Human Intervention
Environments
Structure & Function
Anatomy & Physiology
Biodiversity
100

This farming method often reduces soil microbial diversity, including beneficial bacteria.

What is monoculture?

100

This is the most common environment for bacteria on Earth, playing a key role in nutrient cycling

Soil

100

This domain of life includes microorganisms that can thrive in extreme environments such as Volcanic hot springs, deep-sea vents, and salt lakes.

Archaea

100

What do both Archaea and Eubacteria lack as prokaryotic cells?

What is a nucleus/organelles?

100

What is biodiversity?

Variety of life on earth

200

One benefit of planting trees in previously deforested areas is the return of these microbes that help recycle nutrients.

 What are soil bacteria / decomposers

200

Name 2 kinds of archaea and what environment they would live in

halophiles: environments with high salt concentrations

thermophiles: environments with high temperatures

alkalophiles: adapted to environments with high pH

acidophiles: inhabit environments with very low pH

200

This part of a prokaryotic cell contains the genetic material and is not surrounded by a membrane.

Nucleoid

200

This domain of prokaryotes includes organisms like E. coli and Lactobacilli

What is Eubacteria?

200

How does biodiversity help an ecosystem recover from environmental stress?

diverse ecosystems make stronger ecosystems

300

Name 2 types of human intervention that can be beneficial to the biodiversity of archaea & eubacteria ecosystems.

Tree plantations, biofertilizers , improved wildfire management, compost, sustainable harvesting, protected natural areas.

300

This type of bacteria, known for forming the top layer of microbial mats, can survive in extreme environments ranging from Antarctic ice to hot springs and hypersaline lakes.

Cyanobacteria

300

What are the three main shapes used to classify bacteria?

Cocci, bacilli, and spirilla or Spherical, rod, and spiral

300

What adaptation allows Archaea to survive in extreme conditions?

What is a cell wall  structure?

300

Why are ecosystems with higher biodiversity more resistant to diseases and invasive species?

Diversity lessens the spread of diesese due to increased gene pool.

400

Name one risk of using pesticides to reduce pests on the  archaea & eubacteria terrestrial ecosystems.

Kill both harmful and beneficial bacteria, reducing microbial diversity.

400

What type of environment can anaerobic archaea NOT survive in?

High oxygen environments

400

What staining method is used to classify bacteria based on their cell wall structure?

Gram-staining

400

What adaptation allows Archaea to survive in extreme conditions?

What is a cell wall structure?

400

Explain how the loss of one species can lead to a chain reaction affecting the entire ecosystem.  

One loss disrupts food chain

500

Overharvesting wild plants can damage microbial communities, and reduce this vital bacterial function.

What is nitrogen fixation?

500

Name 3 impacts that climate change may have on either archaea or bacteria

Archaea: Thermophiles (e.g., Pyrococcus) may expand into newly warmed habitats like polar soils.

Methanogens in thawing permafrost could amplify methane emissions, exacerbating warming.

Halophiles may face habitat loss as rising sea levels dilute hypersaline lakes.


 Bacteria:

Pathogens: Vibrio cholerae blooms in warmer coastal waters increase cholera risk.

Soil bacteria: Drought-resistant Actinobacteria replace moisture-dependent Pseudomonadota in arid soils.

Cyanobacteria: Harmful algal blooms intensify in warmer, nutrient-rich waters, reducing aquatic biodiversity.

500

What molecule makes up the cell walls of most bacteria but not archaea?

Peptidoglycan

500

A reproductive prokaryotic process where an individual cell reproduces its single chromosome and splits in two.

What is binary fission?

500

Why is biodiversity important to humans?

Provides us with clean water, oxygen, food.