biological classification
Archaea
Bacteria 1
Bacteria 2
viruses
100

what is taxonomy

the science dealing with the description, identification, naming, and classifying of organisms

100

what are methanogens

live in oxygen free environment, like the digestive tracts of cows or buried in the muck at the bottom of the marshes and swamps

100

what is a pathogen

an organism that causes disease

100

what's the difference between photoautotrophs and chemoautotrophs

photosynthetic bacteria


chemosynthetic bacteria that convert energy from inorganic molecules instead of sunlight

100

what is virology

 the study of the nature of viruses

200

what is binomial nomenclature

naming and organism with its genus and species name

200

what are halophiles

salt-loving; live in environments with extremely high salt concentrations, like Utah’s Great Salt Lake

200

what 3 characteristics do biologists use to identify and classify bacteria

  • cell shape

  • cell wall structure 

  • method of movement

200

what's the difference between photoheterotrophs and chemoheterotrophs

grows on just about anything you like to eat if not properly handled (mold)


converting energy stored in bonds of organic compounds into energy they can use for their cell functions

200

what is a virus

a noncellular infectious agent that has 2 characteristics: (1) it has genetic material (DNA or RNA) inside a protective protein coat, (2) it cannot reproduce on its own; it must infect a living cell

300

what is an antibiotic

a chemical secreted by a living organism that kills or reduces the reproduction rate of other organisms

300

what are thermophiles

heat-loving; live in environments where temperatures approach the boiling point of water, like the hot springs at Yellowstone or in deep-sea hydrothermal vents

300

what are the 3 basic shapes of bacteria

  • round-shaped (coccus)

  • rod-shaped (bacillus)

  • spiral-shaped (spirillum)

300

what is an endospore

a thick internal wall (made of several hard layers), produced by the bacterium, that encloses its DNA and other essential parts

300

what is the lytic cycle

a virus enters a cell, hijacks the host cell’s DNA replication system, makes copies of itself, and causes the cell to burst, releasing even more viruses

400

what is leaf c

elm

400

true or false: archaea's cell walls contain peptidoglycan

false

400

what's the difference between gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria

Gram-negative are red-pink and have a thin cell wall

Gram-positive are blue-purple and have a thick cell wall

400

list and define the 3 types of genetic recombination in bacteria

Conjugation: a temporary union of 2 organisms for the purpose of DNA transfer

Transformation: the transfer of a DNA segment from a nonfunctional donor cell to that of a functional recipient cell

Transduction: the process in which infection by a virus results in DNA being transferred from one bacterium to another

400

what is the lysogenic cycle

a virus enters a cell, embeds its DNA into the DNA of the host cell, and is replicated along with the host cell’s DNA

500

list the taxonomic classification system

domain

kingdom

phylum

class

order

family

genus

species

500

can archaea cause diseases in humans

no

500

what's the difference between obligate aerobes and obligate anaerobes

Obligate aerobes: bacteria that requires a constant supply of oxygen for cellular respiration to take place (e. Coli in animal intestines)

Obligate anaerobes: bacteria that cannot live in the presence of oxygen - they’re poisoned by it (c. botulinum in food poisoning/botulism)

500

Most pathogenic bacteria cause disease by producing 1 of 2 types of toxins. What are these toxins?

Exotoxin: poisonous proteins produced as part of bacterial growth and metabolism - shoots out of the bacteria

Endotoxin: poisonous lipid in the bacterium’s cell wall that gets released when the bacterium dies and the cell wall begins to break up 

500
what are 2 ways in which our bodies can defend us from viruses

immune system/WBC and vaccines