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Adaptive Radiation: A process in evolution where organisms diversify rapidly into a wide variety of forms to adapt to different environments.
Adaptive radiation is the opposite of mass extinction.
Mass extinction: extraordinary, sudden, and temporary changes in the environment causes species to die on a huge scale
Background extinctions: normal environmental change, emerging disease, predation, or competition reduces populations to zero. This normally happens and is different from a mass extinction.
If the actual rate of extinction is much greater than the background extinction rate, then it may be a mass extinction event.
Bacteria vs. Archaea
Bacteria
Peptidoglycan cell wall
Archaea
No peptidoglycan
Has unique phospholipids in their cell wall
Bacteria
Simple transcription and translation processes
Archaea
More complex transcription and translation processes
Bacteria
Commonly heterotrophic or autotrophic
Archaea
Often extremophiles (thermophiles, halophiles)
Bacteria
Found in a variety of environments (soil, water, human body)
Some pathogenic
Archaea
Often found in extreme environments (hot springs, salt lakes)
Generally non-pathogenic
Bacteria
Diverged early in the tree of life
More diverse in terms of species
Archaea
Closer to eukaryotes in evolutionary terms
Less diverse than bacteria
Bacteria and Archaea share similarities in being unicellular and having circular DNA, but differ significantly in cell structure, metabolism, habitat, and evolutionary relationships.
Prokaryotes are pretty much found everywhere on Earth and greatly outnumber eukaryotes.
Virulence: the ability of an organism to cause disease. Virulence is heritable and varies from individual to individual
Endospore: tough thick-walled dormant structures formed by prokaryotes during times of environmental stress to protect themselves
Transformation — a cell dies and another cell sucks up the DNA left behind
Transduction — a virus transfers DNA from one cell to another
Conjugation — a tube transfers DNA from one cell to another
Size varies greatly
Shape varies greatly
Methods of motility varies (the way that the prokaryote moves)
Gram positive bacteria — bacteria that has a thicker peptidoglycan cell wall. Turns purple/blue during gram staining.
Gram negative bacteria — bacteria that has a thinner peptidoglycan cell wall and an outer membrane. Turns pink/red during gram staining.
The extra outer membrane of gram negative bacteria makes it significantly harder to treat with antibiotics.
Adaptive Radiation: A process in evolution where organisms diversify rapidly into a wide variety of forms to adapt to different environments.
Adaptive radiation is the opposite of mass extinction.
Mass extinction: extraordinary, sudden, and temporary changes in the environment causes species to die on a huge scale
Background extinctions: normal environmental change, emerging disease, predation, or competition reduces populations to zero. This normally happens and is different from a mass extinction.
If the actual rate of extinction is much greater than the background extinction rate, then it may be a mass extinction event.
Bacteria vs. Archaea
Bacteria
Peptidoglycan cell wall
Archaea
No peptidoglycan
Has unique phospholipids in their cell wall
Bacteria
Simple transcription and translation processes
Archaea
More complex transcription and translation processes
Bacteria
Commonly heterotrophic or autotrophic
Archaea
Often extremophiles (thermophiles, halophiles)
Bacteria
Found in a variety of environments (soil, water, human body)
Some pathogenic
Archaea
Often found in extreme environments (hot springs, salt lakes)
Generally non-pathogenic
Bacteria
Diverged early in the tree of life
More diverse in terms of species
Archaea
Closer to eukaryotes in evolutionary terms
Less diverse than bacteria
Bacteria and Archaea share similarities in being unicellular and having circular DNA, but differ significantly in cell structure, metabolism, habitat, and evolutionary relationships.
Prokaryotes are pretty much found everywhere on Earth and greatly outnumber eukaryotes.
Virulence: the ability of an organism to cause disease. Virulence is heritable and varies from individual to individual
Endospore: tough thick-walled dormant structures formed by prokaryotes during times of environmental stress to protect themselves
Transformation — a cell dies and another cell sucks up the DNA left behind
Transduction — a virus transfers DNA from one cell to another
Conjugation — a tube transfers DNA from one cell to another
Size varies greatly
Shape varies greatly
Methods of motility varies (the way that the prokaryote moves)
Gram positive bacteria — bacteria that has a thicker peptidoglycan cell wall. Turns purple/blue during gram staining.
Gram negative bacteria — bacteria that has a thinner peptidoglycan cell wall and an outer membrane. Turns pink/red during gram staining.
The extra outer membrane of gram negative bacteria makes it significantly harder to treat with antibiotics.