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virus - living - can reproduce on its own bacteria - non-living - needs…

Question

virus

  • living
  • can reproduce on its own

bacteria

  • non-living
  • needs a host to reproduce

both

  • genetic material (dna or rna)
  • smaller than a cell
  • has ribosomes

possible answers

  • has a capsid
  • single celled

Explanation:

Response

To solve this, we analyze the characteristics of viruses, bacteria, and their commonalities:

Step 1: Recall Characteristics
  • Viruses: Non - living, need a host to reproduce, have genetic material (DNA/RNA), smaller than a cell, have a capsid (protein coat), not single - celled (not cells).
  • Bacteria: Living, can reproduce on their own, single - celled, have genetic material, smaller than most eukaryotic cells, have ribosomes.
  • Both: Genetic material (DNA/RNA), smaller than a cell (but note: Bacteria are cells, but smaller than eukaryotic cells; viruses are non - cellular and smaller than bacteria too).
Step 2: Analyze Each Option
  • “Has a capsid”: Only viruses have a capsid (bacteria do not), so this is not a “both” characteristic.
  • “Single Celled”: Bacteria are single - celled (they are prokaryotic cells). Viruses are not cells, so they can’t be single - celled. Wait, no—wait, the “Both” category was misassigned earlier? Wait, no, let's re - evaluate. Wait, the original table has some misclassifications (like “Has ribosomes” in “Both” is wrong, as viruses don’t have ribosomes). But for the “Possible answers” and the categories:

Wait, the task is to place the options into the correct category (Virus, Bacteria, Both). Let's re - do:

  • “Single Celled”: Bacteria are single - celled (they are prokaryotes, unicellular). Viruses are not cells, so this belongs to Bacteria? No, wait, the original table’s “Bacteria” section was mislabeled (said “Non - living” which is wrong—bacteria are living). But assuming we correct the labels:

Bacteria are living, single - celled, can reproduce on their own, have ribosomes, etc. Viruses are non - living, need a host, have a capsid, etc.

So “Single Celled” is a characteristic of Bacteria (since bacteria are single - celled organisms), and “Has a capsid” is a characteristic of Viruses (since viruses have a protein capsid around their genetic material).

But if we assume the original table’s “Bacteria” section was a mistake (should be living, single - celled, reproduce on own, has ribosomes, etc.), and “Virus” section: non - living, needs host, has capsid, etc. Then:

  • “Single Celled” → Bacteria (because bacteria are single - celled prokaryotes; viruses are not cells).
  • “Has a capsid” → Virus (because viruses have a capsid; bacteria do not).

If the question is to place “Single Celled” or “Has a capsid” into the correct category:

For “Single Celled”: Bacteria are single - celled (they are unicellular organisms), so this belongs to Bacteria (correcting the original table’s wrong “Non - living” label for Bacteria—bacteria are living).

For “Has a capsid”: Viruses have a capsid (a protein coat around their genetic material), so this belongs to Virus.

Assuming the task is to assign “Single Celled” to Bacteria (since bacteria are single - celled, living, reproduce on own, etc.):

Step 1: Identify Bacteria’s Traits

Bacteria are living, single - celled (prokaryotic) organisms that can reproduce independently. Viruses are non - cellular, so not single - celled.

Step 2: Assign “Single Celled”

Since bacteria are single - celled, “Single Celled” belongs to the Bacteria category.

Answer:

“Single Celled” should be placed under Bacteria. (If the option was to assign, the correct category for “Single Celled” is Bacteria; for “Has a capsid”, it’s Virus.)