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6 Kingdoms of Life

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Title: 6 Kingdoms Author: Heather Cadorette Last modified by: Lauren Snow Created Date: 2/5/2005 6:29:43 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 6 Kingdoms of Life


1
6 Kingdoms of Life
  • SOL BIO 5 a-f

2
  • Students will investigate and understand life
  • functions of archaebacteria, eubacteria,
    protists, fungi, plants, and animals,
  • including humans.
  • Main concepts include
  • how structures and functions vary between and
    within the kingdoms
  • comparisons of metabolic activities
  • analyses of responses to the environment
  • maintenance of homeostasis
  • human health issues, human anatomy, body systems,
    and life functions and
  • how viruses compare with organisms.

3
  • As living things are constantly being
    investigated, new attributes are revealed that
    affect how organisms are placed in a standard
    classification system.

4
  • There used to be only 5 kingdoms
  • Monera
  • Protista
  • Fungi
  • Plantae
  • Animalia

This kingdom has now been divided into 2
archaebacteria eubacteria
5
  • Taxonomists
  • have also added
  • 3 Domains to this
  • classification
  • system.

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  • The grouping of organisms into kingdoms is based
    on 3 factors
  • 1. Cell Type
  • 2. Cell Number
  • 3. Feeding Type

10
  • 1. Cell Type- The presence or absence of cellular
    structures such as the nucleus, mitochondria, or
    a cell wall

Prokaryotes Eukaryotes
11
Prokaryotes
  • DO NOT HAVE
  • a membrane bound nucleus
  • any membrane bound organelles

12
Prokaryotes
  • DO HAVE
  • DNA
  • Ribosomes
  • Cytoplasm
  • Cell membrane

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Eukaryotes
  • DO HAVE
  • separate membrane bound nucleus
  • other organelles

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  • 2. Cell - Whether the organisms exist as single
    cells or as many cells
  • Unicellular- single celled organism
  • Multicellular- many celled organism

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  • Unicellular
  • Multicellular

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  • 3. Feeding Type - How the organisms get their
    food
  • Autotroph or Producer
  • Makes its own food
  • Heterotroph or Consumer
  • Must eat other organisms to survive
  • Decomposer
  • Breaks down dead organic matter to get nutrients

19
6 Kingdoms
  • Archaebacteria
  • Eubacteria
  • Protista
  • Fungi
  • Plantae
  • Animalia

Prokaryotes
Eukaryotes
20
Archaebacteria
  • Ancient bacteria-
  • Live in very harsh environments
  • extremophiles

21
Eubacteria
  • It is the eubacteria that most people are talking
    about when they say bacteria, because they live
    in more neutral conditions.

22
Bacteria
  • Bacteria are unicellular prokaryotes

23
Bacterial Shapes
  • Bacteria come in 3 main shapes
  • Rod or Stick (bacilli)
  • Sphere (cocci)
  • Helical or spiral (borrelia)

24
Bacterial Locomotion
  • Some bacteria have flagella or cilia for movement
  • Some secrete a slime layer and ooze over surfaces
    like slugs

25
Bacterial Nutrition
  • Some bacteria are autotrophs and can
    photosynthesize
  • Some bacteria are heterotrophs

26
Protists
  • Protists include many widely ranging microbes,
    including slime molds, protozoa and primitive
    algae.

27
Protists
  • There are animal-like, fungus-like, and
    plant-like protists
  • Some are beneficial
  • Some protists can cause diseases in humans, such
    as

28
Disease Protist Vector (carrier) Symptoms Details
Amebic dysentery Ameba histolytica water diarrhea can get from tap water in some places
Giardaisis (beaver fever) Giardia water diarrhea, vomiting don't drink water from streams
African Sleeping Sickness Trypanosoma Tse tse fly uncontrolled sleepiness, confusion Only found in isolated areaslives in blood
Malaria Plasmodium Anopheles mosquito fever, chills, death can be treated with quininelives in bloodresults in millions deaths per year
Toxoplasmosis Toxoplasma cats fetal death or brain damage pregnant women should avoid cat litter
29
Protist Disease
  • Amebic dysentery

Ameba histolytica
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Protist Disease
  • Giardiasis
  • (beaver fever)

 Giardia
31
Protist Disease
  • African Sleeping Sickness

 Trypanosoma
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Protist Disease
  • Malaria

Plasmodium
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Protist Disease
  • Toxoplasmosis

Toxoplasma
34
Protist Locomotion
  • 3 types of movement
  • Pseudopod (false foot)
  • Flagella/cilia
  • Contractile vacuoles

35
Protist Nutrition
  • Protists can be autotrophs or heterotrophs

36
Fungi
  • The Kingdom Fungi includes some of the most
    important organisms.
  • By breaking down dead organic material, they
    continue the cycle of nutrients through
    ecosystems.

