.
What is conjugation?
This type of hyphae extends into plant root cell walls.
What is Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi?
Bacteriophages can use either of these two life cycles (and sometimes both).
What is the lysogenic and lytic cycle?
This type of bacteriophage can use both life cycles.
What is a temperate phage?