Jeopardy Final Jeopardy The History of Life on Earth Tree of Life

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Jeopardy Final Jeopardy The History of Life on Earth Tree of Life Intro to Cell Division Prokaryotes Protists $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 Final Jeopardy

1 - $100 What kind of rocks are fossils found in? Sedimentary… But it’s igneous and metamorphic rocks that can be radiometrically dated. So you just date these rocks that are near the sedimentary rocks to find out how old the fossils are.

1 - $200 Which came about first, prokaryotic cells or eukaryotic cells? Prokaryotic… Prokaryotic evolved 3500 MYA, eukaryotic evolved 2000 MYA Dr. Colbert doesn’t want you guys to remember specific dates, but he wants you to know relative times (what evolved before what)

1 - $300 What type of rocks are used for radiometric dating? Igneous and metamorphic

1 - $400 Define fact Define hypothesis A fact is something that can be observed to occur A hypothesis is really a prediction about what will happen in a certain set of circumstances. AKA an educated guess that is possible to test.

1 - $500 Explain the difference between a law and a theory. A law is a “universal relationship describing how the natural world behaves under specific conditions. Can often be expressed mathematically. Theory means an explanation for a natural phenomenon that is well-supported by data, incorporates relevant laws, and makes accurate predictions. Well-supported scientific theories are not a “just”, an “opinion” or a “guess” – they are the very best explanations that science has to offer

2 - $100 What is the goal of taxonomy? Name all species on planet Earth

2 - $200 How do you write scientific names? What are the parts of a scientific name? Why do we use scientific names? The two parts are Genus and Species. Genus comes before species when you write it. Genus is always capitalized and species is always lower case. The whole thing should be italicized. We use scientific names to be more descriptive and specific. Example: Homo sapiens

2 - $300 What is phylogeny? Phylogeny is the history and relationships of groups of organisms. Typically represented by a “phylogenetic tree” showing “lineages” (groups of organisms related through common ancestry, also called a “clade” or “monophyletic group”

2 - $400 What’s a taxon? What are the different taxonomic levels? A group of organisms. The different levels are Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species

2 - $500 What is the difference between homology and homoplasy? Homology is having a similar trait due to COMMON ANCESTRY. Homoplasy is having a similar trait NOT due to common ancestry.

3 - $100 How do prokaryotic cells divide? Binary fission

3 - $200 What does binary fission produce? Two genetically identical daughter cells (have the same DNA sequence)

3 - $300 What does mitosis produce? Two genetically identical daughter cells (same DNA sequence)

3 - $400 What does Meiosis produce? Four genetically distinct HAPLOID daughter cells (each has own distinct DNA sequence) Depending on the type of organism, meiosis may or may not lead directly to the production of gametes

3 - $500 What is the difference between binary fission and mitosis? They have the same overall result (two genetically identical daughter cells) BUT they occur by different processes AKA they achieve this same result but each do it a different way

4 - $100 What are the four common shapes of prokaryotes? What do they look like? Cocci – spheres Bacilli – rods Vibrios – comma Spirilla – spiral

4 - $200 What is the difference between an autotroph and heterotroph? Autotrophs self-synthesize (make their own food) and heterotrophs have to eat other organisms

4 - $300 Name and describe the four different ways prokaryotes use oxygen. Obligate aerobes – need oxygen to survive Facultative anaerobes - can use oxygen, but don’t need it Aerotolerant anaerobes – don’t use it but aren’t poisoned by it Obligate anaerobes – poisoned by oxygen

4 - $400 True or False: Archaens have peptidoglycan in their cell walls while Bacteria and Eukaryotes do not. FALSE – Bacteria have peptidoglycan in their cells walls. Archaens and Eukaryotes do not.

4 - $500 What is this? Does it belong to domain bacteria or domain archaea? How does it obtain nutrition? Is it unicellular or multicellular? Cyanobacteria; Domain Bacteria; Photoautotroph; Multicellular

5 - $100 What groups of organisms have eukaryotic cells? Animals Plants Fungi Protists

5 - $200 What are the three major lineagesof Alveolata? What are they characterized by? Ciliates, Dinoflagellates and Apiocomplexans. Characterized by presence of small membrane-bounded cavities (alveoli) under their cell membrane (only visible with electron microscopes)

5 - $300 What’s this? What lineage is it a member of? Diatoms; Stamenopilla

5 - $400 What are the major lineages of amoebozoa? Lobose amoebae, cellular slime molds, plasmodial slime molds

5 - $500 Describe the endosymbiont theory. Is there evidence that supports this theory? If yes, what? A theory stating that the eukaryotes evolved through a process whereby different types of free-living prokaryotes became incorporated inside larger prokaryotic cells and eventually developed into mitochondria, chloroplasts, and possibly other organelles. Evidence: Plastids and mitochondria are about the same size as typical prokaryotic cells Reproduce by a process similar to binary fission Contain circular DNA molecules

Final Jeopardy What lineage of protists does this organism belong to? Is this eukaryotic or prokaryotic organism? What nutritional strategy does this organism use? Plantae / green algae Eukaryotic – you can tell because of the nucleus Photoautotroph – you can tell because of the green chloroplasts. Chloroplasts = photosynthesis