Six Kingdom Notes Characteristics Chart Kingdom Archaebacteria Cell

Six Kingdom Notes

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Archaebacteria Cell Type Prokaryotes Cell Structures Have cell walls that lack peptidoglycan Body Form Nutrition Examples Methanogens, halophiles

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Archaebacteria Cell Type Prokaryotes Cell Structures Have cell walls that lack peptidoglycan Body Form Unicellular Nutrition Examples Methanogens, halophies

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Archaebacteria Cell Type Prokaryotes Cell Structures Have cell walls that lack peptidoglycan Body Form Unicellular Nutrition Autotrophic or heterotrophic Examples Methanogens, halophiles, sulfolobus

Reproduction Asexual: Binary Fission

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Eubacteria Cell Type Cell Structures Have cell walls made up of peptidoglycan Body Form Unicellular Nutrition Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Examples

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Eubacteria Cell Type Prokaryotes Cell Structures Have cell walls made up of peptidoglycan Body Form Unicellular Nutrition Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Examples

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Eubacteria Cell Type Prokaryotes Cell Structures Have cell walls made up of peptidoglycan Body Form Unicellular Nutrition Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Examples Streptococcus, E. Coli, Staphylococcus

Reproduction Asexual: Binary Fission

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Protista Cell Type Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, some have chloroplasts Body Form Nutrition Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Examples Ameba, paramecium

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Protista Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, some have chloroplasts Body Form Nutrition Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Examples Ameba, paramecium

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Protista Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, some have chloroplasts Body Form Mostly unicellular, some multicellular Nutrition Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Examples Amoeba, paramecium, euglena

Reproduction Mostly Asexual: Binary fission, Some sexual: Conjugation

Characteristics Chart Fungi Kingdom Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, but no chloroplasts, have a cell wall made of chitin Body Form Most multicellular, some unicellular Nutrition Examples

Characteristics Chart Fungi Kingdom Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a cell wall made of chitin Body Form Most multicellular, some unicellular Nutrition Heterotrophic (absorption) Examples

Characteristics Chart Fungi Kingdom Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, but no chloroplasts, have a cell wall made of chitin Body Form Most multicellular, some unicellular Nutrition Heterotrophic (decomposers) Examples Yeast, molds, mushrooms

Reproduction Mostly Asexual: Binary Fission & Spores

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Plantae Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a cell wall made of cellulose Body Form Nutrition Examples Mosses, ferns, flower plants, seaweeds

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Plantae Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts, have a cell wall made of cellulose Body Form Multicellular Nutrition Examples Mosses, ferns, flower plants, oak trees

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Plantae Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts, have a cell wall made of cellulose Body Form Multicellular Nutrition Autotrophic (process? ) Examples Mosses, ferns, flower plants, seaweeds

Reproduction Mostly Sexual: sperm(pollen) & egg (ovule) Some: Asexual: spores, budding, regeneration

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Animalia Cell Type Cell Structures Body Form Multicellular Nutrition Heterotrophic Examples

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Cell Type Animalia Eukaryotes Cell Structures Body Form Multicellular Nutrition Heterotrophic Examples

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Animalia Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have no cell wall Body Form Multicellular Nutrition Heterotrophic Examples

Characteristics Chart Kingdom Animalia Cell Type Eukaryotes Cell Structures Have a nucleus, mitochondria, but no chloroplasts, have no cell wall Body Form Multicellular Nutrition Heterotrophic Examples Sponges, worms, snails, insects, fish, mammals, birds,

Reproduction Mostly Sexual: sperm & egg Some are Asexual: budding, regeneration , fragmentation

Diagram

Dichotomous Keying • Used to identify organisms • Characteristics given in pairs • Read both characteristics and either go to another set of characteristics OR identify the organism 28

Example of Dichotomous Key • 1 a Tentacles present – Go to 2 • 1 b Tentacles absent – Go to 3 • 2 a Eight Tentacles – Octopus • 2 b More than 8 tentacles – 3 • 3 a Tentacles hang down – go to 4 • 3 b Tentacles upright–Sea Anemone • 4 a Balloon-shaped body–Jellyfish • 4 b Body NOT balloon-shaped - 5 29

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