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193 Terms

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systematics

the study of diversification and relationships

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taxonomy

the naming of groups of organisms

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classification

assigning organisms to hierarchical groups

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taxon

(pl. taxa) a named group of organisms

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phylogeny

evolutionary history

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linnaean classification from largest to smallest

domain, kingdom, phylum, class. order family, genus, species

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how do you correctly write names of taxa

if typed = italics

if written = underlined

frst word capitalized, second lowercase

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clade

a lineage of ALL organisms descended from a common ancestor ex= mammals

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grade

a group of organisms that share similarities but not because of a common ancestor or it excludes some descendants. ex= marine vertebrates

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monophyletic

a lineage with a single common ancestor ex = mammals

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paraphyletic

a lineage including some but not all descendants of a common ancestor; NOT A CLADE ex = reptiles (excluding birds); a common ancestor but not all of its descendants

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polyphyletic

a lineage or trait that is found in independent lineages; NOT A CLADE; ex = flying animals (birds, bats, insects)

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sister taxa

groups that share an immediate common ancestor and diverged from that ancestor at the same time

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branch points

the representation on a phylogenetic tree of the divergence of two or more taxa from a common ancestor

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rooted trees

the common lineage from which all the species on the tree are derived is indicated at the base of the tree

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convergent evolution

the independent evolution of similar features in different lineages or analogous traits

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divergent evolution

evolution of one or more closely related species into different species; resulting from adaptations to different environmental conditions or homologous traits; ex = Darwin's finches

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apomorphic

derived characteristic

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plesiomorphic

ancestral characteristic

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synapomorphic

shared derived "characteristics"

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symplesiomorphic

shared ancestral characteristic

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autapomorphic

an unshared, derived characteristic

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features of a prokaryotic organism

no nucleus, no membrane bound organelles, no mitochondria, no chloroplasts, no cytoskeleton,

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do prokaryotes form a clade? why?

no, because they share the ancestral characteristic of lacking a nucleus

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why are viruses not considered to be alive?

because they cannot live without a host

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prokaryotic domains

Bacteria and Archaea

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explain the relationship between archaea, bacteria, and eukarya

eukarya and archaea are more closely related than bacteria.

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coccus

spherical shaped cell

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bacillus

rod like cell

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spirillum

spiral

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gram positive

purple = bacteria = peptidoglycan

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gram negative

pink = archaea = psuedopeptidoglycan

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fimbrae

hair like protein structures that are used to attach

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pili

used to transfer plasmids during conjugation of horizontal gene transfer

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endospores

way of resistance for bacteria; shell like structure

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capsules

gluey outside layer that acts as a shell or a mask

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why are flagella in prokaryotes and eukaryotes analogous?

they work differently and did not come from a shared common ancestor; and derived differently

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horizontal gene transfer

genetic info passed from on cell to another

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transformation

plasmids from environment

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conjugation

plasmids passed via pili

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transduction

virus mediated gene transfer

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positive taxis

movement towards a stimulus

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negative taxis

movement away from a stimulus

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prokaryotes have more metabolic diversity. why?

they can feed by being heterotroph, autotroph, photoheterotrophs, photoautotrophs, chemoautotrophs, mixotrophs

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pathenogenic

most famous for bacteria; causing harm

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free living

dont have a permanent association with a host

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mutualistic

2 organisms where both benefit from the association

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decomposers

breakdown dead biomass

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biofilms

communities of organisms that grow together

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based on endosymbiont theory, where did mitochondria and cholorplasts come from?

mitochondria = alphaproteobacteria

chloroplasts = cyanobacteria

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major groups of archaea

Eukarychaeota

Crenarchaeota

Korarchaeota

Nanoarchaeota

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major groups of bacteria

proteobacteria, chlamydias, spirochetes, cyanobacteria, gram positive bacteria

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synapomorphies shared by eukaryotes?

cells with nuclei, membrane bound organelles, sexual life cycles, linear chromosomes, mitochondria

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is zygotic meiosis haploid or diploid dominant

haploid

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is gametic meiosis haploid or diploid dominant

diploid

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how is photosynthesis within eukaryotes polyphyletic?

through multiple endosymbiosis events throughout lineage but they all happened separately

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Horseshoe crabs (Phylum Arthropoda, Class Xiphosura) have exhibited very little morphological change over 450 million years of evolution and are considered "living fossils". This is an example of ___.

