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Bacteria & viruses Questions 1-10 By juan velasquez & mubashir aziz

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Bacteria & viruses. Questions 1-10 By juan velasquez & mubashir aziz. Q :what are the characteristics of eubacteria and archeabarcteria ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bacteria & viruses

Bacteria & virusesQuestions 1-10

By juan velasquez& mubashir aziz

Page 2: Bacteria & viruses

Q :what are the characteristics of eubacteria and archeabarcteria ?• A: Eubacteria

- Cell wall of peptidoglycan- can live nearly anywhere- Unicellular-Prokaryotic- Reproduce AsexuallyArchaebacteria- Cell wall without peptidoglycan- Live in environments without oxygen- Prokaryotic- Unicellular-Reproduce Asexually

Page 3: Bacteria & viruses

Q: what are the three ways bacteria are important?• A: in a way some are

producers ,others are decomposers and the rest is used in human use

Page 4: Bacteria & viruses

Q:The 7 diseases caused by bacteria• A: Lyme diseases.• B: Bacteria Meningitis.• C: Tooth Decay.• D: Diphtheria • E: Strep throat • F: Tetanus • G: Tuberculious

Page 5: Bacteria & viruses

Q: what types of environments do bacteria favor?• A: moist and dark area

Page 6: Bacteria & viruses

Q:Describe the structure of a virus • A:A virus is a nucleic acid surrounded by a protein coat,

often a capsid, although their are variables. A virus can invade a cell by injection of the nucleic acid or by invigilation of the cell membrane forming a vacuole. It dismantles the DNA of the cell and reorganizes it into viral particles that may then leave the cell and invade other disease free cells. It may also remain dormant within the cell for some time.

Page 7: Bacteria & viruses

Q:Of What Importance Is A Capsid.• A: The capsid protein contains

proteins that allow the virus to enter the host cell. Without the host cell the virus can not grow/reproduce.

Page 8: Bacteria & viruses

List At Least 5 Viral Diseases. How Can You Tell If Its A Virus Or Bacteria Just By Looking At The Name.

• 1. H.I.V. 2. Hepatitis A, Hepa.B, Hepa.C etc.3. Influenza4. Chicken pox5. Small poxand many more.

• Bacteria have bionomical names

Page 9: Bacteria & viruses

How Do Viruses Cause Disease.?• a. by releasing toxins

b. by destroying cells or affecting cellular processesc. by changing normal proteins into misfolded proteinsd. by inserting prophages into human DNA

Page 10: Bacteria & viruses

What Do A Virus And A Living Cell Have In Common.• DNA & RNA C;

Page 11: Bacteria & viruses

Create A Venn Diagram Comparing & Contracting Viruses & BacteriaViruseCant be killed

Bothneed a suitable environment 

Bacteria killed by antibiotics

considerably smaller

both pathogenic

instead of being a living cell able to undergo a life cycle on their own (bacteria can do this

cause colds Dna and rna live independently

Page 12: Bacteria & viruses

Plants Diamond Guadalupe

JacobNick

Page 13: Bacteria & viruses

The first land plant evolved from what organism

•Bryophytes

Page 14: Bacteria & viruses

What is the function of the stomata•transportation

Page 15: Bacteria & viruses

The female sex gamete in plants is the….•ovule

Page 16: Bacteria & viruses

The male sex gamete in plants is the….•anther

Page 17: Bacteria & viruses

What is the function of the roots• absorbs water and nutrients from

the soil

• anchors plants in the ground

• prevents erosion

Page 18: Bacteria & viruses

Identify the various tropisms of plants responses• Gravitropism: a plants response to

gravity• Phototropism: a plants response to

light• Hydrotropism: a plants response to

water• Thigmotropism: a plants response to

touch

Page 19: Bacteria & viruses

Monocots :roots, stems,seeds,leaves• Roots: Fibrous • Stems :scattered veins• Seeds:monocots• Leaves: parallel veins

Page 20: Bacteria & viruses

Dicots:roots,stems,seeds,leaves• Roots :taproot• Stems: arranged in a circle• Seeds:dicots• Leaves: netted veins

Page 21: Bacteria & viruses

The two groups of angiosperms are differentiated by their number of….•petals

Page 22: Bacteria & viruses

The bright colors found on plants are an adaptation that aids in what type of pollination

• Attract insect to help pollination

Page 23: Bacteria & viruses

Skeletal and muscular system

Genesis Mineros Katia cruz

Godson belcherAstrid

Page 24: Bacteria & viruses

Functions of the skeleton• Provides structure• Works with muscular to provide

movement

Page 25: Bacteria & viruses

Where is red marrow found? What is the function• It is found in the bones and it

produces blood cells

Page 26: Bacteria & viruses

Functions of integumentary • Protects organs

Page 27: Bacteria & viruses
Page 28: Bacteria & viruses

#9• Hair • Skin• Nails

Page 29: Bacteria & viruses

#10• cir·cu·late  • /ˈsərkyəˌlāt/• Verb• Move or cause to move continuously

or freely through a closed system or area: "antibodies circulate in the bloodstream".

• Move around a social function in order to talk to many different people.

Page 30: Bacteria & viruses
Page 31: Bacteria & viruses

Chapter 3 EcologyKiaya & Adrian

Page 32: Bacteria & viruses

What is the 10% rule?• States that ONLY 10% of energy is

transferred to the next trophic level.

Page 33: Bacteria & viruses

What happens to the other 90%• The other 90% of energy is lost

in body processes and as HEAT to the environment.

= Thermal Energy

Page 34: Bacteria & viruses

What is an autotroph?• An organism that makes its own

food

Page 35: Bacteria & viruses

What is an heterotroph?• An organism that has to get its

own food

Page 36: Bacteria & viruses

3 type of symbiotic relationship• Mutualism : both benefits

• Commensalisms : one benefits and other neutral

• Parasitism : one benefits , other suffer/ harmed

Page 37: Bacteria & viruses

3 trophic levels • Producer

• Consumers

• Decomposers

Page 38: Bacteria & viruses

Food webEagle

snakefox

Mice