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k in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Gre Growth’ & Spoil Banks ssignment: se the supplied data & your lab handout to calculate Shannon-Weiner Diversity Indices & Schoener’s Community Similarity Index nswer the questions on assignment sheet (bac of room, or on the course website)

This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

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Page 1: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks,‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks

- your assignment:1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout to calculate Shannon-Weiner Diversity Indices & Schoener’s Community Similarity Index2) Answer the questions on assignment sheet (back of room, or on the course website)

Page 2: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Last day… we were discussing the major changes occurring during the history of life, including mass extinctions

Page 3: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Luis and Walter Alvarez

Included the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-T) extinction event that wiped out dinosaurs and much more

Page 4: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

The K-T extinction was not the worst ever…

- late in Permian, massive volcanic eruptions causing lava flows, ash, and cooling of climate- extensive glaciation- turn-over of ocean waters brings oxygen depleted water, CO2 and hydrogen sulfide to surface

Extinction of most living species (>90% of marine spp.), and end of Paleozoic era.

Page 5: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

History of life characterized by great changes in flora and fauna due to extinction & evolution

- response to mobile continents & constantly changing climate

Fossil record incomplete, but does document many sweeping changes in living things

*Required*reading: Chapt.25, pp. 507-524

Page 6: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

This long history of life has resulted in an enormous diversity of organisms on the planet

- we will try to survey some of this diversity...

Page 7: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Traditionally, organisms classified as plants or animals

(Kingdoms Plantae & Animalia)

- but many species do not fit readily into these categories...

- a five kingdom system became popular after 1969

Page 8: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

- but still does not reflect relationships well, or do justice todiversity of smaller organisms...

A three domain system is a starting point for organizing all of these species: Bacteria, Archaea, & Eukarya

Page 9: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

The first two domains are traditionally grouped as ‘prokaryotes’:

- simpler internal structure than eukaryotic cells (no nucleus or other membrane enclosed organelles

such as mitochondria)

Page 10: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Generally tiny (1-5 m), though some only... tiny

Page 11: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Found almost everywhere...- soil, water, in & on other organisms- places too hot or cold or inhospitable for most life- usually do require moisture

Page 12: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Most ‘prokaryotes’ are unicellular, a few may be colonial- come in various shapes, especially cocci, bacilli, and

spiral forms

Page 13: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Normally have a cell wall - protects, maintains shape &prevents bursting in hypotonic conditions

Cell walls contain peptidoglycan (sugars linked by peptides)

- thick outer layer in gram positive bacteria, thinner layerbetween membranes in gram negative

Page 14: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Some are covered with sticky capsule (polysaccharide or protein)

- helps stick to surfaces, protects

Page 15: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Some use fimbriae (short, hairlike) to stick to each other or surface

Page 16: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

May also use pilus (pl. pili) to hold on, or to exchange DNA- horizontal gene transfer

Page 17: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

About 50% are capable of directional motion, sometimes ‘fast’- rotation of basal apparatus moves flagella

Taxis: movement toward (or away from) chemicals, conspecifics, etc.

Page 18: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Lack organelles, but may have membranes from infoldingsof plasma membrane

Page 19: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

‘Prokaryotes’ have single, circular ‘chromosome’- few associated proteins

May also have smaller DNA rings called plasmids that often carry ‘specialized’ genes (e.g. antibiotic resistance)

Page 20: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Reproduction is by binary fission, some can divide every 20 minutes

Page 21: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Under unfavourable conditions, some spp. produce endospores

- chromosome copied & surrounded by tough wall, water removed, spore can remain dormant for centuries

Page 22: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

‘Prokaryotes’ exploit a wider range of resources than alleukaryotes combined

Page 23: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

‘Prokaryotes’ may be obligate aerobes (require O2 for aerobic respiration), facultative anaerobes (use O2 when available, or fermentation if not) or obligate anaerobes (must use fermentation or anaerobic respiration)

All organisms require nitrogen to make proteins, etc.,but only certain prokaryotes can fix N2 toproduce ammonia NH3 (nitrogen fixation)

Page 24: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Some ‘prokaryotes’ form colonies, and may show cooperation or specialization

- some cyanobacteria have specialized cells for photosynthesis and nitrogen fixation

Page 25: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Bacteria that produce dental plaque grow as colony to form resistant coating

Page 26: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Discussing ‘prokaryotes’ as if one uniform group, but far from true...

- paraphyletic grouping, Archaea closer to eukaryotes thanbacteria

Page 27: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Bacteria & Archaea share some ancestral traits

Archaea & Eukarya share some derived traits

Each domain may also show some unique traits

Page 28: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Each group also shows great diversity within...

Page 29: This week in lab: sampled trees in 2 habitats at Green Oaks, ‘Old Growth’ & Spoil Banks - your assignment: 1) Use the supplied data & your lab handout

Archaea seem to be less abundant, and often found in extreme environments where other organisms cannot live (e.g. thermophiles, halophiles, methanogens), but new types still being found