Deck 21: Viruses, Bacteria, Archaea, and Protists: the Diversity of Life 1

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Question
Bacteria that benefit from living in or on us while we are unaffected by the relationship are termed:

A) commensal.
B) pathogenic.
C) mutualistic.
D) probiotic.
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Question
The material in the core of HIV (AIDS virus) is:

A) protein.
B) xarbohydrate.
C) DNA.
D) RNA.
Question
The viral capsid is:

A) a fatty membrane surrounding the virus.
B) the genetic material at the core.
C) a protein coat around the genetic material.
D) the viral offspring that rupture the cell and escape.
Question
Which of the following is the best description of a virus?

A) A virus is the smallest living thing.
B) A virus is a life-form that can reproduce inside cells or independently.
C) A virus is a tiny spore-producing cell.
D) A virus is a noncellular, replicating entity.
Question
Which statement about the relationship between bacteria and the human body is most accurate?

A) Although many tissues are kept bacteria-free, around 100 trillion bacteria live on or in us.
B) About one-tenth of our body weights are due to bacteria
C) Bacteria are found in the mouth, stomach, and intestines in about equal amounts.
D) Most bacteria are transient; that is, they come for brief periods and then are gone.
Question
In general, most antibiotics work by:

A) exploiting differences between human and bacterial cells.
B) preventing bacteria from entering human cells.
C) preventing viruses from entering human cells.
D) boosting the human immune system.
Question
Which phrase most accurately describes the genome of most viruses?

A) surprisingly complex, with tens of thousands of genes
B) surprisingly complex, with around 1 million genes
C) the same as most bacteria, with hundreds of genes
D) relatively simple, with around a dozen genes or fewer
Question
Which of the following is true of Domain Archaea compared to other groups?

A) They are the only anaerobes on Earth.
B) Their cell wall and membrane biochemistry is unique.
C) Most of their genes are similar to those found in bacteria.
D) None of their genes work like those found in eukaryotes.
Question
The antibiotic penicillin inhibits the ability of bacteria to:

A) make cell walls.
B) synthesize protein.
C) copy DNA.
D) undergo respiration.
Question
A bacterium that is pathogenic:

A) is flexible regarding use of metabolic pathways.
B) has genes similar to viruses.
C) is a disease-causing organism.
D) benefits from living inside humans and produces nutrients for us.
Question
Which organisms accomplish most of the work of converting atmospheric nitrogen into a form usable to green plants?

A) bacteria and archaea
B) viruses
C) protists
D) fungi
Question
The botulism bacterium can kill a person by:

A) killing muscle cells.
B) secreting a toxin that paralyzes muscles.
C) causing brain hemorrhages.
D) producing lethally high fevers.
Question
The process by which viruses can exchange genetic sequences to come up with a "new" virus such as H1N1 is:

A) recombination.
B) reassortment.
C) independent assortment.
D) conjugation.
Question
The life cycle of viruses involves:

A) production of new virus particles on the outside of a cell.
B) reproducing on the surface of a cell.
C) filling the host cell with viral particles.
D) attaching viral DNA to the surface of a cell.
Question
A major difference between bacteria and eukaryotes is that bacteria have:

A) a rod-shaped nucleus.
B) no membrane-bound organelles.
C) faster mitosis as their method of sexual reproduction.
D) no ribosomes.
Question
If antibiotics seem effective against a human illness, then this illness is probably caused by a/an:

A) protist.
B) autoimmune disease.
C) virus.
D) bacterium.
Question
Which of the following would support the hypothesis that bacteria have mutually beneficial relationships with us?

A) Bacteria derive benefit from waste materials in our intestines.
B) Mice that were made "germ free" did not absorb and metabolize nutrients as well.
C) Bacteria can metabolize food using alternate pathways.
D) Most intestinal bacteria cannot live outside the body.
Question
The human immunodeficiency virus targets:

A) lymph nodes.
B) all white blood cells.
C) helper T cells.
D) bone marrow cells.
Question
Which of the following would support the statement that bacteria represent the most fundamentally diverse group on Earth?

A) Bacteria exist in varieties with and without cell walls.
B) Bacteria accomplish all characteristics of life as small, single cells.
C) Bacteria are metabolically diverse regarding oxygen and food requirements.
D) Bacteria come in several different shapes.
Question
The main decomposers on Earth are the:

A) viruses and protists.
B) plants and animals.
C) bacteria and fungi.
D) plants and fungi.
Question
Chlamydomonas "mating types" differ in what way?

