Archaebacteria
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Transcript Archaebacteria
1.
ARCHAEBACTERIA
Live in harsh conditions
2.
EUBACTERIA
More normal and
common bacteria
Archaebacteria are prokaryotes.
Prokaryotes are: single celled without a nucleus
organisms and are the smallest and simplest
forms of life.
Archaebacteria are found in anaerobic and
extreme conditions (high salt, high
temperature, and/or very acidic.)
These are believed to be the conditions on the early
Earth. Earth’s early atmosphere did not contain
oxygen, therefore the earliest organisms were
anaerobic.
Anaerobic can live in the absence of oxygen
Lives in extremely salty places.
Picture on the right shows a salty pond in the
Arabian desert that has turned red due to the
presence of Halobacterium salinarum
Thermus thermophilus
is an archaean which
can withstand very
high temperatures.
Often lives in hot
springs like those
found at Yellowstone.
Eubacteria are also prokaryotes.
Eubacteria is made up of more traditional
bacteria and is a larger kingdom than
archaebacteria.
They are found in almost all habitats.
Eubacteria are unicellular and have no
membrane-bound organelles.
ie: no nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts, ER, or
Golgi apparatus.
Archaebacteria
and
Eubacteria
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Cocci spherical
Bacilli rod shaped
Spirilla spiral shaped
Cilia and Flagella allow a bacterium to move.
Cilia are hair-like and work like oars in a boat.
Repetitive beating allows the cell to move.
If a bacteria cannot move cilia can also move water
across the cell’s surface.
Flagella are whip-like and wave back and forth
to move the cell.
Most bacteria are heterotrophs.
Heterotrophs feed on other organisms.
These include parasites which live and feed off of a
living host
and decomposers that feed on dead and decaying
organisms
Some bacteria are autotrophs.
Autotrophs use chemicals or photosynthesis as
a form of energy.
Bacteria reproduce either asexually or sexually.
Asexual Reproduction
Prokaryotes reproduce
by splitting in two in a
process called binary
fission.
The DNA is copied and
the cell divides into two
identical cells.
Sexual Reproduction
Combines genes from
two different
individuals.
Prokaryotes that do not
technically reproduce
sexually can still mix
genes with one another.
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Cells that do not reproduce sexually can still
mix genes through three processes:
Conjugation- Two cells briefly join and one
cell donates DNA to the other.
Transformation – Bacteria pick up pieces of
DNA from the environment.
Transduction- viruses can transfer pieces of
DNA from one cell to another
These processes add genetic diversity to
bacteria.
Mutation is also a large source of genetic
diversity in bacteria.
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Bacteria cause disease in two ways:
By damaging tissues and breaking down cells
for food
By releasing toxins that interfere with the
normal bodily functions of the host.
1.
To treat diseases caused by bacteria we use:
Vaccines small doses of live bacteria, killed
bacteria, or parts of bacterial cells which cause
an immune response.
2.
Vaccines allow your body to learn how to kill a
bacteria without getting sick.
Antibiotics drugs that interfere with the
growth of bacteria