Taxonomy
Phylogenetic Trees
Viruses
Bacteria 1
Bacteria 2
Fungi 1
Fungi 2
Mixed Bag
Mixed Bag 2
100

Developed by Carl Linneaus, this is used to classify organisms

What is taxonomy?

100

The definition of a phylogenetic tree

What is a hypothesis about evolutionary relationships where branch lengths often represent time

100

H1N1, measles, and corona are all examples of this

What is a virus?

100

Prokaryotic organisms

What are bacteria and archaea?

100

Organisms on earth for the first two billion years

What are anaerobic organisms?

100

The foldings of a cell membrane into the interior of a cell

What is infolding?

100

A relationship between plant roots and their symbiotic fungi

What is mycorrhizae?

100
Antibiotic resistance, mosquitos changing in response to climate change, Galapagos finches diverging into different lineages, genetic variation in house sparrows in North America
What are examples of evolution that is occuring today?
100

Single celled algae

What are diatom?

200

This part of an organism is similar in structure and comes from a common ancestor but could be utilized in a different way

What is a homology?

200

This represents an ancestor and all of its descendents

What is a clade?

200

The reason(s) viruses are considered to be nonliving

What is they cannot survive without a host and cannot reproduce on their own?

200

Bacteria that get their food from other sources

What is heterotrophic bacteria?

200

Coccus, bacillus, and helical

What are shapes of bacteria?

200

Evidence that mitochondria and chloroplasts were descended from free-living cyanobacteria

What is they have their own DNA

200

A symbiotic relationship between fungi and a photosynthetic organism, often algae

What is lichen?

200
Autotrophic eukaryotes containing chlorophyll

What is green algae?

200

Bacteriophages, the viruses that infect bacteria, move DNA from one bacterium to another. Archaea have a different set of viruses that infect them and translocate genetic material from one individual to another.

What is transduction? (A method for prokaryotes to alter their genetic information)

300

The definition of an analogy

What is a part of an organism that is similar in function but has a different evolutionary history?
300

A group that diverged before all other taxa

What is an outgroup?

300
Structure of a virus

What is a nucleic acid core, capsid protein coat, and glycoprotein spikes?

300

Pigments that make green, blue, and red

What is chlorophyll A, phycocyanin, and phycoerythrin?

300

This makes a prokaryotic cell gram-positive

Layers of peptidoglycan

300

Binary fission, multiple fission, and budding

How do protists reproduce?

300
Club fungi, often come up as a ring

What are basidiomycetes

300

The color that a gram-negative test would show

What is pink?

300

Dinoflagellates

What are single-celled aquatic organisms that have two flagella?

400

Maximum parsimony

What is the fewest synapomorphies and the simplest explanation?

400

Two things phylogenetic trees tell us

What are classifications and evolutionary relationships?

400

This creates an early immune resistance to a virus

What is a vaccine?

400

The basic structure of a prokaryote

What is cell membrane and a few ribosomes (some have cell walls)?

Their DNA is simple and simple

400

An extremophile would be found in this type of location

What are extreme environments?

Extremophiles like to live in: volcanos, polar ice caps, bottom of the ocean, super salty water

400

Aquatic parasites with cell walls made of chitin, infect and kill frogs

What are chytridomycetes?

400

Fungi cannot photosynthesize and they store their food as glycogen rather than starch

What evidence suggests fungi are more closely related to humans than plants?

400

Structures of a protist

What are multiple nuclei, being enveloped by a cell wall or membrane or pellicle, and able to move (usually with cilia or flagella)?

400

Infolding of prokaryote plasma membranes that lead to compartmentalization

What is autogenesis?

500

DNA's role in improving phylogenetics

What is confirming early classfications and uncovering previous errors?

Morpohologic AND genetic information is most effective

500

A pitfall of phylogenetic trees

Correct answers include:

-they are only as robust as the species they include

-the branches don't always accurately represent time

-the traits could be homologies or analogies

500

Ten million viruses are found in every drop of this

What is water?

500

These organisms makes their own organic compounds by photosynthesis or chemosynthesis

What are autotrophic bacteria?

They all produce sugar of some sort and are found at the base of the food web

500

Earth's first oxygen producers which evolved from phototrophs

What are cyanobacteria?

500

Conjugated fungi, including bread molds and penicillin

What are zygomycetes?

Asexual spores, mostly terrestrial

500

Primarily terrestrial, cannot photosynthesize, consumes food from decaying matter, can cause infections in plants and animals, has glycogen storage

What are characteristics of fungi?

500

The major seaweeds of the temperate and polar regions

What are brown algae?

500

A condition where one organism lives within another

What is endosymbiosis?

600

Organisms that share an immediate common ancestor

What is a sister taxa?
600

True/false: Do phylogenetic trees show time?

If they do, it will be notated. Branching does not always indicate age of particular species.

600

H1N1 refers to the presence of this on the surface of the virus

What are proteins?

600

When medication is stopped early and conditions are good for resistant bacteria to have spaces to grow, take over, and submit drug resistance to other bacteria that may not have been killed

What is antibiotic resistance?

600

The primary producers at the base of all food chains

What are autotrophic bacteria?

600

Sac fungi, multi- and uni-cellular with cup-like structure

What are ascomycetes?

600

The ability of fungi to transform nutrients to make them available for plants, food source for wildlife, medicinal source

Why are fungi important to the ecosystem?

600

A single-celled, brightly colored mass of cytoplasm with multiple nuclei

What is a slime mold?

600

An event where certain types of algae on the coastline grow out of control 

What is red tide?

700

A lineage that evolved early from the root and remains unbranched

What is a basal taxon?

700

A derived trait that distinguishes a species from its ancestors

What is a synapomorphy?

700

Using a glycoprotein to attach to their host cells at molecules on the cell called viral receptors. Attachment is a requirement for viruses to later penetrate the cell membrane, inject the viral genome, and complete their replication inside the cell.

How do viruses use their host cells to reproduce?

700

Single-celled organisms that lack nuclei but do not have layers of peptidoglycan in their cell walls. Found in extreme environments but also in human microbiomes

What are archaea?

700

Ringworm, a fungal infection of the skin

What is the common name for tinea?

700

A tangle of slender thread-like structures, characteristics of vegetative state

What are hyphae?

700

A mass of hyphae

What is mycelium?

700

A method of analysis that evaluates a phylogenetic tree based on highest probability

What is maximum likelihood?

700

An organism that feeds on dead organic material

What is a heterotrophic saprobe?

800

A generic (genus) name and a specific (species) name

What is binomial nomenclature?

800

A trait shared by two or more taxa that is also shared with their earliest common ancestor

What is a symplesiomorphy?

800

SARS-COV-2, SARS, and MERS are all types of this virus

What is coronavirus?

800

The cell takes in DNA found in its environment that is shed by other prokaryotes, alive or dead

What is transformation? (A method for prokaryotes to alter their genetic information)

800

DNA is transferred from one prokaryote to another by means of a pilus that brings the organisms into contact with one another.

What is conjugation? (A method for prokaryotes to alter their genetic information)

800

Heterotrophs that contain neither photosynthetic pigments such as chlorophylls nor organelles such as chloroplasts. Because they feed on decaying and dead matter, they are saprobes. They establish parasitic relationships with animals and plants.

What are characteristics of fungi?

800

Yeasts and mycelium

What are types of fungi?

800
Some prokaryotes developed aerobic respiration; through endosymbiosis, a cell engulfed an aerobic prokaryote; this allowed mitochondria to develop

How did eukaryotes evolve?

800

A (typically single-celled) eukaryotic organism that is not an animal, plant, or fungus

What is a protist?