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The Diversity of Life

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Title: The Diversity of Life


1
The Diversity of Life
  • Classification, Viruses, Prokaryotes, Protists
    and Fungi
  • Magnet Parts of Chapters 20-23

2
Classification of organisms
  • Taxonomy-Discipline of Bio that deals with
    identifying, naming, classifying, organisms
  • Aristotle- Grouped organisms as plants or animals
    Grouped animals based on habitat plants based on
    structure (morphology). Believed species were
    fixed
  • Linnaeus-Father of taxonomy. Classified species
    based on natural relationships ( behavior,
    structure and habitat)
  • Systematics is a broader science that deals with
    taxonomy and evolutionary history
  • Binomial nomenclature-2 word Latin name
  • Taxons Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order,
    Family, Genus, species
  • Species-group of organisms that are able to
    produce viable offspring
  • Phyla in plants are called divisions
  • Dichotomous keys

3
How are relationships determined?
  • Evolutionary history (phylogeny). Cladistics-
    classifies organisms according to the order they
    diverged from a common ancestor. See cladograms
    (phylogenic trees)- p. 354 (Mag) and p. 497
    (Hon). Sequence orders of organisms based on
    derived characters that evolved with respect to a
    common outgroup
  • Development and Behavior
  • Biochem (Nucleic acids and amino acids) and
    Genetics
  • HW- What is a molecular clock?

4
Traditional (old)5 Kingdom System
  • Older classification system (before domains)
    Kingdoms Monera, Protista, Fungi. Plantae,
    Animalia
  • But now we have added domains.Monerans are now
    divided into 2 domains-Archeae and Bacteria. 3rd
    domain is Eukarya. According to the cladogram on
    p. 354 (Mag) and 497 (Hon)
  • , which 2 domains are more closely related?
  • Some classification systems are now dividing K.
    Protista into 3 kingdoms

5
Evidence for the 3 domain system
  • Distinct differences in the rRNA sequence between
    2 groups of prokaryotes
  • DNA sequencing data
  • Membrane structure
  • Cell wall structure bacteria cell wall is made
    of peptidoglycan. Archaea have proteins in their
    walls similar to the ones found in our membranes
  • STUDY TABLE 20.3! (Mag)

6
Viruses
  • Made of protein coat (capsid) and nucleic acid
  • 5-300 nm (nm is a billionth of a meter)
  • Why arent they considered living?
  • No cure. Some can be prevented by vaccination
  • Ex- influenza, cold, measles, mumps, HIV,
    hepatitis, chicken pox, herpes

7
Reproduction
  • Intracellular parasites
  • Virus attaches to host cell using their coats
    proteins and the hosts cell membrane receptors.
    Viral genome then enters host cell
  • Viruses can be made of DNA or RNA---HIV is a
    retrovirus made of RNA
  • Lytic cycle(active-lysis) vs. Lysogenic
    (inactive-virus hidden as prophage). HW-What is a
    prion? Give an example

8
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9
Bacteria
  • SHAPES- See Book p. 371
  • Cocci-spheres
  • Spirillum (spirochete)-spiral (helical)
  • Bacillum-rod-shaped

10
Typical bacterial cell
  • Know structure p. 63 (Mag) and p 518 (Hon)
  • Unicellular
  • Prokaryotic
  • Large circular chromosome plasmids in nucleiod
    region
  • Cell walls (peptidoglycan) Many secrete sticky
    substance that forms capsule outside wall. Both
    surround DNA.
  • Usually 1-10 um long
  • Cell wall prevents osmotic rupture. Penicillin
    breaks down cell wall and allows rupture

11
Bacteria continued
  • Some use O2others are anaerobes (may be obligate
    or facultative)
  • Some are flagellated
  • Fimbriae (once called nonsexual pili)- help
    bacteria to adhere to surfaces.
  • Pili (sexual)--used for conjugation
  • Reproduce asexually by binary fission
  • Endospore- resistant structure with a thick,
    protective coat protecting a bacterium inside.
    Can survive for years before rehydrating.
  • MAG Some bacteria have an additional outer
    coat containing lipid. Those that have it are
    not able to absorb a dye called a gram stain
    and are called gram -. Those without it (gram )
    can absorb it and appear purple. Technique is
    often used in (medical) labs to differentiate
    types and narrow down possible diseases .

