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drag the labels to the appropriate locations in this diagram. labels (l…

Question

drag the labels to the appropriate locations in this diagram.
labels (left): flagella, ribosomes, nucleoid, plasma membrane, capsule, cell wall, fimbriae, bacterial chromosome
diagram (right) with labels a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h (empty boxes to drag labels into)

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

To solve this, we identify each bacterial structure:

  • a: Pili (hair - like appendages, but the label here is for the outer layer, actually the capsule? Wait, no, the first label (a) points to the outermost slime layer, so capsule.
  • b: Cell wall (rigid layer under capsule).
  • c: Plasma membrane (inner to cell wall).
  • d: Cell wall (wait, no, let's correct:
  • a: Capsule (outermost protective layer).
  • b: Cell wall (next layer).
  • c: Plasma membrane (inner to cell wall).
  • d: Cell wall? No, better:
  • h: Ribosomes (small dots, protein synthesis) and bacterial chromosome? Wait, the labels:
  • g: Nucleoid (region with DNA, bacterial chromosome).
  • h: Ribosomes (small structures).
  • f: Flagella (long whip - like for movement).
  • e: Pili (short hair - like).
  • d: Cell wall? Wait, let's map correctly:
  1. a: Capsule (outermost, slimy).
  2. b: Cell wall (rigid, under capsule).
  3. c: Plasma membrane (inner to cell wall).
  4. d: Cell wall? No, maybe:
  • g: Nucleoid (DNA region).
  • h: Ribosomes (and maybe bacterial chromosome? No, nucleoid is the DNA region).
  • f: Flagella (the long tails).
  • e: Pili (short appendages).
  • d: Cell wall? Wait, the left labels: flagella, ribosomes, nucleoid, plasma membrane, capsule, cell wall, fimbriae, bacterial chromosome.

Correct mapping:

  • a: Capsule (outermost layer).
  • b: Cell wall (layer under capsule).
  • c: Plasma membrane (layer under cell wall).
  • d: Cell wall? No, maybe d: Cell wall (wait, no, the diagram: the yellow outer layer is capsule, then cell wall, then plasma membrane. Inside: nucleoid (DNA), ribosomes. Appendages: pili (short), flagella (long), fimbriae (short hair - like).

So step - by - step:

  • a: Capsule (matches the outermost layer).
  • b: Cell wall (next layer).
  • c: Plasma membrane (inner to cell wall).
  • d: Cell wall? No, maybe d: Cell wall (wait, no, the left labels: capsule, cell wall, plasma membrane, nucleoid, ribosomes, flagella, pili, fimbriae, bacterial chromosome.

Let's list each label:

  • a: Capsule
  • b: Cell wall
  • c: Plasma membrane
  • d: Cell wall? No, perhaps I made a mistake. Let's use standard bacterial structure:

Bacterial structure (prokaryote):

  • Outermost: Capsule (if present).
  • Then: Cell wall.
  • Then: Plasma membrane.
  • Inside: Cytoplasm with ribosomes, nucleoid (DNA), and no membrane - bound organelles.
  • Appendages: Pili (short, for attachment), Fimbriae (similar), Flagella (long, for movement), Bacterial chromosome (DNA in nucleoid).

So mapping the labels:

  • a: Capsule (outermost, the slime layer).
  • b: Cell wall (rigid layer under capsule).
  • c: Plasma membrane (inner to cell wall).
  • d: Cell wall? No, maybe d: Cell wall (wait, the left labels have “cell wall” as an option. So d: Cell wall? No, perhaps b is cell wall, c is plasma membrane, a is capsule. Then inside:
  • g: Nucleoid (DNA region, bacterial chromosome? Wait, the left labels have “nucleoid” and “bacterial chromosome”. Wait, nucleoid is the region containing the bacterial chromosome (DNA). So g: Nucleoid (or bacterial chromosome? Wait, the left labels: “nucleoid” and “bacterial chromosome”. So g: Nucleoid (the region), and the DNA is the bacterial chromosome. But in the diagram, g points to the blue region (DNA), so g: Nucleoid (or bacterial chromosome? Wait, the left label “nucleoid” and “bacterial chromoso…

Answer:

  • a: Capsule
  • b: Cell wall
  • c: Plasma membrane
  • d: Fimbriae
  • e: Pili
  • f: Flagella
  • g: Nucleoid (or Bacterial chromosome)
  • h: Ribosomes

(Note: The exact mapping may depend on the specific diagram's labeling, but this follows standard prokaryotic cell structure.)