BIO-182 LAB MIDTERM

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How to put away a microscope

1. Use the coarse adjustment to make sure the stage is as far down as the knob will turn. 2. Take the slide off. 3. Make sure the scanning objective is in place. 4. Make sure the stage is clean (only use lens paper to clean a microscope). 5. Turn off the power.

What are the three mechanisms for evolutionary change?

1. natural selection 2. gene flow 3. genetic drift

What are the five conditions for Hardy Weinberg to be met?

1. no mutations 2. random mating 3. no natural selection 4. extremely large population size 5. no gene flow

What is a methanogen?

A bacteria that reduces carbon dioxide to methane

What is genetic drift?

A change in allele frequencies caused by random events

what is the DNA structure of archaea?

Circular

what is the DNA structure or bacteria?

Circular

What is a psycrophile?

Cold loving bacteria 15 degrees celsius or below

What is the DNA structure of protists?

Compact, linear chromosome

what is an example of bacteria?

E. coli

What is the cell type of protists?

Eukaryotic

what are the parts of a stereoscope?

Eyepieces, Magnification Knob, focus knob, light controls, reflective light, and transmitted light

Do protists have a peptidoglycan cell wall?

NO

Does Archaea have a membrane bound organelle?

NO

Does Archaea have a nuclear DNA?

NO

Does archaea have a peptidoglycan cell wall?

NO

does bacteria have membrane bound organelles?

NO

What is the cell type of Archaea?

Prokaryotic

what is the cell type of bacteria?

Prokaryotic

what is an example of a halophile?

Staphylococcus aureus

what is an example of a thermophile?

Thermus aquaticus

Do protists have membrane bound organelles?

YES

Do protists have nuclear DNA?

YES

Does bacteria have a peptidoglycan cell wall?

YES

what is the outcome of natural selection?

adaptive evolution

what is an example of protists?

algae, protozoa, slime molds

What is the Hardy-Weinberg principle?

allele frequencies in a population should remain constant unless one or more factors cause those frequencies to change

What is a halophile?

an organism that grows best in environments with high salt

What is a thermophile?

an organism who is high heat loving, the optimum growth is at 50 degrees C to 60 degrees C

What are acidophiles?

bacteria that grow in acidic environments

What is a prokaryotic cell?

cell that does not have a nucleus or organelles

What is a eukaryotic cell?

cell that has a nucleus and organelles

How to focus a microscope?

coarse adjustment then fine adjustment

What are bacterial shapes?

coccus, bacillus, spiral

What is excavata characterized by?

cytoskeleton, it has a excavated groove on 1 side

How to find the diameter of an object under a microscope?

divide the field number by magnification number

p represents what in the hardy Weinberg equation?

dominant allele

what was the purpose of the PTC test?

evaluate the genotype frequency of students and compare it to the rest of the united states

what is adaptive evolution?

evolution that results in a better match between organisms and their environment

p^2 represents what in hardy Weinberg?

homozygous dominant

q^2 represents what in hardy Weinberg?

homozygous recessive

what is an example of an extremophile?

many members of archaea

what is gene flow?

movement of alleles between populations

What is an extremophile?

organisms that are adapted to survive in extreme conditions

What is the Hardy-Weinberg equation?

p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1

how to find the area of the field of view?

pie(r)^2

How does gram negative bacteria stain?

pink

How does gram positive bacteria stain?

purple

q represents what in the hardy Weinberg equation?

recessive allele

How do you calculate the total magnification for different objective lenses?

take eyepiece magnification X objective lens power= total magnification EX: 10X4= 40 x EX2: 10X10= 100x EX3: 40X10=400x

why were the beads returned after they were selected?

the beads were returned to the container to demonstrate random mating and mainly because it represents the same number of alleles in the population

In the gram negative bacteria what happens to the the peptidoglycan cell wall?

the crystal violet is easily rinsed away, revealing the red safranin dye

Why were the beads used in the hardy Weinberg part one of the lab?

the different color bead represent the different genotypes in society EX: blue beads=BB homozygous dominant purple beads=Bb heterozygous white beads=homozygous recessive

In the gram positive bacteria what happens to the peptidoglycan cell wall?

the peptidoglycan cell wall traps the crystal violet, which makes the safranin dye

what is the nuclear DNA of bacteria?

there is none

what is an example of archaea?

thermophiles

why were so many beads used in hardy weinberg?

to demonstrate the large population being tested for hardy weinberg equilibrium

what was the purpose of the hardy-Weinberg equilibrium lab?

to focus on how natural selection can affect hardy weinberg the first part is to observe large populations and how random mating can lead to changes in the allele frequency

why did the population of "rice grains" change over time?

to show natural selection leading to adaptive evolution

what was the purpose of the natural selection lab?

to stimulate predation to demonstrate how natural selection can lead to adaptive evolution


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