Chapter 5 Flashcards

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1
Q

What are some traits of protists?

A
  • Protists are a diverse, polyphyletic group of eukaryotic organisms.
  • Protists may be unicellular or multicellular.
  • They vary in how they get their nutrition, morphology, method of locomotion, and mode of reproduction.
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2
Q

What are protists called during the feeding and growth part of their life?

A

Trophozoites.

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3
Q

What stage do protists enter during harsh environmental conditions?

A

Encapsulated cyst stage.

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4
Q

What is encystment?

A

The process by which a trophozoite becomes a cyst (cell with a protective wall).

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5
Q

What is excystment?

A

Cyst to trophozoite.

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6
Q

How does asexual reproduction occur in protozoans?

A

Binary fission, budding, or schizogony.

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7
Q

What is schizogony?

A

The nucleus of a cell divides multiple times before the cell divides into many smaller cells.

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8
Q

What are the important structures of protists?

A

Contractile vacuoles, cilia, flagella, pellicles, and pseudopodia.

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9
Q

Protozoans are heterotrophic, what does heterotrophic mean?

A

An organism that cannot produce its own food and instead relies on other sources of organic carbon, mainly plant or animal matter, for nutrition.

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10
Q

What is the difference between holozoic and saprozoic?

A

Holozoic: ingest whole food
Saprozoic: ingest small, soluble food molecules.

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11
Q

What do protists use for locomotion?

A

whip-like flagella, hair-like cilia, or cytoplasmic extensions (pseudopodia “false feet” to attach the cell to a surface)

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12
Q

What are the three supergroups?

A

Amoebozoa, chromaleolata, and excavata.

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13
Q

What does helminth mean?

A

Worm

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14
Q

How are helminth parasites identified?

A

By looking for microscopic eggs and larvae.

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15
Q

What are the two major groups of helminth parasites?

A

Roundworms (Nematoda) and flatworms (Platyhelminthes).

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16
Q

What is monecious?

A

Both male and female reproductive organs in a single individual.

17
Q

What is dioecious?

A

Having either male or female reproductive organs.

18
Q

How are nematodes transmitted?

A

Common intestinal parasites often transmitted through undercooked foods, although they are also found in other environments.

19
Q

How are platyhelminths transmitted?

A

Includes Tapeworms/Cestodes and flukes, which are often transmitted through undercooked meat. Most of them are monoecious.

20
Q

How are nematoda (roundworms) identified?

A

In feces or around the anus of infected individuals.

21
Q

What is an example of a roundworm?

A

Ascaris lumbricoides is the largest nematode intestinal parasite found in humans; females may reach lengths greater than 1 meter. It may cause symptoms ranging from relatively mild to severe.

22
Q

What is the most common Nematoda infection?

A

Pinworm (Enterobius vermicularis) that cause sleeplessness and itching around the anus.

23
Q

How many classes of flatworms (platyhelminths) are there?

A

4

24
Q

What are some characteristics of fungi?

A
  • The fungi include diverse saprotrophic eukaryotic organisms with chitin cell walls.
  • Can be unicellular or multicellular
  • Some (like yeast) and fungal spores are microscopic, whereas some are large.
  • Some pathogenic species that can cause mycoses.
25
Q

What are multicellular molds made up of?

A

Filaments called hyphae.

26
Q

What are hyphae?

A

Hyphae can form a tangled network called a mycelium and form the thallus (body) of fleshy fungi.

27
Q

What is septate hyphae?

A

Hyphae that have walls between the cells.

28
Q

What is nonseptate or coenocytic hyphae?

A

Hyphae that lack walls and cell membranes between the cells.

29
Q

How do unicellular yeasts reproduced?

A

Budding off a smaller daughter cell.

30
Q

What are the four fungal groups?

A

Zygomycota, Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, and Microsporidia.

31
Q

Which three groups produce deadly toxins?

A

Zygomycota, Ascomycota, and Basidiomycota

32
Q

What is targeted in antifungal medication?

A

Important differences in fungal cells, such as ergosterols in fungal membranes.
- Similarities in human and fungal cells can cause difficulties in finding targets and toxic effects.

33
Q

What are algae important for?

A

Producing agar, which is used as a solidifying agent in microbiological media, and carrageenan.

34
Q

Overall algae has little pathogenicity, what is the exception to this?

A

May be associated with toxic algal blooms that contaminate seafood with toxins that cause paralysis.

35
Q

What are lichens?

A

A symbiotic between a fungus and an algae.

36
Q

What kind of symbiotic are lichens?

A

Controlled parasitism where the fungus benefits and the algae is harmed.

37
Q

What are some traits of lichens?

A
  • slow growing and can live for centuries in a variety of habits.
  • environmentally important, helping to create soil, providing food, and acting as indicators of air pollution.