with your host/hostess, your classmate chapter 6 review jeopardy

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With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

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Page 1: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

With your host/hostess,Your classmate

Chapter 6Review

Jeopardy

Page 2: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Diagram

BacteriaBacteri

a or fungi

“p” words

Misc.

100 100 100 100 100

200 200 200 200 200

300 300 300 300 300

400 400 400 400 400

500 500 500 500 500

Page 3: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Diagram 100

What does Part A of the diagram show?

Page 4: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Diagram 200

What does Part B of the diagram show?

Page 5: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Diagram 300

What does Part C of the diagram show?

Page 6: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Diagram 400

What types of reproduction are shown in the diagram?

Page 7: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Diagram 500

How does this organism obtain food?

Page 8: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria 100 Eubacteria are grouped by their

a. age. b. color. c. shape. d. size.

Page 9: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria 200 All of the following are extremophiles

except

a. endospores. b. halophile. c. methanogens. d. thermacidophiles.

Page 10: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria 300 Bacteria cells have

a. a capsid. b. cytoplasm. c. a nucleus. d. a protein coat.

Page 11: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria 400 A structure found on some bacteria that

allows them to move is

a. a cell wall. b. a flagellum. c. a nucleus. d. a stalk.

Page 12: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria 500 A bacterium covered by a protective

outer wall is called

a. bacilli. b. cocci. c. an endospore. d. a flagellum.

Page 13: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria or fungi 100 Bacteria are used to make

a. butter. b. cheese. c. yogurt. d. butter, cheese and yogurt.

Page 14: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria or fungi 200 A common fungi that grows on bread

and fruits is

a. amoeba. b. mold. c. paramecium. d. yeast.

Page 15: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria or fungi 300 Bacteria can do all of the following

except

a. cause plant rot. b. cause food to spoil. c. help make food. d. prevent infection.

Page 16: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria or fungi 400 Colorless, unicellular fungi are called

a. yeasts. b. molds. c. algae. d. mushrooms.

Page 17: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Bacteria or Fungi 500 Bacteria exist in all of the following

shapes except:

a. bacilli. b. cocci. c. lumini. d. spirilli.

Page 18: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

“p” words 100

Plantlike protists that can make their own food are

a. protozoans. b. yeasts. c. slime molds. d. algae.

Page 19: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

“p” words 200

A paramecium moves by tiny hairlike structures called

a. rhizoids. b. pseudopods. c. flagella. d. cilia.

Page 20: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

“p” words 300 Fingerlike projections of cytoplasm used

for food-getting and movement are

a. spores. b. pseudopods. c. flagella. d. cilia.

Page 21: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

“p” words 400 All of the following belongs to the

Kingdom Protist except

a. algae. b. protozoans. c. slime molds. d. yeasts.

Page 22: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Daily Double How many points would you like to

wager on today’s DAILY DOUBLE???

Page 23: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

“p” words 500 A unicellular algae that is both plantlike

and animal-like is called

a. an amoeba.b. an euglena.c. a plankton.d. a trypanosome.

Page 24: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Miscellaneous 100 A stalk is a structure found on

a. algae. b. mushrooms. c. protozoans. d. yeasts.

Page 25: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Miscellaneous 200 The reproductive cells of molds are

called

a. caps. b. gills. c. rhizoids. d. spores.

Page 26: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Miscellaneous 300 Algae can be all of the following except

a. brown. b. green. c. colorless. d. red.

Page 27: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Miscellaneous 400 Yeasts reproduce by a method of

asexual reproduction called

a. fermentation. b. sporulation. c. budding. d. pasteurization.

Page 28: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Miscellaneous 500 Tiny plants and animals that float near the

surface of oceans and lakes are called

a. algae. b. fungi. c. molds. d. plankton.

Page 29: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Chapter Review

Jeopardy

THANK YOU for PLAYING!!!

Would you like a final Jeopardy question?

Page 30: With your host/hostess, Your classmate Chapter 6 Review Jeopardy

Final Jeopardy

Why is it important for scientists to continue to study bacteria? Scientists are continuing to find the cure to many diseases caused by bacteria and are also discovering other beneficial uses of bacteria.