A) chloroplasts
B) flagella structure
C) interlocking male and female parts
D) membrane phospholipids
Question
Organisms called plasmodial slime molds move by which process?

A) beating of cilia
B) cytoplasmic streaming
C) contractile cytoskeleton movements
D) growth in the direction of sunlight
Question
Which organisms form the basic foundation of the food chain in the ocean?

A) shrimp
B) krill
C) phytoplankton
D) jellyfish
Question
Refer to the scenario below, and then answer the following question(s).
As part of your field biology independent study, you visit a small lake with an extremely high salt concentration. Searching with nets and other sampling devices, you find no fish, plants, algae, or any visible signs of life in the lake. Still, you decide to take a few samples of the water back to the lab. You find the sample teeming with very small cells, hundreds of times smaller than a typical human cell. These cells have cell walls, which you analyze chemically and find they are not made of peptidoglycan or cellulose.
Based upon the environment in which you found these life-forms, how would you categorize them?

A) thermophiles
B) halophiles
C) anaerobes
D) methanogens
Question
Bacteria are the smallest living things known.
Question
Entamoeba histolytica is a/an:

A) photosynthetic protist.
B) protist that moves using flagella.
C) parasitic protist responsible for dysentery.
D) aggregating protist that can form a "slug-like" organism.
Question
In what type of environment would you be most likely to find anaerobes?

A) high temperature
B) high acidity
C) high salt content
D) no oxygen
Question
Which of the following areas/conditions would be favored by thermophiles?

A) anaerobic conditions
B) deep-sea volcanic vents
C) the arctic tundra
D) the stomachs of herbivores
Question
Volvox and Paramecium share which characteristic?

A) photosynthetic ability
B) movement
C) true multicellularity
D) anaerobic respiration
Question
Which statement best describes our current understanding of protist evolution?

A) Protists evolved from the Archaea while other eukaryotes did not.
B) Protists evolved from multicellular eukaryotes.
C) Protists evolved from separate branches off the early eukaryotic line.
D) Protists evolved from eukaryotic parasites.
Question
Cilia are:

A) the cytoplasmic extensions or false feet that some cell types use for locomotion.
B) different kinds of cells, each designed to perform a different function.
C) the circular chromosomes of bacteria.
D) many short, hair-like cellular extensions that beat to produce movement.
Question
Cells such as those of golden algae that form stable associations but do not take on specialized roles are described as:

A) incomplete unicellular.
B) selective multicellularity.
C) true multicellularity.
D) colonial multicellularity.
Question
Refer to the scenario below, and then answer the following question(s).
As part of your field biology independent study, you visit a small lake with an extremely high salt concentration. Searching with nets and other sampling devices, you find no fish, plants, algae, or any visible signs of life in the lake. Still, you decide to take a few samples of the water back to the lab. You find the sample teeming with very small cells, hundreds of times smaller than a typical human cell. These cells have cell walls, which you analyze chemically and find they are not made of peptidoglycan or cellulose.
Based upon the chemical experiments you performed, how would you classify these life-forms?

A) protists
B) fungi
C) bacteria
D) archaea
Question
The core of some viruses is carbohydrate in nature.
Question
What is the benefit of sexual reproduction in protists?

A) greater variation among offspring
B) fast increase in numbers
C) availability of more environments
D) ease of finding a mate
Question
Plasmodium falciparum is a protozoan that:

A) can switch between plant and animal lifestyles.
B) is closely related to fungi.
C) causes malaria.
D) causes intestinal distress.
Question
Microscopic algae and bacteria produce over half of the oxygen in the atmosphere.
Question
A protist such as Chlamydomonas may switch to sexual reproduction when:

A) there are numerous predators.
B) there is little nutrition.
C) a 90-day cycle is completed.
D) hormones from nearby members of the species are detected.
Question
An example of a protist intestinal parasite would be:

A) Clostridium botulinum.
B) Yersinia pestis.
C) Chlamydomonas.
D) Giardia.
Question
Amoeba and phytoplankton differ in that phytoplankton can:

