QUESTION IMAGE
Question
examples of the three domains
classify each of the following examples of organisms into one of the three domains based on the details provided.
bacteria
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crytosporidium is a unicellular protist that causes severe illness in humans. it is transmitted through contaminated water sources
leptothrix discophora is a unicellular organism that oxidizes iron and manganese in aquatic ecosystems. its circular genome that resides in a nucleoid area has recently been sequenced
archaea
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methanoregula formicica is a methane producing unicellular organism capable of living in extremely acidic environments where little else can survive.
halogeometricum is a halophile, or salt - loving organism, that lives in extremely salty environments. its membrane is composed of ether - linked lipids bonded to glycerol.
eukarya
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ceratium is a photosynthetic zooxanthellae found in coral reefs. its membrane - bound chloroplasts produce energy
To solve this, we use the characteristics of each domain:
Bacteria:
Organisms are prokaryotic (no membrane - bound organelles), and many are involved in nutrient cycling or can be pathogens.
- Leptothrix discophora: Unicellular, has a circular genome in a nucleoid (prokaryotic feature), and is involved in oxidizing iron/manganese in aquatic ecosystems. So it belongs to Bacteria.
Archaea:
Organisms are prokaryotic but have unique membrane lipids (ether - linked) and often live in extreme environments.
- Methanoregula formicica: Unicellular, produces methane, and lives in extremely acidic environments (extreme environment, prokaryotic).
- Halogeometricum: Halophile (lives in extremely salty environments), has ether - linked lipids (a key Archaea feature), and is prokaryotic. So both Methanoregula formicica and Halogeometricum belong to Archaea.
Eukarya:
Organisms are eukaryotic (have membrane - bound organelles like nuclei, chloroplasts, etc.).
- Cryptosporidium: Unicellular protist (protists are eukaryotes), causes illness, and is eukaryotic (has membrane - bound structures).
- Ceramium: Photosynthetic, has membrane - bound chloroplasts (a eukaryotic feature), and is a zooxanthellae (eukaryotic). So both Cryptosporidium and Ceramium belong to Eukarya.
Final Classification:
- Bacteria: Leptothrix discophora
- Archaea: Methanoregula formicica, Halogeometricum
- Eukarya: Cryptosporidium, Ceramium
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To solve this, we use the characteristics of each domain:
Bacteria:
Organisms are prokaryotic (no membrane - bound organelles), and many are involved in nutrient cycling or can be pathogens.
- Leptothrix discophora: Unicellular, has a circular genome in a nucleoid (prokaryotic feature), and is involved in oxidizing iron/manganese in aquatic ecosystems. So it belongs to Bacteria.
Archaea:
Organisms are prokaryotic but have unique membrane lipids (ether - linked) and often live in extreme environments.
- Methanoregula formicica: Unicellular, produces methane, and lives in extremely acidic environments (extreme environment, prokaryotic).
- Halogeometricum: Halophile (lives in extremely salty environments), has ether - linked lipids (a key Archaea feature), and is prokaryotic. So both Methanoregula formicica and Halogeometricum belong to Archaea.
Eukarya:
Organisms are eukaryotic (have membrane - bound organelles like nuclei, chloroplasts, etc.).
- Cryptosporidium: Unicellular protist (protists are eukaryotes), causes illness, and is eukaryotic (has membrane - bound structures).
- Ceramium: Photosynthetic, has membrane - bound chloroplasts (a eukaryotic feature), and is a zooxanthellae (eukaryotic). So both Cryptosporidium and Ceramium belong to Eukarya.
Final Classification:
- Bacteria: Leptothrix discophora
- Archaea: Methanoregula formicica, Halogeometricum
- Eukarya: Cryptosporidium, Ceramium