Kingdoms
Bacteria
Protists
Fungi
Plants
100
Two kingdoms of prokaryotes
What are Kingdoms Eubacteria and Archebacteria?
100
Body type for bacteria and archebacteria
What is unicellular?
100
The number of general groups of protists that are recognized by biologists.
What is 6?
100
This fungus is used to make bread.
What is yeast?
100
Three types of nonvasuclar plants
What are mosses, hornworts and liverworts?
200
Unicellular and Multicellular organisms
What are Kingdoms Protista and Fungi?
200
Chemical in the cell walls of bacteria that is not present in archebacteria
What is a peptoglycan?
200
A type of parasite that causes malaria
What is the sporozoan stage of Plasmodium?
200
This fungus can be edible or poisonous and has a cap and stalk.
What is a mushroom?
200
The reproductive part of a plant that creates seeds.
What is a flower?
300
There are six
What is the number of Kingdoms?
300
Bacteria are primarily responsible for recycling of this mineral.
What is phosphorus?
300
The three types of Protists.
What is animal like, plant like, and fungus like?
300
The threadlike structure of a fungi that absorbs nutrients.
What is a hyphae?
300
Potatoes, radishes, turnips and yams.
What are examples of roots used for food?
400
The only kingdom of solely autotrophic organisms
What is the Kingdom Plantae?
400
The 3 main characteristics used to classify bacteria.
What are shape, nutrition and cell structure?
400
The 3 organelles of movement for protists.
What is a flagellum, cilia, and pseudopodia?
400
Water and air spread these to reproduce fungi.
What is spores?
400
Seed coat, embryo, cotyledon
What are the contents of a typical seed?
500
The cell structure that is most often used to differentiate between kingdoms.
What is the cell wall?
500
Drugs used to treat bacterial infection.
What are antibiotics?
500
The protist method of feeding.
What is a produce and consumer relationship? (photosynthesis/absorbing, autotrophic/heterotrophic)
500
The unicellular process of reproduction in fungi.
What is asexual budding?
500
Conifers, cycads, ginkos and gnetophytes.
What are gymnosperms?