AP bio unit 9

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5/6 kingdoms

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5/6 kingdoms

Monera (Eubacteria, archaebacteria) , Protista, Fungi, Plantae, Animalia

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three domains

domain bacteria, domain archaea, domain eukarya

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Domain Archea

halophiles, thermophiles, methanogens

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halophiles

love salt

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thermophiles

love hot temperature

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methanogens

love methane and anaerobic conditions

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domain bacteria

One type of RNA polymerase, sensitive to antibiotics, lack introns

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3 shapes of bacteria

Cocci, spirilla, bacilli

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gram positive

Bacteria have simple cell walls

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gram negative

Complex cell walls

harder for antibiotics to work

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how do antibiotics kill bacteria

Inhibit the synthesis of the peptidoglycan in the bacterial cell wall and cripple the bacteria

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how do prokaryotes make symptoms

They invade the tissue of the host and most commonly it isn't the prokaryote that makes the symptoms but the toxins it produces

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types of prokaryotic movement

flagella/ filaments/ slime gliding/ taxis

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exotoxins

Is released by the cell

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endotoxins

Release in the cell wall

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commensalism

One organism benefits other is not affected

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parasitism

The parasite benefits at cost of the host

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mutualism

Both organisms benefit

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nitrogen fixation

some convert ammonium to nitrate

others denitrify nitrate into nitrogen gas and release it back into the atmosphere

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endosymbiotic theory

Eukaryotic cells come from partnership of prokaryotes

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archezoa

Most closely related to prokaryotes

oldest eukaryotic organism

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3 groups of protists

Plant-like protists (photosynthetic-algae) animal like protists (heterophic-protozoa) fungus like protists (absorptive-slime mold)

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types of algae

Dinoflagellates, diatoms, green algae, brown algae, red algae, golden algae

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dinoflagellates

Algae with flagella

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diatoms

Reproduce asexually, symmetric shells of silicon for protection

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green algae

Form lichen with fungi, ancestor of plants

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brown algae

Kelp & seaweed, large protists, marine

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red algae

moderate/deep sea levels and absorb red and blue wavelengths

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golden algae

Use flagella and swim among plankton

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amoebas

Unicellular

some have shells and they reproduce asexually, use pseudopodia to move and eat

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paramecium

Contain cilia, solitary, freshwater, have macronucleus, micronuclei

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plasmodial slime-molds

Heterotrophic, brightly colored (yellow/orange)

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cellular slime molds

They are alone when there's lots of food and clump together when food is scarce form fruiting bodies which produce resistant spores

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characteristics of kingdom fungi

cell wall made of chitin, heterotrophs and decomposers, body is made of long filaments of hyphae

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How does fungi reproduce?

asexually by spores

sexually by hyphae filaments

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types of fungi

club fungi, bracket fungi, cup fungi, mold

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Myecellium

group of hyphae that sends spores underground to spread, also produces fruiting bodies on top of stalks

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whats the change in the history of plants?

bryophytes, monilophytes, gymnosperms, and angiosperms

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bryophytes

Non-vascular with no seeds \n primitive plants \n live in damp areas \n flagellated sperm \n waxy cuticle to prevent water loss

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Monilophytes

Seedless \n vascular plants, \n use xylem to transport water and phloem for sugar and nutrients \n no seeds \n ferns

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gymnosperms

Seeded plants \n use pollination \n produce seeds in center \n conifers \n evergreen \n male and female cones

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angiosperms

Flowering plants \n vascular \n monocots and dicots \n pollination is a very evolutionary advanced methods \n animals are used for pollination

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monocots

parallel plant vein

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dicots

branched plant veins

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Angiosperm reproduction

Pollen is sperm goes into the egg and fertilizes it

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animal characteristics

no cell walls \n multicellular \n sexual reproduction \n mobile \n heterotrophs \n store carbs as glycogen \n specialized nervous and muscle tissue

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embryological events

Zygote, morula (solid mass of cells), blastula (hollow call of cells) , gastrula

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gastrulation

Germ layer development \n mesoderm endoderm ectoderm \n produces coelom mouth and anus

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cleavage

produces morula

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blastopore

first opening in the developing embryo

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protosomes

mouth first

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dueterostomes

anus first

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What makes a chordate

Notochord, nerve cord, pharyngeal gill slits, tail

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notochord

support, replaced by bone

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nerve cord

develops into brain and spinal chord

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pharyngeal gill slits

open from digestive tube

function in filter feeding and gas exchange

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tail

contains skeleton and muscle

lost by the time born in many species

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class agnatha

Lampreys and hagfish

jawless small lack paired fins

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Class Placodermi

placoderms

jawed- went extinct 350mya

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Class Chondrichthyes

Sharks, rays cartilaginous fish, skeleton made out of cartilage, well developed jaw, paired fins, lateral line system, internal fertilization

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Class Osteichthyes

Bony fish, skin covered in scales and mucus, lateral line system, operculum, swim bladder

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Class Amphibia

Lay and fertilize eggs in water but adults move on land/ gas exchange via lings, in mouth and across skin

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Class Reptilia

Scales made of keratin, 3 chambered heart, internal fertilization most lay amniotic egg with a hard shell, oviparous

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amnion

protection

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yolk

nutrients

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Class Aves

Wings feathers and light hollow bones, 4 chambered heart, endothermic, oviparous

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Class Mammalia

Hair of keratin, mammary gland to nourish young, rapid metabolism, 4 chambered heart, regulate temp through sweat glands and hair

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3 groups of mammals

Monotremes, marsupials, placental

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monotremes

Platypus anteater, lay eggs

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marsupials

Birthed immature and crawl to pouch and attach to a teat to complete development, kangaroos

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placentals

Nourish embryo through placenta in womb, birthed more developed

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characteristics of archaebacteria

histones in DNA, introns, in genes, multiple RNA polymerase, live in extreme conditions

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characteristics of eubacteria

one type of RNA polymerase, lack introns in genome, sensitive to antibiotics

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how does bacteria grow

binary fission, 1-3 hours

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mesosome

extension of cell membrane

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