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The Six Kingdoms Use the words in RED to fill in the blanks!
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3 Domains, 6 Kingdoms Domain Archaea Domain Bacteria Domain Eukarya
Kingdom Archaebacteria Domain Bacteria Kingdom Eubacteria Domain Eukarya Kingdom Protista Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Animalia
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Cell Types Prokaryotes Eukaryotes
No nucleus No membrane-bound organelles Most μm in size Evolved 3.5 billion years ago Only Archaebacteria and Eubacteria Kingdoms Has nucleus Many organelles Many 2-1,000 μm in size Evolved 1.5 billion years ago Includes Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia Kingdoms
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Types of Nutrition: Autotrophs or Heterotrophs
Autotrophs: 1.) photosynthetic -organism that uses energy from the sun to make its own food, and 2.) chemosynthetic -simple nonliving chemical nutrients such as H2S, sulfur, and iron is consumed and made into living tissue; makes its own food. All autotrophs make their own food! Heterotrophs: organisms that cannot make its own food—must eat other organisms or organic wastes Absorbers: produces enzymes that break down food particles outside its body, then absorbs the digested molecules
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Prokaryotic cells Archaebacteria and Eubacteria Domains
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Bacteria Shapes Coccus (spherical shaped) Bacillus (rod shaped)
Singular Plural Coccus cocci Bacillus bacilli Spirillum spirilla Singular Plural Coccus cocci Bacillus bacilli Spirillum spirilla Spirillum(spiral/curved walls)
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Domain Archaebacteria
methanic Domain Archaebacteria halophile halophile methanic sulfurous halophile
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Kingdom Archaebacteria
Cell Type: Prokaryotes (original life form on earth and gave rise to eukaryotes; believed to be the ancestors of the protists; called the “ancient bacteria”) Cell structure: no nucleus, no organelles, have cell walls that contain lipids found in no other organism Body Forms: unicellular Nutrition: autotrophs or heterotrophs Niche: extreme environments such as deep sea volcanic vents, hot springs, salt flats and brine pools, and black organic mud that lacks oxygen (anaerobic) Reproduction: asexual (binary fission) Neat Facts: fewer than 100 species
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Examples of Archaebacteria
Halophiles (Salt lovers) Acidophiles (love acidic environments) Sulfurous bacteria (high sulfur environments) Methanic bacteria (high methane environments) Anaerobic bacteria (no oxygen)
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Domain Eubacteria
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Kingdom Eubacteria
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Domain Eubacteria Cell Type: Prokaryotes - gave rise to eukaryote cell organelles; believed to be the ancestors of mitochondria and chloroplasts; considered the “true bacteria” Cell Structure: no nucleus; no organelles; cell walls contain complex carbohydrates; all species have at least one inner cell membrane Body Forms: unicellular Nutrition: photosynthetic and chemical autotrophs, and heterotrophs Niche: Common environments, live in and on organisms Reproduction: mainly asexual (binary fission); sexual (conjugation) Neat Facts: extremely diverse—5,000 species; many cause disease; some make vitamins and help with digestion; used for food and drugs; decomposers, fix nitrogen
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Examples of Eubacteria
Strep (Streptococcus aureus) Cyanobacteria Salmonella Clostridium botulinum E. coli
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Bacterial Fossils of blue-green algae cyanobacteria
2.6 billion years old 3.2 billion years old Algal mats preserved in rock Modern day
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Protists – yellow; fungi – red; plantae – green; animalia - blue
Eukaryotic Cells – Domain Eukarya, Kingdoms Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia Protists – yellow; fungi – red; plantae – green; animalia - blue
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Domain Eukarya, Kingdom Protista from microscopic to 150 feet large (the “catch-all kingdom”)
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Diversity in Kingdom Protista
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Domain Eukarya, Kingdom Protista
Cell Type: Eukaryotes (“catch all” kingdom) Cell structure: have a nucleus, mitochondria, and some have chloroplasts Body Forms: mostly unicellular, some multicellular, some colonial Nutrition: autotrophic or heterotrophic; ingestion, absorption, or photosynthesis Niche: freshwater and ocean water, in and on organisms; anywhere where there is water or a moist environment Reproduction: asexual or sexual Neat Facts: autotrophic protists produce 1/3 of oxygen in the atmosphere; wide range of sizes