A) perform photosynthesis.
B) eat krill.
C) move with pseudopodia.
D) live on land.
Question
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Ribosome
Question
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Bacillus
Question
Nearly half the antibiotics used in the United States go into animal feed as growth stimulants.
Question
The simplest eukaryotes are the bacteria.
Question
Some bacteria can obtain their nutrition by photosynthesis.
Question
A long, whip-like tail found in a protist is called a flagellum.
Question
Bacteria are considered to be a type of protist.
Question
Rod-shaped bacteria are called spirochetes.
Question
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Fatty membrane called an envelope
Question
When a virus takes over the machinery of a cell, it forces the cell to manufacture more viral particles.
Question
When bacteria undergo binary fission, they produce identical daughter cells.
Question
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Nucleus
Question
Malaria is caused by a bacterium.
Question
Most bacteria present in the human intestines are pathogenic.
Question
Most protists are unicellular.
Question
Scientists do not consider viruses to be alive because viruses cannot metabolize outside a host cell.
Question
Paramecium is a heterotrophic protist that moves using cilia.
Question
Spherical bacteria are called cocci.
Question
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Coccus
Question
Bacteria store their DNA within a spherical nucleus.
Question
Protists are arguably the most diverse of the eukaryotic kingdoms. Defend that statement using examples to support your ideas.
Question
Scientists mostly agree that viruses are not technically living things. Defend this position based on what you know about what viruses are and how they work.
Question
Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s). <strong>Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s).   The missing label indicated by a 1 corresponds to the:</strong> A) receptor. B) capsid. C) RNA. D) envelope. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The missing label indicated by a "1" corresponds to the:

A) receptor.
B) capsid.
C) RNA.
D) envelope.
Question
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
Thrives in salty environments
Question
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
H1N1 virus
Question
Some protists have locomotor extensions called ________ and ________.
Question
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
Dictyostelium discoideum
Question
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
"False foot"
Question
Defend the position that bacteria are both beneficial and detrimental to humans.
Question
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
"Other-eater"
Question
Photosynthetic aquatic microorganisms, such as some bacteria and protists, are known as ________.
Question
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
Thrives in hot environments
Question
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
Paramecium
Question
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
The bacterium Yersinia pestis
Question
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
Volvox
Question
Virus-like entities called viroids lack a ________ and are simply strands of infectious RNA.
Question
Overuse of antibiotics has likely produced MRSA. MRSA stands for ________.
Question
Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s). <strong>Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s).   The missing label indicated by a 2 corresponds to the:</strong> A) receptor. B) capsid. C) RNA. D) envelope. <div style=padding-top: 35px>
The missing label indicated by a "2" corresponds to the:

A) receptor.
B) capsid.
C) RNA.
D) envelope.
Question
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
Lives without oxygen
Question
Methanogens are in the ________ category of extremophile.
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Deck 21: Viruses, Bacteria, Archaea, and Protists: the Diversity of Life 1
1
Bacteria that benefit from living in or on us while we are unaffected by the relationship are termed:

A) commensal.
B) pathogenic.
C) mutualistic.
D) probiotic.
A
2
The material in the core of HIV (AIDS virus) is:

A) protein.
B) xarbohydrate.
C) DNA.
D) RNA.
D
3
The viral capsid is:

A) a fatty membrane surrounding the virus.
B) the genetic material at the core.
C) a protein coat around the genetic material.
D) the viral offspring that rupture the cell and escape.
C
4
Which of the following is the best description of a virus?

A) A virus is the smallest living thing.
B) A virus is a life-form that can reproduce inside cells or independently.
C) A virus is a tiny spore-producing cell.
D) A virus is a noncellular, replicating entity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which statement about the relationship between bacteria and the human body is most accurate?

A) Although many tissues are kept bacteria-free, around 100 trillion bacteria live on or in us.
B) About one-tenth of our body weights are due to bacteria
C) Bacteria are found in the mouth, stomach, and intestines in about equal amounts.
D) Most bacteria are transient; that is, they come for brief periods and then are gone.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In general, most antibiotics work by:

A) exploiting differences between human and bacterial cells.
B) preventing bacteria from entering human cells.
C) preventing viruses from entering human cells.
D) boosting the human immune system.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which phrase most accurately describes the genome of most viruses?

A) surprisingly complex, with tens of thousands of genes
B) surprisingly complex, with around 1 million genes
C) the same as most bacteria, with hundreds of genes
D) relatively simple, with around a dozen genes or fewer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Which of the following is true of Domain Archaea compared to other groups?

A) They are the only anaerobes on Earth.
B) Their cell wall and membrane biochemistry is unique.
C) Most of their genes are similar to those found in bacteria.
D) None of their genes work like those found in eukaryotes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The antibiotic penicillin inhibits the ability of bacteria to:

A) make cell walls.
B) synthesize protein.
C) copy DNA.
D) undergo respiration.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
A bacterium that is pathogenic:

A) is flexible regarding use of metabolic pathways.
B) has genes similar to viruses.
C) is a disease-causing organism.
D) benefits from living inside humans and produces nutrients for us.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Which organisms accomplish most of the work of converting atmospheric nitrogen into a form usable to green plants?

