6th grade microorganisms - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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6th grade microorganisms

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6th grade curriculum on Microorganisms – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 6th grade microorganisms


1
Microorganisms
  • Evea Shurtz

2
What are the Characteristics of Microorganisms?
  • Characteristics
  • What Microorganisms require
  • Single celled
  • Unicellular
  • food, air and water to dispose of waste
  • Producers
  • Make their own food by using sunlight as plants do

3
More Characteristics of Microorganisms
  • Helpful or Hurtful?
  • How are they classified?
  • Some are helpful
  • Some are hurtful
  • Most are helpful and do not make you sick
  • By shape
  • Size
  • Structure
  • How they get food
  • Where they live
  • How they move

4
Different Types of Microorganisms
  • Bacteria
  • Bacteria continued
  • The smallest and simplest living thing
  • Single celled
  • Has no nucleus-called Salmonella
  • (Salmonella causes food poisoning)
  • Millions and trillions of bacteria that are good
    live in or on our body
  • Bacteria are the most abundant of organisms on
    Earth
  • Live in most environments
  • They are found in
  • The ocean
  • soil
  • Animal intestines
  • Rocks below the earths surface

5
How many bacteria are in there in the world?
  • It is estimated to be 5x10 to the power of 30 or
  • Five million trillion trillion!
  • How many bacteria do you have on and in you?
  • More then you have cells in your body

6
Where do you find bacteria?
  • Are bacteria living things?
  • How do they obtain energy?
  • They are individual cells
  • Their cells are similar to human cells but
    different
  • They are able to adapt to their environment
  • They have a wide range of metabolism
  • Their metabolism determines where they live
  • From the what ever is around them
  • They can live in practically any environment
  • Bacteria is the most numerous species on the
    planet

7
How do bacteria reproduce?
  • By binary fission
  • What is Binary Fission?
  • This is called asexual reproduction
  • A parent cell splits in two identical daughter
    cells
  • Under ideal conditions the bacteria population
    doubles every 20 min.
  • This is an adaptation to a unstable environment
  • example
  • 0
  • 00
  • 0000
  • 00000000
  • 0000000000000000
  • 00000000000000000000000000000000
  • 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
    00000000000000

8
What is Fungi?
  • Blue green mold growing on a piece of bread
  • A mushroom that you eat on a pizza
  • An antibiotic that the doctor prescribed to you
  • Fungi belong to the kingdom Fungi
  • Fungi is not a plant or an animal
  • They do not photosynthesize or eat
  • They absorb
  • Most fungi are multi-cellular, some exist as
    single cells
  • Yeast, mold and mushrooms are all fungi

9
More about fungi
  • There are over 1.5 million species of fungi
  • Most fungi cannot be seen without a microscope or
    they live where you cannot see them easily
  • Where are they found?
  • deep soil
  • Under decaying logs
  • Inside plants
  • Inside animals
  • In or on top of other fungi
  • Mushrooms
  • Yeast
  • Mold
  • Fungi are important in almost every ecosystem on
    Earth

10
Why do we need fungi?
  • Fungi helps to decompose matter to release
    nutrients and make nutritious food for other
    organisms.
  • What habitats is Fungi found in?
  • Deserts
  • In land
  • Aquatic habituate
  • Soil
  • Dead matter
  • Symbiotic relationships with plants animals or
    other organic matter on earth

11
Fungi Continued
  • Decomposition of dead organisms returns nutrient
    to soil and the environment
  • Bracket fungus
  • What does fungus have in common with mold?
  • The bracket fungus does not look like mold but it
    has a lot in common with mold
  • It breaks down organic matter to obtain nutrients
  • They both reproduce spores
  • They are both eukaryotic-contains cells that
    contain a nucleus and other cell parts
  • However, they are not plants or animals they are
    both Fungi

12
Fungi are consumers
  • Fungi are Heterotrophs they eat by absorption
  • The largest part of fungi are underground

13
How do fungi eat?
  • They squirt special enzymes into their
    environment
  • The enzymes help digest large organic molecules
    (similar to you cutting up our food before you
    eat it0
  • Cells of the fungi then absorb the broken down
    the other nutrients
  • What do Fungi Consume?
  • They decompose dead organic matter
  • They feed on living host
  • They live mutualistically, in a naturally
    beneficial relationship, with other organisms

