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100

Who is the father of taxonomy?

Carl Von Linne

100

the naming system is called...

binomial nomenclature

100

Give an example of an organism Kingdom Monera.

archaea and eubacteria.

100

what does "eu" stand for?

true

100

Which taxa determines the first portion of the binomial name?

Genus.

200

Which taxa is the broadest?

Kingdom

200

Which taxa comes before Class?

Phylum.

200

Which taxa comes after Order?

Family.

200

Which taxa comes after genus?

Species.

200

Which taxa comes before phylum?

kingdom.

300

What is an example of an organism in Kingdom Protista?

Amoeba and algae

300

provide an example of an organism in kingdom fungi?

mushrooms, mold, mildew, and yeast.

300

define unicellular 

a single-celled organism.
300

what is the difference between eukaryotic and prokaryotic?

eukaryotes have a nucleus and prokaryotes do not.

300

what does it mean if an organism is chemoautotrophic?

it is an organism that makes its own food by using chemicals such as ammonia.

400

what does it mean if an organism is photoautotrophic? 

it's an organism that makes food by using sunlight and CO2.

400

a group of similar species are a part of the same ______.

Genus. example: Lion and house cat are two different species but are in the same genus.

400

Define heterotroph.

Organisms that get their energy by consuming organic molecules made by other organisms 

(aka eats other living organisms to survive such as plants and animals).

400

what are the most common shapes of bacteria?

bacilli and cocci.

400

what 4 things do scientists look at when differentiating bacteria?

Nutrition, respiration, cell wall composition, and cell shape.

500

what does it mean when a bacteria is gram-positive?

it has a thin cell wall, one layer, which means antibiotics can get throw it. 

500

what kind of environment does a halogen live in?

extremely salty envirnments such as the dead sea.

500

what is gram staining?

a process where eubacteria are stained first with a purple dye, rinsed, and then stained with a red dye. Depending on the thickness of the cell wall the eubacteria will appear red or purple. Whether the bacteria is gram-positive or negative will depend on how thick their cell wall is. 

500
What color would a gram-negative bacteria stain?

red.

500

can we treat gram-negative bacteria with antibiotics? why or why not?

no, because the antibiotics cannot get through the double cell wall.