12
Prokaryotes are the foundation of life on earth
  • Decompose dead organisms
  • Decomposers, saprobes, saprophytes
  • Perform nitrogen fixation
  • Live in our digestive system and are also used in
    the food industry
  • Cheese, yogurt, etc
  • Used to decompose waste in sewage
  • Disesase causing bacteria Usually produce
    toxins. Ex- bacteria that causes botulism
    (paralyzes nerve cells)

13
Some Prokaryotes Cause Disease
  • Bacterial Examples cholera, diphtheria, leprosy,
    Lyme disease, meningitis, the plague, pneumonia,
    syphilis, gonorrhea tetanus, tuberculosis, strep
    throat. See book
  • Antibiotics are the most effective means of
    fighting bacterial infections
  • No known Archaea cause disease

14
Major Groups of Archaea
  • Extremophiles-3 types
  • Methanogens- are poisoned by oxygenuse CO2 as
    the electron acceptor in respiration produces
    methane as a waste product
  • Halophiles- lives in very saline places
  • Thermophiles (aka hyperthermophiles)

15
Archaeabacteria
  • Used to be grouped with bacteria and called
    monerans
  • Now believed eukaryotes split from archaeal
    line of descent
  • Archaea and Eukarya share some of the same rRNA
    sequences and ribosomal proteins also, similar
    tRNA
  • Archaea have unusual diverse lipids in membrane
    that allow them to live under extreme conditions
  • Cell walls composed of polysacc and some only are
    entirely protein. A few recently discovered
    have no wall (not on test, just FYI)
  • Some Archaea have introns bacteria do not

16
The Origin of the Eukaryotic Cell
  • Eukaryotic cells arose through a combination of 2
    processes
  • -membrane infolding- produced all the
    membrane-bound organelles except the
    mitochondrion and the choloroplasts.
  • Endosymbiosis-Mitochondria and chloroplasts
    believed to once be prokaryotic cells that were
    ingested or absorbed by eukaryotic cell.

17
Kingdom Protista
  • Domain Eukarya
  • Very diverse group of organisms (currently being
    phylogeneticaly reclassified based on common DNA
    sequences, proteins and therefore common
    ancestors
  • Most are unicellular
  • The most elaborate cells of all the kingdoms
  • Most are aerobic use mitochondria for
    respiration
  • Some are autotrophs, some are heterotrophs
  • 3 types ingestive, absorptive, photosynthetic.

18
Kingdom Protista
  • Motility flagella, cilia, pseudopodia
  • Some reproduce sexually, some reproduce asexually
  • - the haploid stage is the main vegetative stage
    of most protists only the zygote is diploid.
    Zygotes undergo meiosis and become haploid (see
    life cycle in book)
  • Can form cysts that survive harsh conditions
  • Most are aquatic (plankton). What adaptation
    prevents them from lysing in water?

19
Protozoa animal-like protists
  • Heterotrophic and ingestive Currently grouped by
    their means of locomotion (only know these)
  • 1-ciliophorans (P. Ciliophora) move with
    _______
  • examples include Paramecium Stentor
    Blepharisma
  • paramecium have a macronucleus (for everyday
    metabolism) and micronucleus (reproduction)
  • 2 -zooflagellates (P. Zoomastigophora) move
    with ________
  • examples include Giardia, Trypanasoma
  • 3 -sarcondines (some texts P. Sarcodina
    others P. Rhizopoda) move with _______
  • examples include amoeba
  • 4 -sporozoans (P. Apicomplexa/ P. Sporozoa)
    don't move parasitic Plasmodium

20
Amoeba- moves and ingests using pseudopodia
21
Ciliates
Paramecium- has both a macro and micro nucleus,
so it has a reserve copy of genome. Macro
regulates metabolism and micro is used in
conjugation.
22
Flagellates
Euglena- unique flagellate. Both autotrophic and
heterotrophic
23
Algae the plant-like protists
  • Autotrophic
  • Currently, classified by the pigments they
    contain
  • All of the algae contain chlorophyll
    (photosynthetic), but some contain different
    types of chlorophyll and accessory pigments,
    causing them to appear other colors than green.

