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MonthDayLecture Oct2Eubacteria and archebacteria 4Protists 6No class-Homecoming! 9Plants 11Fungi 13The coral reef 16Animals I 18Animals II
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Outline 1.Diversity of life 2.The three domains of life 3.Bacteria and Archaea 4.Biodiversity
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Evolutionary Tree extreme thermophiles halophiles methanogens cyanobacteria ARCHAEBACTERIA PROTISTANS FUNGI PLANTS ANIMALS club fungi sac fungi zygospore- forming fungi echino- derms chordates annelids mollusks flatworms sponges cnidarians flowering plants conifers horsetails lycophytes ferns bryophytes sporozoans green algae amoeboid protozoans slime molds ciliates red algae brown algae chrysophytes cycads ginkgos rotifers arthropods round- worms chytrids oomycotes euglenoids dinoflagellates Gram-positive bacteria spirochetes chlamydias proteobacteria ? crown of eukaryotes (rapid divergences) molecular origin of life EUBACTERIA parabasalids diplomonads (e.g., Giardia) (alveolates) (stramenopiles) chlorophytes kinetoplastids extreme (e.g., Trichomonas) Figure 19.21 Page 321
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Five Kingdoms BacteriaProtistsPlantsFungiAnimals Earliest organisms
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Three domains Bacteria Earliest organisms ArchaeaEukarya
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three domains
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Prokaryotes Includes Bacteria and Archaea
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What roles do prokaryotes play in our lives? or Why we care about prokaryotes…
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Characteristics of prokaryotes 1.Form
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Coccus Bacillus Filaments
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Characteristics of prokaryotes 1.Form 2.Cell structure
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A prokaryote cell...
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Characteristics of prokaryotes 1.Form 2.Cell structure 3.Locomotion
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Whip-like flagella: swimming motion
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Internal fibrils: rolling motion
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Adjustable gas vesicles: floating or sinking motion
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Characteristics of prokaryotes 1.Form 2.Cell structure 3.Locomotion 4.Peptidoglycan cell walls (Bacteria) Protein cell walls (Archaea)
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A prokaryote cell...
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Characteristics of prokaryotes 1.Form 2.Cell structure 3.Locomotion 4.Peptidoglycan cell walls (Bacteria) Protein cell walls (Archaea) 5. Asexual reproduction
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Prokaryotes reproduce asexually through fission, but there are some mechanisms for genetic recombination –Transformation –Conjugation –Transduction
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Characteristics of prokaryotes 1.Form 2.Cell structure 3.Locomotion 4.Peptidoglycan cell walls (Bacteria) Protein cell walls (Archaea) 5. Asexual reproduction
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Prokaryotes have many “lifestyles”... Anaerobic versus aerobic
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Prokaryotes have many “lifestyles”... Anaerobic versus aerobic respiration Obligate anaerobes Facultative anaerobes Obligate aerobes
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Nutritional modeEnergyCarbon PhotoautotrophLightCO 2 ChemoautotrophChemicalsCO 2 PhotoheterotrophLightOrganic material ChemoheterotrophOrganic material Organic material
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Photoautotrophs These bacteria use light for energy and CO 2 for carbon.
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These bacteria use H 2 SO 4 as an energy source and CO 2 as a carbon source Chemoautotrophs
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Photoautotrophs These bacteria use light for energy and CO 2 for carbon.
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Chemoheterotrophs These organisms use organic materials for energy and for carbon.
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Prokaryotes drive biogeochemical cycles... Nitrogen Carbon Sulfur Other elements: phosphorous, hydrogen, mercury, iron...
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Carbon cycle Carbon Cycle
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Bacteria can be pathogens... (but not Archaea!) Plant pathogens Animal pathogens
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Crown gall—bacterial infection of geranium plant stem
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“Strep” “Staph” Anthrax E. coli Salmonella Botulism Tuberculosis Legionnaire’s Leprosy Syphilis and many more...
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Bacterial toxins Endotoxins –Released from cell wall when bacteria burst –Rarely fatal –E. coli, samonella poisoning Exotoxins –Released by growing bacteria –Often fatal –Tetanus, botulism, cholera, black plague
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