Chapter 26 Flashcards

1
Q

One of the three monophyletic domains of life, consisting of single-celled organisms with a single circular chromosome but no nucleus that divide by binary fission and differ from archaeons in many aspects of their cell and molecular biology.

A

Bacteria

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2
Q

One of the three domains of life, consisting of single-celled organisms with a single circular chromosome and no true nucleus that divide by binary fission and differ from bacteria in many aspects of their cell and molecular biology.

A

Archaea

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3
Q

A complex polymer of sugars and amino acids that makes up the cell wall.

A

peptidoglycan

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4
Q

The transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not parent and offspring.

A

horizontal gene transfer

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5
Q

The direct cell-to-cell transfer of DNA, usually in the form of a plasmid.

A

Conjugation

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6
Q

The conversion of cells from one state to another, as from nonvirulent to virulent, when DNA released to the environment by cell breakdown is taken up by recipient cells. In recombinant DNA technology, the introduction of recombinant DNA into a recipient cell.

A

Transformation

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7
Q

Horizontal gene transfer by means of viruses.

A

Transduction

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8
Q

Producing oxygen.

A

Oxygenic

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9
Q

Utilizing oxygen.

A

Aerobic

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10
Q

Not producing oxygen; anoxygenic photosynthetic bacteria do not gain electrons from water and so do not generate oxygen gas.

A

Anoxygenic

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11
Q

A light-harvesting pigment closely related to the chlorophyll found in plants, algae, and cyanobacteria.

A

bacteriochlorophyll

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12
Q

A process of breaking down pyruvate through a wide variety of metabolic pathways that extract energy from fuel molecules such as glucose; the partial oxidation of complex carbon molecules to molecules that are less oxidized than carbon dioxide.

A

Fermentation

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13
Q

An organism that uses the energy from sunlight to make ATP and relies on organic molecules obtained from the environment as the source of carbon for growth and other vital functions.

A

photoheterotroph

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14
Q

A microorganism that obtains energy from chemical compounds, not from sunlight.

A

chemoautotroph

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15
Q

An organism that takes up inorganic carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and other compounds from the environment and converts them into organic compounds that will provide food for other organisms in the local environment.

A

primary producer

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16
Q

The process by which organisms take up nutrients from the environment.

A

assimilation

17
Q

The process in which nitrogen gas (N2) is converted into ammonia (NH3), a form biologically useful to primary producers.

A

nitrogen fixation

18
Q

The process by which chemoautotrophic bacteria oxidize ammonia (NH3) to nitrite (NO2−) and then nitrate (NO3−).

A

Nitrification

19
Q

The process in which some bacteria use nitrate as an electron acceptor in respiration.

A

Dentrification

20
Q

Anaerobic ammonia oxidation; energy metabolism in which ammonium ion is oxidized by nitrite, yielding nitrogen gas as a by-product.

A

Anammox

21
Q

The episodic loss of diversity as a successful variant outcompetes others.

A

periodic selection

22
Q

The most diverse bacterial group, defined largely by similarities in rRNA gene sequences; it includes many of the organisms that populate the expanded carbon cycle and other biogeochemical cycles.

A

proteobacteria

23
Q

Bacteria that retain, in their thick peptidoglycan walls, the diagnostic dye developed by Hans Christian Gram. (Bacteria with thin walls, which do not retain the dye, are said to be gram negative.)

A

gram-positive bacteria

24
Q

A monophyletic group of bacteria capable of oxygenic photosynthesis.

A

cyanobacteria

25
Q

One of the three major divisions of Archaea; includes acid-loving microorganisms.

A

Crenarchaeota

26
Q

One of the three major divisions of Archaea; includes acid-loving, heat-loving, methane-producing, and salt-loving microorganisms.

A

Euryarchaeota

27
Q

One of the three major divisions of Archaea; thaumarchaeota are chemotrophs, deriving energy from the oxidation of ammonia.

A

Thaumarchaeota

28
Q

An organism that requires an environment with high temperature.

A

hyperthermophile

29
Q

Euryarchaeotes that generate natural gas (methane, CH4).

A

methanogens

30
Q

A layered structure that records sediment accumulation by microbial communities.

A

stromatolite

31
Q

The process in which species evolve together, each responding to selective pressures from the other.

A

coevolution