37
Fungi
  • All fungi are eukaryotic
  • They may be unicellular or multicellular
  • All fungi have a cell wall

Unicellular (yeast)
Multicellular
38
Fungi
Penicillin
  • Fungi can be very helpful and delicious
  • Many antibacterial drugs are derived from fungi

39
Fungi
  • Fungi also causes a number of plant and animal
    diseases
  • Athlete's Foot

40
Fungi
  • Ringworm

41
Fungi Locomotion
  • Fungi are stationary
  • They have root-like structures that they use for
    attachment

42
Fungi Nutrition
  • All fungi are heterotrophs
  • They absorb nutrients from dead organic matter
  • They are saprophytes

43
  • There are 4 main types of Fungi (classified by
    how they reproduce)
  • Zygospore (Zygosporangia)
  • Bread molds

44
  • There are 4 main types of Fungi
  • 2. Club (Basidiomycetes)
  • Mushrooms puffballs

45
  • There are 4 main types of Fungi
  • 3. Sac (Ascomycetes)
  • Yeasts

46
  • There are 4 main types of Fungi
  • 4. Imperfect (Deuteromycetes)
  • penicillin

47
Plants
  • All plants are multicellular autotrophs that have
    a cell wall.

48
  • 4 important plant groups are the

Mosses (Bryophytes)
Non-vascular
Ferns (Pteridophytes)
Vascular
Flowering Plants (Angiosperms)
Conifers (Gymnosperms)
49
  • Nonvascular Plants
  • Nonvascular plants are the simplest of all land
    dwelling plants. 
  • They lack an internal means for water
    transportation. 
  • They do not produce seeds or flowers. 
  • They generally only reach a height of 1 to 2
    centimeters, because they lack the woody tissue
    necessary for support.

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  • Mosses

51
  • Liverworts Hornworts

52
  • Vascular Plants
  • Vascular plants have water-carrying tissues
    (xylem) and sugar-carrying tissues (phloem)
    enabling the plants to evolve to a larger size.
  • Vascular plants produce seeds.

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  • Ferns

54
  • Conifers (cone bearing)
  • Gymnosperms
  • Oldest vascular plants

55
  • Flowering plants
  • Angiosperms

56
  • Animalia

All animals are multicellular heterotrophs that
LACK a cell wall and are capable of movement at
some point in their lives.
57
Animals are divided into taxa by many variables.
One variable is body symmetry
  • Asymmetrical
  • Asymmetrical animals (sponges) have no general
    body plan or axis of symmetry that divides the
    body into mirror-image halves.

58
  • Radial
  • Radially symmetrical animals (such as coral and
    jelly fish) have body parts organized about a
    central axis and tend to be cylindrical in shape.

59
  • Bilateral
  • Bilaterally symmetrical animals (such as humans
    and fish) have only a single plane of symmetry
    that produces mirror halves.

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  • Animals are also classified by their skeletal
    system
  • Invertebrates have a hard external skeleton made
    of chitin known as an exoskeleton
  • Vertebrates have a hard internal skeleton made of
    bone

62
Kingdom Cell Type Cell Number Feeding Type Cell Wall
Archaebacteria Prokaryote Unicellular Both Yes
Eubacteria Prokaryote Unicellular Both Yes
Protista Eukaryote Most Unicellular Both Yes No
Fungi Eukaryote Most Multicellular Heterotroph Yes  
Plantae Eukaryote Multicellular Autotroph Yes
Animalia Eukaryote Multicellular Heterotroph No
63
  • Some important animal groups (phyla) are the

64
  • Porifera sponges

65
  • Cnidarians Jellyfish, corals, and other
    stingers. . . Their stinger is called a nematocyst

66
  • Nematocyst

67
  • Mollusks
  • Octopi, squid

68
  • Mollusks
  • Clams, oysters

69
  • Mollusks
  • Snails, slugs

70
  • Platyhelminthes (flat worms)
  • Tapeworms flukes

Human liver fluke
71
  • Annelids (segmented worms)
  • Worms leeches

72
  • Echinoderms
  • Starfish, sea urchins, sea cucumbers

73
  • Arthropods
  • Shell fish, arachnids BUGS!

74
  • Chordates
  • The Chordata is the animal phylum with which
    everyone is most familiar, since it includes
    humans and other vertebrates.

75
  • Chordates

76
Viruses
  • Viruses do not share many of the characteristics
    of living organisms.

HIV Virus
77
Viruses
DNA or RNA
  • Viruses are not cells.
  • Basic viral structure consists of a nucleic acid
    (DNA or RNA) core surrounded by a protein coat.

78
Viruses
  • Viruses can reproduce only inside a living cell,
    the host cell.

79
Viruses
  • The viral reproductive process includes the
    following steps
  • A virus must insert its genetic material into the
    host cell.
  • The viral genetic material takes control of the
    host cell and uses it to produce viruses.
  • The newly formed viruses are released from the
    host cell.

80
Virus Vectors
  • Viruses are transmitted through vectors, such as
  • Airborne
  • Influenza
  • Common cold

81
Virus Vectors
  • Contaminated food or water
  • Hepatitis

82
Virus Vectors
  • Infected animal bite
  • West Nile
  • Rabies
  • Avian influenza (bird flu)
  • Ebola

83
Virus Vectors
  • Sexual contact
  • HIV
  • Herpes

84
Virus Vectors
  • Contaminated blood products or needles
  • HIV
  • Hepatitis

85
Virus Treatment
  • Viruses cannot be treated with antibiotics.
  • There are some anti-viral drugs available.
  • You generally have to wait for the virus to run
    its course and let your immune system fight it
    off.
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