Bradytely

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t or f: prokaryotes are a valid taxon

false

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Bacteria and archaea don't have nuclei or other membrane-bound organelles. This character state is:

Symplesiomorphic

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Relative to Archaea and Bacteria, having membrane-bound organelles is a(n) for Eukarya

autapomorphy

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Protists are:

paraphyletic

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Which of the following phyla has NO photosynthetic members?

Apicomplexa

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Select all of the COENOCYTIC clades of Fungi
Lichenized fungi
Chytridiomycota
Ascomycota
Imperfect fungi
Basidiomycota
Zygomycota
Glomeromycota

chytridiomycota
zygomycota
glomeromycota

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Which of the following phyla has NO known sexual members?
Zygomycota
Ascomycota
Chytridiomycota
Glomeromycota
Basidiomycota

glomeromycota

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Which of the following phyla have flagellated members?
Glomeromycota
Chytridiomycota
Zygomycota

chytridiomycota

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Bd is a fungal pathogen of amphibians in which phylum?
Chytridiomycota
Glomeromycota
Zygomycota

chytridiomycota

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The fastest acceleration in the world has been attributed to the fungus Pilobolus. What phylum is Pilobolus in?
Chytridiomycota
Zygomycota
Glomeromycota

zygomycota

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Why are the fertile hyphae of zygomycetes called "+" and "-"?

Because they are chemically interfertile

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What is the habitat of Pilobolus?

Horse manure

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Glomeromycetes engage in [ BLANK ] relationships with [BLANK]

mutualistic, plants

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T or F: Fungi represent a monophyletic kingdom

true

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Which of the following are crown eukaryote kingdoms? Select all that apply.
Archaea
Plantae
Protista
Excavata
Fungi
SAR
Animalia

plantae, animalia, fungi

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Fungi share which of the following characteristics? Select all that apply
Zygotic meiosis
Chitinous cell walls
Heterotrophic by assimilation
Unicellular
Heterotrophic by ingestion
Reproduce by spores
Multicellular

zygotic meiosis
chitinous cell walls
heterotrophic by assimilation
reproduce by spores

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Which of the following phyla are septate?
Glomeromycota
Basidiomycota
Ascomycota
Chytridiomycota
Zygomycota

Basidiomycota
ascomycota

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About how old is the "humongous fungus" (order of magnitude)?
10

000s of years
100

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Which of the following macrofungi are basidiomycetes?
Pore fungi
Chanterelles
Gilled mushrooms
Cup fungi
Puffballs
Rust fungi
Morels

pore fungi
chanterelles
gilled mushrooms
puffballs
rust fungi

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pileus

cap

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lamellae

gills

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annulus

ring

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stipe

stalk

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how many basidiospores does a basidium produce

4

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how many ascospores does an ascus usually produce

8

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Cordyceps

the ant-killer fungus

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Select all that apply. Lichens are symbiotic relationships between fungi and:
Diatoms
Cyanobacteria
Red algae
Green algae
Plants

cyanobacteria
green algae

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Spores produced by mitosis are called:

conidia

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Which of the following genera is NOT imperfect?

cordyceps

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The largest phylum of fungi (number of species) is:

ascomycota

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Select all of the characteristics shared by ALL animals.
Chitinous cell walls
Cellulose cell walls
Heterotrophic by assimilation
Multicellular
Gametic meiosis
Zygotic meiosis
Locomotion
Heterotrophic by ingestion

multicellular
gametic meiosis
locomotion
heterotrophic by ingestion

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blasocoel

space inside the blastula

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morula

solid ball of cells

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blastospore

point of invagination

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archenteron

space formed by invagination of the blastospore

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zygote

first diploid cell

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diploblastic

having two germ layers

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in deuterostomes the blastospore becomes

the anus

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pinacocytes

provide shape and structure to exterior

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amoebocytes

carry materials around through the mesohyl

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choanocytes

ingestion of food particles

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porocytes

allow for water entry in ascon sponges

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desmospongiae

largest class of sponges