Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Variety of living organisms
- Animals
- multicellular
organisms
- cells do not contain
chloroplasts
- are not able to
carry out
photosynthesis
- have no cell walls
- usually have nervous
coordination and are
able to move from one
place to another
- often store
carbohydrate
as glycogen
- EXAMPLES
- mammals
- humans
- insects
- housefly
- mosquito
- Plants
- multicellular organisms
- cells contain chloroplants
- cells are able to carry
out photosynthesis
- cells have cellulose cell walls
- they store carbohydrates as starch or sucrose
- EXAMPLES
- flowering plants
- maize
- herbaceous legume
- peas
- beans
- Fungi
- not able to carry out photosynthesis
- body is usually organised into a
mycelium made from thread-like
structures called hyphae, which
contain many nuclei
- some examples are single-celled
- cell walls made of chitin
- they feed by extracellular secretion of
digestive enzymes onto food material
and absorption of the organic products
- This is known as saprotrophic nutrition
- they may store
carbohydrate as
glycogen
- EXAMPLES
- Mucor
- has the typical
fungal hyphal
structure
- yeast
- single celled
- Bacteria
- microscopic
single celled
organisms
- have a cell wall, cell membrane,
cytoplasm and plasmids
- no nucleus but contain a
circular chromosome of DNA
- some bacteria carry out
photosynthesis but most
feed off other dead or
living organisms
- EXAMPLES
- Lactobacillus bulgaricus
- a rod shaped bacterium
used in the production of
yoghurt from milk
- Pneumococcus
- a spherical bacterium that acts as the pathogen causing pneumonia
- Protoctists
- microscopic single celled organisms
- Some have features like an animal cell
- Amoeba
- which lives in
pond water
- Others have chloroplasts
and are more like plants
- Chlorella
- A
pathogenic
example,
causing
malaria
- Plasmodium
- Viruses
- small particles, smaller than bacteria
- They are parasitic and can reproduce only inside living cells
- They infect every type of living organism
- They have a wide variety of shapes and sizes
- They have no cellular
structure but have a
protein coat and contain
one type of nucleic acid,
either DNA or RNA
- EXAMPLES
- the tobacco mosaic virus
that causes discolouring of
the leaves of tobacco
plants by preventing the
formation of chloroplasts
- the influenza
virus that
causes 'flu'
- the HIV
virus that
causes AIDS