Bacteria: Archaebacteria Eubacteria
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Transcript Bacteria: Archaebacteria Eubacteria
ARCHAEBACTERIA
EUBACTERIA
ARCHAEBACTERIA
Major Characteristics
Generally only live in very harsh environments, such
as those w/o O2—also known as extremophiles
because they can survive pressures over 200 atm
Microscopic: diameters between 0.0002-0.0004
inches
Cell Type: prokaryotes (DNA not enclosed in nuclei)
Cell Structure: similar to bacteria but different
chemical composition in cell wall & cell
membrane, few internal organelles
Body Plan: unicellular
ARCHAEBACTERIA
Metabolism: autotroph or heterotroph
Reproduction: asexual (binary fission)
4 major Phyla:
Crenarchaeotes: live in hottest, most acidic
environments
Kararchaeotes: newly discovered in Yellowstone,
may be least-evolved lineages of modern life
Nanoarchaeotes: one species exists, relatively
unknown, smallest genome of any organism
Euryarchaeotes: very diverse group
ARCHAEBACTERIA
Some live in environments
that are so harsh
pressures reach 1 ton/cm2
EUBACTERIA
Major Characteristics
Differ from archaebacteria by chemical composition
Are vital in recycling nutrients
Grow in all environments, from guts of animals to
soil and radioactive waste
Cell Type: prokaryotes
Cell Structure: variety of cell shapes: sperical,
rodlike, spiral; few if any internal organelles,
some have external flagella
Body Plan: unicellular
EUBACTERIA
Metabolism: autotroph or heterotroph
Reproduction: asexual (binary fission)
4 major Phyla:
Proteobacteria: includes E. coli and nitrogen-fixing
bacteria in soil
Spirochaetes: distinctive spiral shape; some cause syphilis
and Lyme disease
Actinobacteria: many soil bacteria belong here; some
produce antiobiotics (streptomycin), some produce harmful
illnesses: anthrax, tetanus, botulism; one produces a
powerful insecticide used for genetic engineering in plants
Cyanobacteria: photosynthetic; among oldest organisms on
Earth; are key sources of C and N in the environment