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The M icrobial W orld. Chapter 5. Prokaryotic Metabolism. Autotrophs Heterotrophs. Autotrophs. Some bacteria and archaea make their own organic compounds Primary producers If they do photosynthesis it takes place in on folded membranes in the bacteria cell
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The Microbial World Chapter 5
Prokaryotic Metabolism • Autotrophs • Heterotrophs
Autotrophs • Some bacteria and archaea make their own organic compounds • Primary producers • If they do photosynthesis it takes place in on folded membranes in the bacteria cell • Photosynthetic bacteria account for much of the primary production of open ocean • Other bacterial autotrophs- chemosynthetic bacteria
Heterotrophs • Most marine bacteria are heterotrophs • Heterotrophs obtain energy from organic matter by respiration • Respiration in aerobic bacteria and archaea use oxygen • In Anoxic sediments bacteria use anaerobic respiration
Nitrogen Fixation • Bottom dwelling and planktoniccyanobacteria carry out nitrogen fixation • Nitrogen fixation N2 NH4 (covert nitrogen to ammonium) • Ammonium is then transferred into NO3- (nitrate) and other N compounds • These N sources can be used by primary producers
Unicellular Algae • Algae – very diverse group (mostly aquatic, mostly photosynthetic) • Eukaryotic- cells have a nucleus, organelles • Photosynthesis- Chloroplast • Lack true leaves, stems, roots • Have plant and animal characteristics- Protista
Diatoms • Unicellular but they can be colonial or form groups or chains • In a shell made of silica frustule (2 halves) • The perforations allow dissolved gases and nutrients to enter and exit • Coloration- carotenoid pigments (few are colorless) • Photosynthetic factories • Some are toxic
Diatom Reproduction • Asexual reproduction • Auxospores- resistant stages that eventually give rise to larger cells that display the frustule characteristic of the species **get smaller each division** • Favorable conditions- bloom • Diatomaceous ooze- dead diatoms sink and form thick deposits of siliceous material
Dinoflagellates • Large group of planktonic unicellular organisms • 2 flagella, cell wall, plates • Photosynthesize and ingest • Reproduction is almost exclusively by cell division • Bioluminescence • Toxic
Protozoans (animal like protists) • Eukaryotic • Structure is simple • Animal like • Protozoans comprise several groups of unrelated origins • Heterotrophs and some photosynthesize
Foraminiferans • Type of marine protozoan • Have a shell (test) made of CaCO3 • Pseudopodia- extensions of the cytoplasm • Live on the bottom either free or attached • Shells of bottom forams are important contributors to calcarious material • White cliffs of Dover
Radiolarians • Planktonic marine protozoans • Secrete shells of glass and other materials • Typical shells are spherical with radiating spines • Sausage shaped colonies • When they die and sink to the bottom they become silicious ooze • Resistant to dissolving under pressure
Ciliates • Protozoans • Lots of hair like extentions • Locomotion and feeding • Found all over seaweeds and in bottom sediments • Live in gills of clams, urchin intestines,skin of fish
Fungi • Eukaryotic and mostly multicellular • Molds, yeasts are unicellular • They are heterotrophs that lack chloroplasts • 500 species of marine fungi (most are microscopic) • Decompose detritus • Some are parasites • Some form symbiotic relationships with algae • lichens
Microbial world Prokaryotes Eukaryotes • Bacteria • Cyanobacteria (stromatolites) • Archaea • Extremophiles • Diatoms • Dinoflagellates • Protozoans (animal like) • Foraminierans • Radiolarians • Fungi
Presentation • Row 1 –Diatoms • Row 2- Dinoflagellates • Row 3- Foraminiferans -Row 4 Radiolarians • Row 5- Ciliates • Row 6- Fungi • Row 7: Cyanobacteria
Poster Rubric • Image • Definition • At least 5 facts • Importance to marine environment/role in marine environment • ** this will be a graded assignment**