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Examples of Protists Euglena Paramecium Amoeba Diatoms Slime mold
Algae Kelp Red Tide
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Kingdom Fungi
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Domain Eukarya, Kingdom Fungi
Cell Type: Eukaryotes Cell structure: have a nucleus, mitochondria, but no chloroplasts; cell wall of chitin Body Forms: some unicellular, most multicellular Nutrition: heterotrophic (absorption); mostly decomposers Niche: most are terrestrial (land), some live on organisms Reproduction: asexual and sexual (rarely) Neat Facts: some cause disease; fix nitrogen; make medicine and foods; major decomposers
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Examples of Fungi Bread molds Mushrooms Yeast Mildews Truffles
Penicillium
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Kingdom Plantae
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Domain Eukarya, Kingdom Plantae
Cell Type: Eukaryotes Cell structure: have a nucleus, mitochondria, and chloroplasts; cell walls of cellulose; advanced differentiation of tissues (roots, leaves, reproductive structures) Body Forms: multicellular Nutrition: photosynthetic terrestrial autotrophs Niche: on land (terrestrial) Reproduction: sexual Neat Facts: provide oxygen; convert energy to food; used for paper, textiles, medicine
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Examples of Plants Trees Flowers Ferns Mosses Grasses
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Kingdom Animalia
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Domain Eukarya, Kingdom Animalia
Cell Type: Eukaryotes Cell structure: have a nucleus, mitochondria, but no chloroplasts and no cell walls; advanced differentiation of tissues and complex organs Body Forms: multicellular Nutrition: heterotrophic Niche: anywhere—land (most), water, sea and air Reproduction: sexual and asexual Neat Facts: used for food, clothing
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Examples of Animals Snails Sponges Fish Turtles Snakes Mammals Birds
Worms Insects
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Homework Use your notes to complete the chart entitled “Major Characteristics of the 6 Kingdoms”
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Major Characteristics of the 6 Kingdoms
PHYLUM Archaebacteria Eubacteria Protista Fungi Plantae Animalia CELL TYPE (prokaryote or eukaryote) Prokaryotes (gave rise to eukaryotes); “ancient bacteria” Prokaryotes (gave rise to eukaryotic cell organelles); “true bacteria” Eukaryotes (catch-all kingdom) Eukaryotes CELL STRUCTURE (description of various organelles) Have cell walls, lack cell nuclei, and membrane-bound organelles Cell walls contain complex carbohydrates; all have at least one inner cell membrane Have a nucleus, mitochondria, some have chloroplasts Have a nucleus, mitochondria, but no chloroplasts; Has cell wall of chitin Have a nucleus, mitochrondria, chloroplasts, cell walls of cellulose; tissue differentiation Have a nucleus, mitochondria, no chloroplasts, no cell wall; advanced tissue/ organ differentiation BODY FORMS (unicellular or multicellular) Unicellular Mostly unicellular, some multi-cellular; colonial Some unicellular, most multicellular Multicellular NUTRITION (autotophic or heterotrophic) Autotrophic or heterotrophic Photosynthetic and chemical Autotrophs,and heterotrophs Autotrophic or heterotrophic; Heterotrophic (absorption);mostlydecomposers Photosynthetic terrestrial autotrophs Heterotrophic NICHE (where they live) extreme environ-ments, no oxygen, volcanic vents, hot springs, brine pools Common environments; Live in and on organisms Freshwater, seawater, in and on organisms Most are terrestrial, live on organisms terrestrial Anywhere – land, freshwater, oceans, air REPRODUCTION (asexual or sexual) Asexual Both Sexual NEAT FACTS Fewer than 100 species Many cause disease; some make vitamins; used for food/drugs Autotrophic protests produce 1/3 of O2 in atmosphere Some cause disease; fix nitrogen; make medicine; release free O2 into air Provide O2; convert energy to food; used for paper, textiles, meds Food; clothing EXAMPLES Methanic bacteria, halophile bacteria; anaerobic bacteria; acidophile bacteria Strep, anthrax, cyanobacteria, salmonella, gonorrhea, E.coli Algae, kelp, slime molds, red tides, amoeba, paramecium Bread molds, mushrooms, yeast, mildews, truffles, penicillin Trees, flowers, ferns, mosses, grasses, vascular & non-vascular plants Snails, turtles, fish, mammals, birds, insects, spiders, snakes, worms
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