14
Common types of Fungi
  • Pictures of penicillium, morels, shitake,
    Cremini, oyster, Bakers yeast

15
Kingdom Protista
  • Protista areeukaryotes
  • Not fungi
  • Not animals
  • Not plants
  • Protista are rule breakers
  • They look different from kingdoms of life
  • They look different from each other
  • Some are tiny unicellular, (like amoeba)
  • Some are large like multicellular (like seaweed)
  • Structurally simple compared to plants

16
What are Protista Habitats?
  • Most are aquatic
  • They need a moist environment to survive
  • Found manly in
  • damp soil
  • Marshes
  • Lakes
  • ocean
  • Some are free living organisms
  • Some have symbiotic relationships
  • They live in or on other organisms including
    humans

17
How do Protista move?
  • They have three types of appendages for movement
  • Flagella-whip like structure used to propel an
    organism through water
  • Cilia-small hair like structures used to move
    that may completely cover the Protista
  • Pseudopods-a temporary foot-like extension of the
    cytoplasm which helps the organism to move

18
Protista
  • Amoeboidpseudopods
  • Ciliatecilia
  • Flagellate--flagella

19
Animal Like Protista
  • Protozoaanimal like Protista
  • Single celled eukaryotes that share some of the
    same traits as animals
  • They are heterotrophs-they eat outside them
    selves instead of producing
  • Pseudopodscell surface extends out like a foot
    to propel the cell forward
  • Paramecium has cilia that propel them
  • Flagellates have long flagella or tails that
    rotate like a propeller-like fashion pushing
    Protista through its environment

20
Plant Like Protista
  • Known as Algae
  • Are autotrophs and produces
  • They perform photosynthesis to produce sugar by
    using carbon dioxide and water and energy from
    the sun
  • They do not have true stems, roots, or leaves
  • Most live in the ocean, ponds, or lakes
  • Protista can be unicellular or single celled
  • Seaweed and kelp are examples of multicellular
    plant like protest
  • Kelp can be as large as a tree from a forest in
    the ocean

21
Protista continued
  • Diatoms
  • Seaweed
  • Single celled plant like Protista
  • Multi-Celled plant like Protista
  • Protista are the basis for marine food chain and
    they produce oxygen through photosynthesis

22
Algae Why is it considered plant like?
  • Algae contains chloroplast and production of food
    through photosynthesis
  • Algae do not have roots, steam or leaves
  • They can move with pseudopods or flagella
  • Algae are not plants them selves, they may be the
    ancestors of plants
  • (Types of Algae) Red, brown, green, euglenas' and
    dinoflagellates

23
FungusLike Protista
  • http//www.goo.gl/8EvBiU
  • What is on this plant?
  • This is called water mold
  • Fungus like Protista are heterotrophs or
    consumers
  • They have cell walls
  • They reproduce by forming spores like fungi
  • They do not move
  • Two major types of fungus-like Slime molds
    Protista are..
  • Water molds
  • Slime molds

24
Viruses
  • A virus is not a microorganism
  • A virus is a genetic material surrounded by a
    protein
  • Virus are tiny particles that can cause disease
    like the flu or a cold
  • Viruses are not cells at all but they are alive
  • Viruses contain DNA
  • Lack of other parts are shared by cells like
    plasma membranes, cytoplasm and ribosomes
  • Viruses cannot reproduce by themselves
  • They infect living host and use the host cells to
    copy their own DNA

25
Review of Microorganisms
  • Algae a plant like protest without roots, stems
    or leaves
  • Autotrophs organisms that make food for
    themselves through photosynthesis also know as
    producers
  • Bacteria The smallest and simplest type of
    living things, single-celled, and having no
    nucleus
  • Cilia small, hair-like structures used to move
  • Eukaryotic cells that contain a nucleus an other
    cell parts
  • Flagella whip-like structures used to propel and
    organism through water
  • Fungi a group of organisms that absorbs its
    nutrients from its surroundings
  • Heterotrophs organisms that obtain their food
    from outside of themselves, also know as
    consumers

26
Review continued
  • Microorganisms a living thing too small for the
    human eye to see
  • Organism a living thing
  • Producers living things that make their own food
    from simple substances usually using sunlight, as
    plants do
  • Protests a large and various group of eukaryotic
    organisms
  • Protozoa animal-like Protista
  • Pseudopod temporary, foot-like extensions of the
    cytoplasm
  • Single-celled any living thing that has only
  • Decompose to break down things into simpler
    materialsMutualistically a relationship in
    which tow different species both benefit

27
Are Microorganisms good or Bad for us?
  • Bacteria make our lives easier in many ways
  • We could not survive without them
  • They could not survive without us
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