A) bacteria and archaea
B) viruses
C) protists
D) fungi
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The botulism bacterium can kill a person by:

A) killing muscle cells.
B) secreting a toxin that paralyzes muscles.
C) causing brain hemorrhages.
D) producing lethally high fevers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The process by which viruses can exchange genetic sequences to come up with a "new" virus such as H1N1 is:

A) recombination.
B) reassortment.
C) independent assortment.
D) conjugation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The life cycle of viruses involves:

A) production of new virus particles on the outside of a cell.
B) reproducing on the surface of a cell.
C) filling the host cell with viral particles.
D) attaching viral DNA to the surface of a cell.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
A major difference between bacteria and eukaryotes is that bacteria have:

A) a rod-shaped nucleus.
B) no membrane-bound organelles.
C) faster mitosis as their method of sexual reproduction.
D) no ribosomes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
If antibiotics seem effective against a human illness, then this illness is probably caused by a/an:

A) protist.
B) autoimmune disease.
C) virus.
D) bacterium.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Which of the following would support the hypothesis that bacteria have mutually beneficial relationships with us?

A) Bacteria derive benefit from waste materials in our intestines.
B) Mice that were made "germ free" did not absorb and metabolize nutrients as well.
C) Bacteria can metabolize food using alternate pathways.
D) Most intestinal bacteria cannot live outside the body.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The human immunodeficiency virus targets:

A) lymph nodes.
B) all white blood cells.
C) helper T cells.
D) bone marrow cells.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which of the following would support the statement that bacteria represent the most fundamentally diverse group on Earth?

A) Bacteria exist in varieties with and without cell walls.
B) Bacteria accomplish all characteristics of life as small, single cells.
C) Bacteria are metabolically diverse regarding oxygen and food requirements.
D) Bacteria come in several different shapes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The main decomposers on Earth are the:

A) viruses and protists.
B) plants and animals.
C) bacteria and fungi.
D) plants and fungi.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Chlamydomonas "mating types" differ in what way?

A) chloroplasts
B) flagella structure
C) interlocking male and female parts
D) membrane phospholipids
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Organisms called plasmodial slime molds move by which process?

A) beating of cilia
B) cytoplasmic streaming
C) contractile cytoskeleton movements
D) growth in the direction of sunlight
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Which organisms form the basic foundation of the food chain in the ocean?

A) shrimp
B) krill
C) phytoplankton
D) jellyfish
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Refer to the scenario below, and then answer the following question(s).
As part of your field biology independent study, you visit a small lake with an extremely high salt concentration. Searching with nets and other sampling devices, you find no fish, plants, algae, or any visible signs of life in the lake. Still, you decide to take a few samples of the water back to the lab. You find the sample teeming with very small cells, hundreds of times smaller than a typical human cell. These cells have cell walls, which you analyze chemically and find they are not made of peptidoglycan or cellulose.
Based upon the environment in which you found these life-forms, how would you categorize them?

A) thermophiles
B) halophiles
C) anaerobes
D) methanogens
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Bacteria are the smallest living things known.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Entamoeba histolytica is a/an:

A) photosynthetic protist.
B) protist that moves using flagella.
C) parasitic protist responsible for dysentery.
D) aggregating protist that can form a "slug-like" organism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In what type of environment would you be most likely to find anaerobes?

A) high temperature
B) high acidity
C) high salt content
D) no oxygen
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Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following areas/conditions would be favored by thermophiles?

A) anaerobic conditions
B) deep-sea volcanic vents
C) the arctic tundra
D) the stomachs of herbivores
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Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Volvox and Paramecium share which characteristic?

A) photosynthetic ability
B) movement
C) true multicellularity
D) anaerobic respiration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which statement best describes our current understanding of protist evolution?

A) Protists evolved from the Archaea while other eukaryotes did not.
B) Protists evolved from multicellular eukaryotes.
C) Protists evolved from separate branches off the early eukaryotic line.
D) Protists evolved from eukaryotic parasites.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Cilia are:

A) the cytoplasmic extensions or false feet that some cell types use for locomotion.
B) different kinds of cells, each designed to perform a different function.
C) the circular chromosomes of bacteria.
D) many short, hair-like cellular extensions that beat to produce movement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Cells such as those of golden algae that form stable associations but do not take on specialized roles are described as:

A) incomplete unicellular.
B) selective multicellularity.
C) true multicellularity.
D) colonial multicellularity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Refer to the scenario below, and then answer the following question(s).
As part of your field biology independent study, you visit a small lake with an extremely high salt concentration. Searching with nets and other sampling devices, you find no fish, plants, algae, or any visible signs of life in the lake. Still, you decide to take a few samples of the water back to the lab. You find the sample teeming with very small cells, hundreds of times smaller than a typical human cell. These cells have cell walls, which you analyze chemically and find they are not made of peptidoglycan or cellulose.
Based upon the chemical experiments you performed, how would you classify these life-forms?

