Jeopardy ClassificationMicroscopes Bacterial growth and reproduction Bacteria in our world Labs Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Bacteria.
Advertisements

Bacteria Main Menu Classification Obtaining Energy Respiration Growth and Reproduction Importance Of Bacteria Title Page.
Bacteria: Classification and Structure What are the 6 Kingdoms? Archaebacteria Eubacteria Protists Fungi Plants Animals.
Viruses & Bacteria Biology 20 This Powerpoint is hosted on Please visit for free powerpoints.
Kingdom Monera (Bacteria and Archaebacteria)
{ Virus and Bacteria Test Review 1.Cocci 2.Spirilla 3.Bacilli 4.Staphylococci 5.Streptococci 1. 2.Gram positive – Stain dark purple with gram stain. Have.
(NOW KINGDOM ARCHAEBACTERIA/EUBACTERIA) Microbiology: Kingdom Monera.
Chapter 7 Bacteria.
Bacteria Prokaryotes are single cell organisms that lack a nucleus. Their size range form 1-5 micrometers which is smaller than most eukaryotic cell. Epulopiscium.
1 2 Bacterial Classification 3 Characteristics of Bacteria.
 Archaebacteria: bacteria that lacks the peptidoglycan layer in its structure- Older (in time) bacteria ◦ Live in oxygen free environment ◦ Produce.
Eukaryotes vs Prokaryotes And Bacteria SBI 3C: OCTOBER 2012.
Marconi Bacteria consist of only a single cell, but don't let their small size and seeming simplicity fool you. They're an amazingly complex and.
Monerans Or Prokaryotic Cells
The Wonderful World of Microbes
Bacteria. Characteristics prokaryotic unicellular usually have locomotion reproduce sexually & asexually.
THIS IS Cell Structures Eubacteria & Archaebacteria Food Poisoning Reproduction Culturing & Identification Techniques Useful Bacteria.
Bacteria. Hand Washing  1800’s: 25% of women died after childbirth  Why?  Streptococcus pyogenes bacteria  But most women were perfectly healthy before.
Bacteria & Viruses. Bacteria The earliest known fossils are of 3.5 billion year old bacteria Most bacteria come in 1 of 3 possible shapes: spherical,
Chapter 19 Biology – Miller • Levine
Old Kingdom: MONERANS New: Eubacteria & Archaebacteria Bacteria.
VIRUSES & BACTERIA CHAPTERS 2.3, 7.1, AND 7.2. WHAT ARE VIRUSES? A virus is a nonliving strand of hereditary material surrounded by a protein coating.
Chapter 19. Identifying Prokaryotes  Shape Bacilli- rod shaped Cocci- sphere shaped Spirilla- spiral shaped  Cell walls- Gram staining Eubacteria stain.
Bacteria. Bacterial Video Video Bacterial Kingdoms 1.Archaebacteria   Called “Ancient” bacteria  Live in harsh environments- volcanic vents, hot springs,
Bacteria and Viruses Chapter 19. Introduction Microscopic life covers nearly every square centimeter of Earth.  In a single drop of pond water you would.
End Show Slide 1 of 40 Biology Mr. Karns Bacteria.
Unit 6 Microorganisms & Fungi Ch. 19 Bacteria & Viruses.
Bacteria. Prokaryotes Single-celled organisms that lack a nucleus, usually very small Also known as bacteria.
Kingdom Monera Chapter Bacteria  Bacteria or one-celled prokaryotes are cells without a nucleus and they’re found everywhere!  Bacteria are very.
CHAPTER 19 NOTES BACTERIA.
Bacteria Chapter 7.
Bacteria. VERY SMALL Tip of sewing needle covered in bacteria.
Bacteria Two Kingdoms Archaebacteria and Eubacteria (Prokaryotes, unicellular)
KINGDOM MONERA.
Chapter 18 Bacteria.
BACTERIA KEY CONCEPTS.
Bacteria Guided Reading Wicked Awesome PowerPoint Presentation.
Bacteria Domains Bacteria & Archaea. Kingdoms of Bacteria- 1. Eubacteria or Monera 2. Archeabacteria.
Bacteria Bacteria live in almost every environment on Earth, from arctic ice to volcanic vents. 1 cm 2 of your skin has 100,000 bacteria on it. 1 teaspoon.
Bacteria: Classification and Structure 6/9/2016 SB3C1.
Bacteria All are Prokaryotic-NO NUCLEUS. All are unicellular (means one cell) and survive independently. All reproduce by binary fission. Cynobacteria.
A cell without any membrane bound structures prokaryotic 1.
Viruses & Bacteria What are Viruses A virus is a non-cellular particle made up of genetic material and protein that can invade.
Bacteria. VOCABULARY Spirilla Bacilli Cocci Flagella Fission Aerobes Anaerobe Facultative Anaerobe Antibiotics Saprophytes Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria Pathogen.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
PROKARYOTES.
THIS IS Bacteria Jeopardy. THIS IS Bacteria Jeopardy.
Bacteria Chapter 18 Biology 1.
Metabolic Diversity Prokaryotes are divided into two main groups:
Which Bacteria Am I ? Characteristics Energy Control Me Parts and
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Most environments (most abundant)
Most environments (most abundant)
By: Daniel Ospina and Nicolle Rodriguez
Virus Mobil Cards Write the definition of the following terms on 3 mobil cards: Capsid Bacteriophage Vaccine Explain how viruses reproduce on the card.
Bacteria in Nature.
Chapter 20 Section 1 Bacteria
Monera Part 2.
(more than you wanted to know  )
Microscopes Defending Against Infection Bacterial Classification
Bacteria.
Bacteria.
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly!
Bacteria.
Prokaryotes.
Bacteria.
Bacterial Classification
Microbial Biotechnology
Or “study of itty-bitty creepy things”
I. Prokaryotes Bacilli Cocci Spirilla.
Presentation transcript:

