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Bacteria.

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Presentation on theme: "Bacteria."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bacteria

2 Microorganisms Microorganisms (microbe) are very small organisms which are usually only visible through a microscope. Some microbes are unicellular (one cell) while others are multicellular (more than one cell).

3 Microorganisms Multi - Mould Uni - Euglena

4 Bacteria Bacteria are unicellular microorganisms typically a few micrometres in length. They were first observed by Anton van Leeuwenhoek in 1676, using a single-lens microscope. He called them “Animalcules”. Bacteria have a wide range of shapes, ranging from spheres to rods and spirals.

5 How Big are ... ?

6 Bacteria Types Cocci – spherical bacteria. Bacilli – rod shaped.
Streptococcus pyogenes (causes strep throat). Bacilli – rod shaped. Salmonella enterica (causes typhoid fever).

7 Bacteria Shapes Vibrio – bent rods. Spirilla – Spiral shaped.
Vibrio cholerae (causes cholera). Spirilla – Spiral shaped. Treponema pallidum (causes syphillis).

8 Bacteria Shapes

9 Bacteria Structure Copy and Label the following diagram…

10 8 1 6 5 2 3 7 4 Cilia

11 Bacteria Structure Capsule – A slimy outer shell that gives protection. Cell Wall – Provides structure and support. Cell Membrane – Controls movement of materials in and out of the bacteria.

12 Cell Membrane Cell Wall Capsule

13 Bacteria Have No Nucleus!
Bacteria Structure Nuclear Material (DNA) – Controls all cell processes which take place in the cytoplasm. Bacteria Have No Nucleus! Cytoplasm – The semi-fluid interior of the cell where chemical reactions occur.

14 Bacteria Structure Flagella – Tail-like projection used to help the bacteria move around.

15 Reproduction Bacteria reproduce asexually by a process known as Binary Fission. The bacteria grow larger, the DNA replicates, then the cell splits in two. In ideal conditions, bacteria can reproduce as often as every 20 minutes.

16 Binary Fission Each new bacterium is genetically identical.

17 Binary Fission Video

18 Binary Fission Time (min) No. Bacteria 1 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 400 A certain kind of bacteria can reproduce every 20 minutes. Complete the table on the right and plot the bacteria's growth against time on a line graph.

19 Binary Fission The rapid increase in numbers in the steep part of the graph is called exponential growth. Eventually the lack of food and build up of waste products will cause the number of bacteria to level off and even decrease. Time (min) No. Bacteria

20 Reproduction If conditions are inhospitable, some bacteria can produce spores which can survive for years. What conditions are required for growth?

21 How Bacteria Feed Most bacteria are consumers, meaning they feed off other organisms as they can not make their own food. Bacteria fall into two main feeding groups: Parasites Saprophytes

22 How Bacteria Feed Parasite – an organism which lives and feeds off other living organisms. Saprophyte – an organism that feeds off dead material. E.G. compost

23 How Bacteria Feed Bacteria feed by releasing digestive enzymes which pass through the cell membrane and break food down outside the bacteria. The broken down food then enters the bacteria. This process is called extracellular digestion.

24 Extracellular Digestion


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