A) protists
B) fungi
C) bacteria
D) archaea
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The core of some viruses is carbohydrate in nature.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
What is the benefit of sexual reproduction in protists?

A) greater variation among offspring
B) fast increase in numbers
C) availability of more environments
D) ease of finding a mate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Plasmodium falciparum is a protozoan that:

A) can switch between plant and animal lifestyles.
B) is closely related to fungi.
C) causes malaria.
D) causes intestinal distress.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Microscopic algae and bacteria produce over half of the oxygen in the atmosphere.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A protist such as Chlamydomonas may switch to sexual reproduction when:

A) there are numerous predators.
B) there is little nutrition.
C) a 90-day cycle is completed.
D) hormones from nearby members of the species are detected.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
An example of a protist intestinal parasite would be:

A) Clostridium botulinum.
B) Yersinia pestis.
C) Chlamydomonas.
D) Giardia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Amoeba and phytoplankton differ in that phytoplankton can:

A) perform photosynthesis.
B) eat krill.
C) move with pseudopodia.
D) live on land.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Ribosome
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Bacillus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Nearly half the antibiotics used in the United States go into animal feed as growth stimulants.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 80 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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44
The simplest eukaryotes are the bacteria.
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45
Some bacteria can obtain their nutrition by photosynthesis.
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46
A long, whip-like tail found in a protist is called a flagellum.
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47
Bacteria are considered to be a type of protist.
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48
Rod-shaped bacteria are called spirochetes.
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49
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Fatty membrane called an envelope
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50
When a virus takes over the machinery of a cell, it forces the cell to manufacture more viral particles.
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51
When bacteria undergo binary fission, they produce identical daughter cells.
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52
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Nucleus
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53
Malaria is caused by a bacterium.
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54
Most bacteria present in the human intestines are pathogenic.
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55
Most protists are unicellular.
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56
Scientists do not consider viruses to be alive because viruses cannot metabolize outside a host cell.
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57
Paramecium is a heterotrophic protist that moves using cilia.
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58
Spherical bacteria are called cocci.
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59
Match the following.

A) rod-shaped bacteria
B) structure found in many viruses, often "borrowed" from the host cell
C) round-shaped bacteria
D) organelle not found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
E) type of organelle found in both bacteria and eukaryotes
Coccus
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60
Bacteria store their DNA within a spherical nucleus.
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61
Protists are arguably the most diverse of the eukaryotic kingdoms. Defend that statement using examples to support your ideas.
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62
Scientists mostly agree that viruses are not technically living things. Defend this position based on what you know about what viruses are and how they work.
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63
Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s). <strong>Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s).   The missing label indicated by a 1 corresponds to the:</strong> A) receptor. B) capsid. C) RNA. D) envelope.
The missing label indicated by a "1" corresponds to the:

A) receptor.
B) capsid.
C) RNA.
D) envelope.
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64
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
Thrives in salty environments
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65
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
H1N1 virus
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66
Some protists have locomotor extensions called ________ and ________.
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67
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
Dictyostelium discoideum
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68
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
"False foot"
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69
Defend the position that bacteria are both beneficial and detrimental to humans.
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70
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
"Other-eater"
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71
Photosynthetic aquatic microorganisms, such as some bacteria and protists, are known as ________.
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72
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
Thrives in hot environments
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73
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
Paramecium
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74
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
The bacterium Yersinia pestis
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75
Match the following.

A) bubonic plague
B) "social amoeba"
C) a Type-A influenza
D) ciliated protist
E) truly multicellular algae
Volvox
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76
Virus-like entities called viroids lack a ________ and are simply strands of infectious RNA.
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77
Overuse of antibiotics has likely produced MRSA. MRSA stands for ________.
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78
Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s). <strong>Refer to the figure below, and then answer the following question(s).   The missing label indicated by a 2 corresponds to the:</strong> A) receptor. B) capsid. C) RNA. D) envelope.
The missing label indicated by a "2" corresponds to the:

A) receptor.
B) capsid.
C) RNA.
D) envelope.
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79
Match the following.

A) thermophile
B) anaerobe
C) halophile
D) pseudopod
E) heterotroph
Lives without oxygen
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80
Methanogens are in the ________ category of extremophile.
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