Biology-unit. Microbiology
Virologist
A scientist that studies viruses
Virion
A single virus unit; the thing that we made out of cups and a pen case.
Phylum
A taxonomic category within a kingdom but above class.
Pseudopodia
A temporary footlike extension of a one-celled organism, such as an amoeba, used for moving about and for surrounding and taking in food. "False feet".
Pathogen
An organism that causes disease
Parasite
An organism that lives on or in another organism
Taxis
An organism's response to a stimulus
Protozoans
Animal-like protists
kingdoms that are composed of eucharyotes
Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista
Ascomycota
Ascomycota is a Division/Phylum of the kingdom Fungi and, together with the Basidiomycota, form the subkingdom Dikarya. Its members are commonly known as the sac fungi. They are the largest phylum of Fungi, with over 64,000 species.
Zygomycota
Bread mold;
Late blight
Caused the potato famine
Eucharyotes
Including a membrane-bound nucleus and various other membrane-bound organelles.
Kerenia brevis
Known for causing severe cases of algal bloom of the coast of Florida.
Red eyespot
Light sensitive structure
Cytoplasmic bridge
Which structure is NOT part of the process of phagosytosis in a ciliate
Anaerobic
Without free oxygen; does not require oxygen to survive.
Malaria
________ is caused by four known Plasmodium species which rely on a mosquito insect vector
Thermoacidophiles
_____________________ thrive in hot, acidic environments
Anopheles mosquito
The insect vector for plasmodium vivax. carries malaria.
Eubacteria
The kingdom ___________ contains prokaryotic organisms
Sir Alexander Flemming
The man credited for discovering penicillin
Apicomplexa
The members of the phylum ____________ are all parasitic.
Phagosytosis
The process where an amoeba creates a food vacuole, where digestion continues
Capsid
The protein coating on a virion
Penetration
The second step in the lytic cycle
Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, Protista, Eubacteria, and Archaea
The six kingdoms (you don't have to list "Kingdom")
Food Vacuole
The structure within a protozoan where enzymes are secreted to digest food
Phycology
The study of algae
Microbiology
The study of things too small to be seen without the aid of a microscope.
Uncoating
The third step in the lytic cycle
Hyphae
The thread-like structures which are the building blocks of fungi
Release
The with step in the lytic cycle
Animalcules
The word Leeuwenhoek used to describe what he saw in a single drop of rainwater.
Max Knott an Ernest Ruska
Two Germans who invented the electron microscope in the 1930's.
Lives in water and can move with the help of a whip-like tail
Two reasons members of the phylum Chytridiomycota differ from other members of the kingdom Fungi
Motile, and no cell wall
Two reasons that euglena have been classified as protozoans in the past.
Galileo
Used mathematics to examine the principles of lenses, thus improving on previous attempts on magnification
Dinoflagellates
"Whirling flagella." a species within the phylum Pyrrophyta. Causes the red tide
Protist
A eukaryotic organism that is NOT an animal, NOT a plant, and NOT a fungus
Sulcus
A groove where the short flagellum on a dinoflagellates remains
Mycelia
A group of hyphae
Flagella
A long, whip-like filament that helps in cell motility. Many bacteria are flagellated, and sperm are flagellated.
Host
A plant or animal which supports a parasite
Cilia
Hairlike projections that extend from the plasma membrane and are used for locomotion
Prokaryotes
Cells that do not enclose DNA in nuclei.
Kelp forests
Coastal ocean community named for its dominant organism-kelp, a giant brown alga. Found in the Pacific ocean.
Chitridiomycota
Commonly referred to as "chytrids"; mostly aquatic; the gametes, or reproductive cells, are flagellated, which means that they have a tail-like structure that allows them to propel themselves through the water.
Anton van Leeuwenhoek
Dutch pioneer microscopist who was among the first to recognize cells in animals and who gave the first accurate descriptions of microbes and spermatozoa and blood corpuscles. (1632-1723)
Robert Hook
English scientist who formulated the law of elasticity and proposed a wave theory of light and formulated a theory of planetary motion and proposed the inverse square law of gravitational attraction and discovered the cellular structure of cork and called the little pieces he saw, "cells".
Kingdoms that are composed of prokaryotes
Eubacteria, Archea
Kingdom Animalia
Eukaryotes; all multicellular; true tissue and organ differentiation; no cell walls. Ex. fish, birds, mammals
Kingdom Plantae
Eukaryotes; all multicellular; true tissue differentiation; cell walls composed of cellulose. Ex. flowers, trees, grass
Kingdom Protista
Eukaryotes; cells with true nucleus; eukaryotes NOT classified as plants, animals, or fungi. Ex. amoeba, paramecium, slime mold, algae
Kingdom Fungi
Eukaryotes; no true tissue differentiation; cell walls made of chitin. Ex. mushrooms, puffballs, yeast
Hans and Zaccharias Janssen
Experimented with two glass lenses
Plasmodial slime mold
Gelatin-like derivative of brown algae
Kelp
Giant brown algae.
Hyphae
Multi-nucleated thread-like structures of fungi
Algin
Multinucleated feeding phase
Symbiosis
Mutually positive relationship between two species.
Fun guy
My co-worker is a Mycologist, he is a __________!
Rhizoids
Mycelia responsible for obtaining food
Saprophytes
Obtain food from non-living organic material.
Saprophyte
Obtains food from dead organic material
Kingdom Eubacteria
Prokaryotes; cells have NO true nucleus or membrane-bound organelles; cell walls contain peptidoglycans. Ex. common bacteria, blue-green algae
Kingdom Archaea
Prokaryotes; cells have no true nucleus or membrane-bound organelles ; no peptidoglycans in the cell walls. Ex. extremophiles
Algal bloom
Rapid growth of algae
Spores
Reproductive cells which can tolerate bad conditions
Chemotaxis
Response to a chemical
Phototaxis
Response to light
Conjugation
Sexual reproduction in some protozoans
Thallus
Structure of an algae
insect vector
The Anopheles mosquito is the _________________ for malaria?
Nucleus
The area of a prokaryotic cell that is dense with genetic material
Fermentation
The break down of complex molecules into simpler ones.
Basidiomycota
The common mushroom, along with puffballs, and toadstools
Salinity
The concentration of salt in water
Attachment
The first step of the lytic cycle
Replication
The fourth step in the lytic cycle
Sulcus
The groove in the outer covering of dinoflagellates.
Phycoerythrin
the substance responsible for the red in red algae