Taxonomy
Evolution
Cladistics
Prokaryotes
Prokaryotes pt. 2
100

Define Taxonomy

The scientific study of describing, naming, and classifying organisms

100

Define Phylogeny. What is a phylogenetic tree?

Evolutionary history of a group of organisms. A phylogenetic tree is a branching diagram that hypothesizes likely relationships among groups of organisms.
100

What is the Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)?

Process to make many copies of a DNA sequence from very few original copies.

100

Define the term Extremophile

Prokaryotes that live under extreme conditions 

100

What is the purpose of plasmids in prokaryotes?

A plasmid is an extrachromosomal circular ring of DNA. It is transferable and may provide a selective advantage

200

How do we compose a Scientific Name?

__Genus Name__    __specific epithet__

Italicized when typing & underlined when written

200

Describe the meaning of the roots, lines, and nodes present on a phylogenetic tree

Root - the oldest point in the tree (common ancestor)

Lines - lineages (species/families)

Nodes - last common ancestor of the branches above

200

What is the difference between a Character & a Character State?

Character - a specific heritable attribute or property of an organism (flower color, number of walking legs)

Character states - one or more forms of a character (pink, red, blue, purple, 1,2,3,4,5)


200

What are the 2 reasons as to why Domain Archaea less studied?

1. Most archaea are extremophiles 

2. None of them are pathogens (that we know of)

200

What is the bacterial cell wall made of? Do archaeal cell walls contain the same thing?

Peptidoglycan. Archaeal cell walls no not contain peptidoglycan

300

What is the difference between a Category and a Taxon?

Category - rank/level of taxonomic classification

Taxon - a named group of organisms

300

Define Homoplasy. What does it result from?

Organisms that look similar but aren't closely related. Results from convergent evolution.

300

What data do cladograms represent?

Shared derived character states.

300

Why are prokaryotes so important?

1. Key players in nutrient recycling (nitrogen fixation, nitrification, etc)

2. Prevent diseases & play a role in human health

3. Food production (vinegar, yogurt, cheese)

4. Production of pharmaceuticals 

300

What are the two groups of Gram Stains? What color do they stain and why?

1. Gram positive - stain purple due to thick layer of peptidoglycan 

2. Gram negative - stain pink due to thin layer of peptidoglycan 

400

List the 3 domains. Which domains include prokaryotic organisms?

Eukarya, Archaea, & Bacteria

Archaea & Bacteria include prokaryotes

400

Define Convergent Evolution

Evolution of similar adaptions in organisms that do not share the same evolutionary lineage.

400

List the 4 common shapes of prokaryotes

- Coccus

- Bacillus

- Spirilla

- Vibrios

400

Describe the 3 modes of locomotion in bacteria

1. Flagella - long, thick filaments (movement)

2. Fimbriae - short, thin "hair-like", numerous (attachment)

3. Pili - longer than fimbriae, shorter than flagella (attachment, motility, & DNA transference)

500

What 4 kingdoms make up the Domain Eukarya?

Protists, Fungi, Plantae, & Animalia 

500

What is an analogous structure?

A biological characteristic that 2+ different species have in common that was not inherited from a common ancestor. 

500

Describe the Prokaryotic structure

- Smaller and less complex than eukaryotes

- Have a cell wall (reinforcement & protection)

- Lack nucleus & membrane-bound organelles

- Contains one, circular chromosome within the nucleoid 

500

What are the two nutritional types of bacteria?

Energy:

Phototrophs (light) & Chemotrophs (get energy from chemicals)

Carbon: 

Autotrophs (inorganic sources) & Heterotrophs (obtain carbon from organic compounds

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