Naming an organism with its genus and species name.
What is binomial nomenclature?
The classification of living things
What is Kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species?
medicine that can slow or prevent growth of bacteria
What is an antibiotic?
the study of plants
What is botany?
the 2 types of stem
What are woody and herbaceous?
A non- cellular infectious agent
What is a virus?
The three domains
What are Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya?
Pneumonia, cholera, lyme disease and tetanus are all examples
What is bacteria?
The two basic groups that we use in classifying plants
What is vascular and non vascular?
the two basic types of leaves
What are monocot (parallel) and dicot (pinnate or branched)
An organism that causes a disease.
What is a pathogen?
A cell with no nucleus
What is a prokaryotic cell?
What is bacteria?
An ovule with a protective coating, encasing a mature embryo and nutrient source.
What is a seed?
An example of a plant with carotenoid pigment
What are pumpkins? (carrots, corn)
A virus enters a cell, HIJACKS the host cell's DNA replication system, makes copies of itself and causes the cell to burst, releasing more viruses.
What is the Lytic cycle? (hijackers lie...)
The extremophile domain
What is archaea?
Doesn't have a cell wall, so antibiotics won't work
What is a virus?
The first two ways we categorize fruit
Erect, climbing, prostate and subterranean are examples.
What are stems?
Virus enters a cell, embeds its DNA into the DNA of the host cell, and is replicated along with the host cell's DNA
What is the lysoGENic cycle?
The man who originally developed the system for naming organisms that is largely still used by scientist today.
Who is Linnaeus?
Jenner developed the first vaccine in this country.
What is England?
The five parts of a flower.
What are pedicel (stem), sepal, stamen, carpel, petals?
Plants are this type of cell
What is eukaryotic (multicellular)?