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Diversity. Domain Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species. Archaea. - Single celled prokaryotes that reproduce asexually 4 major phyla Extremophyles Have cell walls with no peptidoglycan Diverse metabolic pathways. Bacteria cell Wall. Archaea. Methanogens
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Diversity • Domain • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species
Archaea • - Single celled prokaryotes that reproduce asexually • 4 major phyla • Extremophyles • Have cell walls with no peptidoglycan • Diverse metabolic pathways
Archaea • Methanogens • Live in the guts of cows, and termites to help digest cellulose in plant cell walls • C02->Ch4 (farts) • Methanobrevibactersmithii
Archaea 1/10th Of human Gut microbes!! 1/10
http://www.colorado.edu/eeb/EEBprojects/schmidtlab/studentres/EBIO3400/Lecture11.pdf (lots more differences!!!)
Eubacteria • Prokaryotic, single celled • Heterotrophic or autotrophic • Reproduce asexually with binary fission
Eubacteria • 1 circular chromosome and a secondary plasmid
Eubacteria • Classified based on shape, spores, metabolism(glycolysis for anaerobes , cellular respiration for aerobes), and ability to “gram stain”
Eubacteria • Cyanobacteria (pond Scum) • Oscillatoriaprinceps • D-Eubacteria • K-Eubacteria • P-Cyanobacteria • C- Cyanophyceae • O- Oscillatoriales • F- Oscillatoria • G- Oscillatoria • S- O. princeps
Protista • Protista are simple, usually unicellular eukaryotic organisms. • Not animals, not plants, not fungi = Protist!! • Usually aquatic • Aerobic • Very important component of plankton • Reproduce sexually or asexually • Divisions (phyla) classified based on Animal like, Plant like or Fungus like
Protista • Animal like-> “Protozoa” • Rhizopoda • Apicomplexia • Zoomastigophora • Ciliophora
Protista • Division Rhizopoda • Move with a pseudopod (false foot) • Eat by engulphing food (phagacytosis)
Protista • Division Zoomastigophora • “Zooflagelates”
Protista • Division Ciliophora • example- Paramecium • Use cilia to move around
Protista Plantlike Protista-> “Algae” • contain chlorophyll and carry out photosynthesis • Very important aquatic primary producers • Dinoflagellata • Euglenophyta • Bacillariophyta • Chlorophyta • Phaeophyta • Rhodophyta
Protista • Bacillariophyta • The “diatoms”
Protista • Dinoflagellata • “Dinoflagelates” • Sometimes show biolluminescence • Red Tide
Protista • Euglenophyta • Unicellular flagellates • Primarily freshwater, but important in some marine environments • Many are heterotrophic (saprotrophic or phagocytic)
Protista • Chlorophyta • Green algae
Protista • Phenophyta • Brown Algae • Alt of Generations
Protista • Rhodophyta • Red Algae • Nori- Iodine source
Protista • Fungus like • Myxomycota- slime molds • Many nuclei for each giant cell full of cytoplasm • Use pseudopodia • The organisms in this group have a complex life cycle during the course of which they go through unicellular, multicellular, funguslike (form spores) and protozoanlike (amoeboid) stages.
Protista • Oomycota • Water molds • Some species (e.g., Saprolegnia, Achyla) are parasites of fishes and can be a serious problem in fish hatcheries. • Downy mildews damage grapes and other crops. • Phytophthorainfestans, the cause of the "late blight" of potatoes. In 1845 and again in 1846, it was responsible for the almost total destruction of the potato crop in Ireland. This led to the great Irish famine of 1845–1860. During this period, approximately 1 million people starved to death and many more emigrated to the New World. By the end of the period, death and emigration had reduced the population of Ireland from 9 million to 4 million. • Phytophthoraramorum, which is currently killing several species of oaks in California. • Cell wall of cellulose, like plants
Fungi • Eukaryotic, nonvascular, Heterotrophic, reproduce sexually and asexually with spores • Alternation of generations • N-2N • Most are multicellular • Cell walls made of Chitin • Decomposers, parasites, or mutualists (Mycorrhizea on plant roots for N)
Fungi • Exoenzymes- digest food externally, then ingest it • Store food energy as glycogen, like animals • Vegetative-> Hyphae-Mycellium • Fruiting body-> Produces spores (the cap)
Fungi Phyla (based on spore arrangement) Chytridiomycota Zygomycota Asomycota Basiomycota
FUNGI Chytridiomycota (primitive Fungi) Sexual and asexual reproduction Spores are motile with a flagella
FUNGI Zygomycota (the molds) Sexual reproduction with spores with very thick walls
FUNGI Ascomycota- Sac Fungi -75 % of all fungi species -Sexual reproduction -Spores can be found in an ascussac -Yeasts, Penicillium, truffels
FUNGI Basidiomycota- “da club fungi” -sexual spores are born externally on a club shaped basidium -Gills on fruiting body to increase surface area
Pizza Mushroom D- Eukarya K- Fungi P- Basiomycota C- Hymenomycetes O- Agricales F- Agricaceae G- Agaricus S- A. Bispores