Jeopardy ClassificationMicroscopes Bacterial growth and reproduction Bacteria in our world Labs Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy

$100 Question from H1 Also known as “True Bacteria”

$100 Answer from H1 What is Eubacteria?

$200 Question from H1 Photosynthetic, Also known as Blue-green bacteria

$200 Answer from H1 What is Cyanobacteria?

$300 Question from H1 Live in harsh environments (extremely hot, salty), oxygen free environments, produce methane gas,

$300 Answer from H1 What is Archeabacteria?

$400 Question from H1 Photosynthetic, produce chlorophyll a and b, similar to chloroplasts of green plants

$400 Answer from H1 What is Prochlorobacteria?

$500 Question from H1 Are three ways you can use to identify Monerans.

$500 Answer from H1 What are cell shape, cell wall and Bacterial movement?

$100 Question from H2 The Magnification of the ocular lens alone.

$100 Answer from H2 What is 10x?

$200 Question from H2 The total magnification when using the oil immersion lens.

$200 Answer from H2 What is 1000x?

$300 Question from H2 The formula to calculate the magnification of a biological drawing.

$300 Answer from H2 What is Magnification= drawing size actual size

$400 Question from H2 What are the important steps to follow before you try and focus the microscope using the oil immersion lens?

$400 Answer from H2 Clean Microscope thoroughly, Fix and stain specimen, Focus at the lower magnifications

$500 Question from H2 What is the purpose of using the oil immersion lens? Why is the oil important?

$500 Answer from H2 The purpose of using the oil immersion lens is to increase the resolution of the microscope. The oil is important because it focuses the light on the specimen. Without the oil light is refracted off of the cover slip or surrounding air therefore losing information.

$100 Question from H3 Process that involves replication of DNA and division of bacterial cell in half producing two identical daughter cells.

$100 Answer from H3 What is Binary Fission?

$200 Question from H3 Process of Bacterial reproduction that involves sharing of genetic information on a long protein bridge.

$200 Answer from H3 What is conjugation?

$300 Question from H3 When unfavourable conditions arise a bacterium can produce a which can later (in favourable conditions) begin to grow.

$300 Answer from H3 What is an endospore?

$400 Question from H3 Is a method of how monerans obtain energy where they obtain energy from inorganic molecules.

$400 Answer from H3 What are Chemotrophic Autotrophs?

$500 Question from H3 Bacteria that can only survive in oxygen free environments.

$500 Answer from H3 What are obligate anaerobes?

$100 Question from H4 Three Bacterial Infections

$100 Answer from H4 What are Leprosy, Tetanus and Flesh eating disease?

$200 Question from H4 Three examples of products that are dependant on monerans.

$200 Answer from H4 What is in the production of yogurt, cheese, sour cream?

$300 Question from H4 A close relationship between organisms where both parties benefit.

$300 Answer from H4 What is Symbiosis?

$400 Question from H4 Our intestines are inhabited with large numbers of this bacteria.

$400 Answer from H4 What is E. Coli?

$500 Question from H4 What is a major role bacteria have in ecosystems?

$500 Answer from H4 Decomposition, Nutrient Flow, Nitrogen fixation.

$100 Question from H5 This method can be used to identify bacteria when the cell shape, motility and size are all exactly the same.

$100 Answer from H5 What is gram staining?

$200 Question from H5 The order of dyes used in the procedure for gram staining.

$200 Answer from H5 What is Crystal violet, Iodine, and Safrin Red?

$300 Question from H5 A real life situation where gram staining can be used.

$300 Answer from H5 If a person has an unknown bacterial infection the gram staining can be used to help identify the bacteria.

$400 Question from H5 Three procedures involved in sterile technique.

$400 Answer from H5 What is cleaning counters before and after, washing hands before and after, flaming loop before and after, washing slides before use.

$500 Question from H5 The purpose of having a control section of the agar plates.

$500 Answer from H5 The purpose of the control section is to account for any errors due to contamination.

Final Jeopardy A drug that can be used to kill bacteria (NEVER VIRUSES)

Final Jeopardy Answer What are Antibiotics?