Title: Taxonomy
1Taxonomy the 5 Kingdom System
- One of the purposes of taxonomy is to discover an
organisms PHYLOGENY or evolutionary history. - We will be following organisms through the
evolutionary family tree, always keeping the
phylogeny of the different phyla in mind.
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4Monerans Prokaryotic Cells
5Structure
- Prokaryotic cells are not as complex as
eukaryotic cells. They do not have a nucleus and
they only have a few simple organelles - They have a cell wall and a cell membrane,
cytoplasm and ribosomes. Their genetic material
(DNA or RNA) is circular. Some of the monerans
move around by means of a tail-like flagella
6Comparison
7Structure of Prokaryotic Cells
8Identifying Monerans
- 1. Cell Shape
- a. Rod-Shaped
- Bacillus
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10Bacillus Electron micrograph
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12Bacilli ( gram negative)with Flagella
13Bacilli with Pilli
14Comparative Size RBCs and Bacteria
A RBC B WBC C - bacteria
15b. Spherical Cocci
16Streptococcus
Sometimes, cocci will form chains
17c. Spiral Shaped Spirillum
18Under our microscopes, it is difficult to
distinguish between these 3 shapes.
19Under TEM
20Under our Microscopes
212. Cell Walls
- Bacteria cell walls can be stained by either
CRYSTAL VIOLET (purple) or SAFRANINE (red). These
stains are called GRAM stains. If the bacterium
picks up the purple stain, it is considered GRAM
POSITIVE. If the bacterium picks stains red, it
is considered GRAM NEGATIVE.
22Gram Staining Overview
- 1. Wash slide
- 2. Fix bacteria to slide
- 3. Flood with Crystal Violet
- 4. Leave 1 minute
- 5. Rinse with water
- 6. Flood with grams iodine
- 7. Decolorize with Ethanol
- (gram (-) loose color)
- 8. Counterstain with Safranin 30 seconds
- 9. Rinse with water, air dry
233. Bacterial Movement
- We can also distinguish between different types
of bacteria by how they get around. - Types of movement include
- Whipping its flagella, gliding along a slime
layer, slithering along like a snake and
spiralling forward like a cork-screw.
24Diversity of Bacteria
- Some are autotrophic either phototrophic or
chemotrophic. (chemotrophic use inorganic
molecules like hydrogen sulphides, nitrites or
iron to make energy. They live in harsh
environments)
25Chemosynthetic Ecosystems
- In a normal marine ecosystem, the organisms found
at the bottom of the food chain are seagrass and
phytoplankton, which produce energy through
photosynthesis (a photosynthetic ecosystem). In
environments rich in methane and sulfides, one
type of food chain relies on chemosynthetic
bacteria as basic producers. These include
sulfur-oxidizing bacteria, methane-oxidizing
bacteria, and sulfide-reducing bacteria. Such an
environment is referred to as a chemosynthetic
ecosystem.
26- A special characteristic of a chemosynthetic
ecosystem is its large biomass, despite its
location in the deep sea.
27Diversity
- Some are HETEROTROPHIC (like humans are). This
means that they ingest organic molecules, and
digest them to release the energy.
28Diversity
- Some are OBLIGATE AEROBES (like us) they would
die without oxygen.
29Diversity
- Others are OBLIGATE ANAEROBES they would die in
the presence of oxygen. - ? (example of this is C. botulinum causes
botulism)
30- Finally, some bacteria are FACULTATIVE ANAEROBES
these bacteria can live with or without oxygen.
31Bacterial Reproduction
- 1. Binary Fission. (a form of asexual
reproduction)
322. Conjugation
- (a form of sexual reproduction).
- A protein bridge is formed between the two
bacteria through which the donor bacterium sends
part of its genetic material to the recipient.
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343. Spore Formation
- When conditions are unfavourable, the bacterium
might create a thick, internal wall around its
genetic material and some cytoplasm. This
ENDOSPORE can remain dormant for an indeterminate
amount of time, waiting for more favourable
conditions again
35 The 4 Phyla of MONERA
- 1. Eubacteria
- The true bacteria
- This is the largest group of bacteria (in
numbers, not size!)
362. Cyanobacteria
- The blue-green algae. (this is a mis-nomer
algae are EUKARYOTIC cells). Thes are
autotrophic, but us a more primitive form of
photosynthesis than found in higher plants.
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383. Archaebacteria
- These APPEAR to be the most primitive, ancient
forms of bacteria. However, on closer
examination, they are more closely related to
eukaryotic cells than they are to other
prokaryotic cells.
39- Archaebacteria live in the HARSHEST of conditions
high temperatures, high salinity (halophilic),
oxygen free (anaerobic), chemosynthetic, etc.
40Archaebacteria A halobacteria (Lives in high
salinity)
- they color the salt flats of desert playas and
evaporation ponds a pinkish-red. This is in Owens
Lake CA. Owens Lake was once a vast blue lake,
before it was drained (by diverting Owens River)
to provide LA with water. Today it is a
pinkish-red, dry lake bed teaming with
salt-loving archaebacteria. A drop of brine
contains millions of tiny bacilli swimming among
crystals of NaCl.
41- Archaebact. At high temperatures. Yellowstone
National Park ?
? High Salinity - Great Salt Lake, Utah (aerial
view)
424. Prochlorobacteria
- These bacteria have chlorophyll a and chlorophyll
b which makes them very similar to chloroplasts
found in higher plants.
Host a tunicate
43Bacteria in Our World
- Food Production bacteria are used to produce
cheese, yogurt, sour cream, vinegar, etc.
44Lactobacillus acidiphilus and Streptococcus
thermophilis (1000X) The bacteria that make Yogurt
45Industry
- Bacteria can digest some petroleum, remove waste
products from water, mine minerals from the
ground and can produce some drugs (like insulin). - ? Thiobacillus ferrooxidans extracts copper from
low-grade copper ore
46Oil-Spill Treatment
47- Species from all of the 4 other Kingdoms are
dependent on bacteria in symbiotic relationships
with different bacteria - Ex lichen
- bacteria and fungus
48- Termites, are composite organisms. The protist
at left is just "one" of hundreds of thousands of
microbes that live symbiotically within the
termites digestive tract, and it is actually
composed of at least 5 different organisms. The
"hair-like" projections are actually several
different species of spirochete and bacillus
bacteria that seem to function in movement.
Still other bacteria live within the protist
cell, releasing energy from the food that it
absorbs while other bacteria produce the enzymes
necessary for digestion of the cellulose and
lignin fibers that are the main components of
wood.
49- Some bacteria are saprophytes (organisms that
obatin their energy and nutrients from
once-living material). We depend on their
ability to decompose organisms after they have
died. They are also responsible for the
decomposition of our sewage.
50- Some plants are dependent on bacteria for
nitrogen fixation they are able to trap the
nitrogen from the air into ammonia (NH3) and
nitrate (NO3-). Plants can use these forms of
nitrogen, but are unable to use nitrogen from the
air
51- there are far more beneficial bacteria in this
world than pathogenic bacteria
52- Pathogenic bacteria cause us grief in two ways
damaging cells and releasing toxins
(staphylcoccus infection - impetigo
53- We have learned many techniques to sterilize our
environments and our foods by using high
temperatures and disinfectants.
54- Medicine is able to prevent bacterial infections
using vaccinations.
55- We also have antibiotics drugs that kill
bacteria specifically.
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