Theme 2: Living Beings and Their Classifications—Microorganisms

Conceptual Map

Taxonomy

KINGDOMS

Monera Protoctista Fungi Plantae Animalia

Protozoa Algae

Lichens

THE CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING THINGS

In order for scientists to study the millions of species that exist, they need to order them in groups, or classify them. Taxonomy is the science that studies and practices the classification of living things.

Taxonomic Rank:


THE FIVE KINGDOMS

KINGDOMS / MONERA / PROTOCTISTA / FUNGI / PLANTAE / ANIMALIA
CHARACTERISTICS / Does not have a defined cell nucleus (prokaryotes). Unicellular. Autotrophic or heterotrophic nutrition. No tissue. / Has a defined cell nucleus (eukaryotes). Unicellular or pluricellular. Autotrophic or heterotrophic nutrition. No tissue. / Eukaryotes, pluricellular, heterotrophic nutrition. No tissue. / Eukaryotes. Pluricellular. Cells form tissue. Heterotrophic nutrition. / Eukaryotes. Pluricellular. Cells form tissue. Heterotrophic nutrition.

THE MONERA KINGDOM

The cell structure-- Prokaryotic cells have a very simple structure. From the exterior to the interior we will find:

·  A rigid and hard cell wall. Its function is to protect the cell. Antibiotics, medicine that destroys bacteria, help destroy this wall.

·  A plasma membrane, which acts as a border between the exterior and interior of the cell. It lets things pass into and out of the cell.

·  The cytoplasm is found in the interior of the cell. This is where all of the cell’s functions take place.

·  The DNA, which contains the bacteria’s genetic information, is found freely in the cytoplasm.

·  The ribosomes, which are little protein factories.

THE IMPORTANCE OF BACTERIA

Harmful bacteria produce illnesses, since many of them are parasites. Other bacteria are beneficial. We use them to produce food products, like yogurt and wine. Another type, called decomposers, act on organic material and turn it into inorganic material. This kind of bacteria is called saprophytes.

THE PROTOCTISTA KINGDOM

Protozoa are unicellular organisms that are generally mobile and heterotrophic.

n  Flagellates are protozoa that move by using flagella.

n  Ciliates are protozoa that move by using cilia.

n  Rhizopods are protozoa that move by using pseudopods.

n  Sporozoa are protozoa that are immobile. They reproduce asexually, by spores.

Algae are unicellular or pluricellular organisms, are sometimes mobile, and are autotrophic.

Algae are used in the food industry as a thickener for marmalades and sauces. In medicine it is used to cultivate bacteria. They also extract substances from them to make medications.

Unicellular algae are formed by only one cell. They are individual and can live on their own. They can also join together and form colonies to live.

Pluricellular algae are formed by many cells. The cells do not form a tissue, as they do with more complex beings. The cells do not share work; rather, all the cells perform all of the functions. If we observe their color, we can observe three types.

Green algae

Brown algae

Red algae

THE FUNGI KINGDOOM

This kingdom includes yeast, mold and mushrooms. They are characterized as being formed by eukaryotic cells, and all have heterotrophic nutrition. Depending on from where they obtain organic material to feed themselves, they are either parasitic (they get the organic material from another living being) or saprophytic (the material does not come from a living thing). They can be:

n  Unicellular, like yeast. Yeast is used to make alcoholic drinks, bread cakes, etc.

n  Pluricellular, formed by cells that group together but do not form tissues.

The Structure of a Mushroom

LICHENS

Lichens are formed when algae and fungus join together. The algae and fungus have a symbiotic relationship, which means that they both benefit from one another. Lichens are used for:

n  Food

n  The pharmaceutical industry

n  Cosmetics, to extract essences for perfumes

n  Indicating contamination, because they don’t develop in contaminated areas.

VIRUSES

Living beings must be able to provide nutrition for themselves, interact with their environment and reproduce. But viruses do not provide nutrition for themselves, nor do they interact. In order to reproduce and make copies of themselves, they depend on the intervention of another cell. For this reason, viruses are not living beings. Therefore, they do not appear in any of the five kingdoms of living beings.

The Structure of a Virus

BASIC VOCABULARY

Kingdoms-- Reinos

Monera-- Monera

Protoctista-- Protoctista

Fungus-- Hongos

Taxonomy-- Taxonomía

Phylum—Tipo

Class—Class

Order-- Orden

Family-- Familia

Genus—Género

Specie-- Especie

Ribosomes-- Ribosomas

Protozoa-- Protozoos

Algae-- Alga

Flagellates-- Flagelados

Ciliates-- Ciliados

Rhizopods-- Rizópodos

Sporozoa -- Esporozoos

Unicellular-- Unicelular

Pluricellular-- Pluricelular

Yeast-- Levaduras

Mold-- Mohos

Mushrooms-- Setas

Symbiosis-- Simbiosis

Symbiotic-- Simbiótico

Benefit—Beneficio; beneficiar

Lichens-- Líquenes

Virus—Virus

19—Criterios de Clasificación

REMEMBER: The classification of living things allows them to be ordered and organized by the characteristics that define them.

Two kinds of criteria are used to classify living things: artificial criteria, which are based on the observation of external characteristics, and natural criteria, which are based on genetic similarities between living things. The current classification system uses natural criteria.

22—El Reino Móneras

REMEMBER: Bacteria belong to the Monera kingdom and are unicellular and prokaryotic organisms. This means they are formed by one cell with a very simple structure and do not have a nuclear membrane to protect their genetic material. They can live in any environment and reproduce asexually by dividing themselves.