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Bacteria and Archaea The prokarotes

Bacteria and Archaea

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Bacteria and Archaea. The prokarotes. What do we already know about bacteria and archaea ?. What do we already know about bacteria and archaea ?. Found in two of the three domains of life: Domain Bacteria and Domain Archaea Unicellular and prokaryotic Found everywhere!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bacteria and  Archaea

Bacteria and ArchaeaThe prokarotes

Page 2: Bacteria and  Archaea

What do we already know about bacteria

and archaea?

Page 3: Bacteria and  Archaea

What do we already know about bacteria

and archaea?Found in two of the three domains of life: Domain Bacteria and Domain ArchaeaUnicellular and prokaryoticFound everywhere!

Page 4: Bacteria and  Archaea

Mini-lab: prokaryotes in the classroom

Each table will receive four cups to culture some bacteria/archaeaChoose two places in the room where you think there will be the most bacteria and two places where you think there will be the least bacteriaLabel your cup with your initials, class period, and what you swabbedSwab according to instructions and observe what happens!

Page 5: Bacteria and  Archaea

What do they eat?

Page 6: Bacteria and  Archaea

What do they eat?Everything (almost)! Can be autotrophs or heterotrophsThree primary ways of making energy: using sunlight, using inorganic compounds, and using organic compounds

Page 7: Bacteria and  Archaea

What do they eat?

Page 8: Bacteria and  Archaea

How are they classified?

Page 9: Bacteria and  Archaea

How are they classified?Three main considerations: cell wall structure, what they eat, what shape they are (morphology)

Page 10: Bacteria and  Archaea

Cell Wall StructureDepending on different substances in the bacteria’s cell wall, they act in different ways

It determines what environment they can live in

Some bacteria can form an endospore

Some can form biofilms

Page 11: Bacteria and  Archaea

Bacterial ShapesThree main shapes: sphere, rod, and spiralOften determines how/what a bacterium eats, how it moves, etc.

Page 12: Bacteria and  Archaea

Bacterial ReproductionBinary fission: divide into two identical bacterial cells

some bacteria can divide every 10 minutes!this is a form of asexual reproduction (only one parent organism)

Page 13: Bacteria and  Archaea

Bacterial MutationBacteria and Archaea can change their genetic code sequence fairly easily

structures called plasmids are traded between bacteriathis allows them to adapt to changing environments

Page 14: Bacteria and  Archaea

Importance of BacteriaDecomposers: release important chemicals from dead organismsFood: used to produce yogurt, cheese, pickles, sauerkraut, wine, and moreIndustry: we use plasmids to produce large quantities of medicines, chemicals, etc.Research: used to study gene/protein function, among many other things