24
Diatoms.my favorite
Contain silica shells- forms diatomaceous earth
25
Volvox- single cells, but colonial
26
The Plant-Like Protists
  • P. Chlorophyta green algae
    -Chlamydomonas, Volvox, some seaweeds, sea
    lettuce
  • P. Chrysophyta golden-brown algae -Ex Diatoms!
    Contain silica (some books are classifying this
    differently now, but I am still going with this)
  • P. Euglenophyta Ex Euglena (are
    photosynthetic, but can ingest if too deep in
    water to get light)
  • P. Dinoflagellata/ P. Pyrrophyta -
    -dinoflagellates
    cause red tide (toxic to fish)

27
Red Tide
28
More Plant-Like Protists
  • P. Phaeophyta the brown algae
    -include the largest seaweeds, the kelps
    (multicellular)
  • P. Rhodophyta the red algae
    -include the red seaweeds, some encrusted
    and common in coral reefs

29
The Fungus Like Protists
  • Unicellular, heterotrophic, absorbative (usually
    feed on decaying matter)
  • Cell walls mainly made of cellulose (like
    plants). No chitin, which is found in true
    fungal walls
  • Most known as slime molds or water molds
  • When food is not plentiful, they produce spore
    producing structures (sporangia) and the wind
    disperses the spores
  • Ex- slime molds

30
Lichens
  • Look similar to some species of moss, but are
    not!
  • Lichens are symbiotic associations between a
    fungus (often an ascomycete) and green algae or
    cyanobacteria
  • The fungus usually give lichens shelter
    (optimal environment) which gives rise to their
    shape
  • Alga provides the fungus with food
  • Fungus provides a suitable physical environment
    for growth

31
What is a fungus?
  • Heterotrophic
  • Most are muticellular
  • Nonphotosynthetic
  • Digest food outside bodies (using enzymes) and
    absorb it
  • some are saprophytes-live off of dead organic
    matter)
  • Cell walls made of chitin.

32
Structure and Function of Multicellular Fungi
  • Composed of tiny filaments called hyphae
  • Hyphae are long strings of cells. Mass called
    mycelium. Some species can grow a km of
    hyphae/day!
  • Can reproduce asexually by releasing haploid
    spores
  • Unicellular fungi-yeast
  • Multicellular ex mushrooms, molds

33
Life cycle
  • See supplement for life cycle of mushroom
  • Stages of a mushroom (Basidiomycetes)
  • Dikaryotic- cytoplasm merges between the 2 mating
    types, but nuclei do not (contains 2 haploid
    nuclei/cell)
  • Diploid- Haploid nuclei fuse in fruiting body of
    mushroom forming diploid zygote
  • Haploid-Zygote undergoes meiosis and forms
    haploid spores. Spores then germinate and fuse.

34
Mushroom Life Cycle
35
Classification
  • Phyla
  • Zygomycota- Common mold(ex-Rhizopus). Reproduce
    by conjugation
  • Ascomycota- Sac fungi Contain ascus which are
    sac like structures that contain spores.
    Ex-Yeast, mildew
  • Basidiomycota-Have fruiting bodies (ex-mushrooms
    cap). Contain basidium which are spore bearing
    repro. structures on the gills of the mushroom
    caps
  • Deuteromycota Imperfect fungi. Sexual repro.
    has not been observed. Ex Penicillium,
    ringworm, athletes foot

36
Zygomycota
37
Ascomycota
38
Basidiomycota
39
Deutermycota
40
Mycorrhizae (fungus roots)
  • Mutualistic associations of plant roots and fungi
  • Almost all vascular plants have mycorrhizae

41
Ecological Impacts of Fungi
  • Decomposers! Important nutrient recyclers
  • Some are pathogens, such as ringworm and athletes
    foot.Plant pathogens--Dutch elm disease, Chestnut
    blight
  • some produce deadly toxins-ex-some species of
    mushrooms
  • we use them for their antibiotics-penicillium.
    Produce enzymes that rupture bacterial cell walls
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