This is the living status of a virus
Non-living, acellular
Bacteria do not have membrane bound organelles, meaning they and Archaea are classified as this
Prokaryotes
A moss is an example of this
Non-vascular plant
Bryophyte
What is speciation
The formation of a new species
2 main categories of all plants
Non-vascular and vascular
This internal part is present in all viruses
Nucleic acid
This is how many cells bacteria have
One-they are unicellular living organisms
A fern is an example of this
Seedless vascular plant
This utilizes variations due to genetic variations/mutations which ultimately results in offspring that are better adapted to the environment
Natural Selection
Angiosperms
This outer part made of proteins is found in all viruses
Capsid
This is how bacteria reproduce
Asexually through binary fission
Fungus
This type of selection is when humans determine which trait is desirable and breed for that trait
Artificial Selection
Xylem transports this in plants
Water and minerals
This outer covering that protects the virus is only found in some viruses, especially animal viruses
Envelope
These form when the environment is unfavorable for growth and allow the bacteria to survive for extended periods of time
Endospores
This type of organism doesn't use solar energy to reduce carbon dioxide
Chemoautotrophs
This is a term to describe the reproductive success of an animal
Fitness
This is where the reproductive structure of a gymnosperm is located
This is how a virus reproduces
Co-opts host cell and uses its machinery
This is the relative size of bacteria
Small - larger than viruses (which are VERY small)
This type of organism requires high concentrations of salt and can absorb light energy to pump chloride and make ATP
Halophile
These 4 things need to exist for natural selection to happen
1.Variation in traits
2.Struggle to exist
3.Organisms vary in fitness
4.Organisms become adapted
This is where angiosperms reproductive structures are located
Flowers - know the illustration!!