Monera and Virus Review
1. Why are
bacteria classified in their own kingdom and not with plants, animals,
protists, or fungi?
2. What features
are shared by prokaryotes?
3. What feature(s)
might cause cyanobacteria to be classified as plants
by some taxonomists?
4. Describe three
shapes that bacteria can have.
5. Why is endospore formation important to bacteria?
6. Describe binary
fission.
7. What is
conjugation in monerans? Why is it important?
8. How is
conjugation different from transformation?
9. A protective
slime coat around some species of bacterium known as a ____ makes them more
capable of causing disease.
10. Why are monerans considered more primitive than protists?
11. What is the
difference between a saprobe and a parasite?
12. How do
obligate aerobes differ from facultative aerobes?
13. _____ are organisms that die in the presence of oxygen.
14. Monerans
belong to a group of organisms known as prokaryotes. Discuss the differences
between eukaryotes and prokaryotes in terms of cell wall, nuclear membrane, and
chromosomes.
15. Why does dried
or salted food resist spoiling by bacteria?
16. Give specific
examples showing the importance of microbial sterility in
a) your kitchen
b) a microbiology lab
17. Describe the
results if all bacteria died.
18. Why is there
controversy as to whether a virus is living or non-living?
19. Could you
accept the hypothesis that viruses were the precursors to life on this planet?
Explain.
20. What are the
main parts of a virus?
21. Suppose you
were trying to develop a way to stop a virus from infecting a cell. How could
this be done?
22. Describe how
viruses can be spread.
23. The shape of a
virus is determined by its _____.
24. Do viruses and
bacteria cause disease in the same way? Explain.
25. Do you think
viral infections are difficult to treat? Why or why not?
26. How is it that
a virus is quite specific in the type of cell that it can infect?