Top Banner
Bacteria Friend or Foe ? pg.224-232
28

Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Apr 27, 2019

Download

Documents

phamnhu
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 2: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Eubacteria and Archaebacteria

• No nucleus

• Can move via flagella

• Reproduce with binary fission

• Use cell respiration for energy

• Producers

• Consumers

• Parasites

• Decomposers

Page 3: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Binary Fission refresher

Page 4: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Where do bacteria live?

• Need to be warm and moist to reproduce

• Endospores- grow a thick protective membrane,

lets them survive harsh environments

• Boiling

• Freezing

• Extremely dry

Page 5: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Better conditions= endospores break open

Page 6: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Shape of Bacteria

Bacilli- rod shaped, large surface area

Cocci- spherical, resist drying out

Spirilla- spiral shaped, least common,

two flagella

Page 7: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Which is which?

Page 8: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites
Page 9: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Flagellum

• Means “whip” in Latin

• Spins like a corkscrew

• Propels bacterium

through liquid

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4hexn-DtSt4

Page 10: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Cyanobacteria Live in water environments

Page 11: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Kingdom Archaebacteria

• Thrive in harsh climates (where no other living thing can survive)

• Hot springs

• Under 430m of ice in Antarctica

• 8km below Earth’s surface

• Not all have cell walls

Page 12: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

3 types of Archaebacteria

Methane makers

• Excrete methane gas

• Live in swamps

Heat lovers

• Live near ocean rift vents

• 360° Celsius

Salt lovers

• High concentration of salt

• Dead Sea

Page 13: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites
Page 14: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

NITROGEN-FIXING BACTERIA

Take nitrogen from air

Convert it into a form plants can use

Peas, beans, alfalfa, clover

Page 15: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

RECYCLING AND CLEANING UP

Break down dead organic matter

BioremediationChange pollution into harmless chemicals

Industrial, agricultural, municipal wastes

Oil spills

Page 16: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

HELPFUL HEALERS

Genetically alter bacteria for:

Antibiotics- medicines to kill bacteria/microorganisms

Insulin- helps people with diabetes use sugars

Page 17: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites
Page 18: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

HARMFUL BACTERIA • Cause diseases

• Are treated with antibiotics

• Prevented by vaccines

In people and plants!

Page 19: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

VirusesMicroscopic particles that invade a cell and usually destroy it

Pg. 233-235

Page 20: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Viruses

• Super tiny

• 5 billion fit in one drop of blood

• They don’t:

• Eat

• Grow

• Breathe

• “live” on their own

• They DO reproduce via a host

Page 21: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Cause Many Illnesses

• Can’t be treated with antibiotics

• Common cold

• Flu

• AIDS

Page 22: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites
Page 23: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Classifying Viruses

• Grouped by:

• Type of disease they cause

• Their life cycle

• Type of genetic material they contain

• All viruses are basically some form of

genetic material in a protein coat

Page 24: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites
Page 25: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Basic Shapes

of Viruses

• Crystals- polio

• Cylinders- attack plants

• Spheres- influenza, HIV

• Spacecraft- only attack bacteria

Page 26: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Which is

Which?

• Crystals

• Cylinders

• Spheres

• Spacecraft

Page 27: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Lytic Cycle

Page 28: Bacteria · Eubacteria and Archaebacteria •No nucleus •Can move via flagella •Reproduce with binary fission •Use cell respiration for energy •Producers •Consumers •Parasites

Lysogenic Cycle

• Viral genes aren’t active

• Become active when

• Change in environment

• Stress to organism