Microbiology: An Introduction (13th Edition)
Microbiology: An Introduction (13th Edition)
13th Edition
ISBN: 9780134605180
Author: Gerard J. Tortora, Berdell R. Funke, Christine L. Case, Derek Weber, Warner Bair
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 4, Problem 4A

In 1985, a 0.5-mm cell was discovered in surgeonfish and named Epulopiscium fishelsoni (see Figure 11-14 page 308). It was presumed to be a protozoan. In 1993, researchers determined that Epulopiscium was actually a gram-positive bacterium. Why do you suppose this organism was initially identified as a protozoan? What evidence would change the classification to bacterium?

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When do we make the determination that a bacterium is Gram positive? A) Safranin washes the crystal violet die out of the cell wall. B) Crystal violet die is not able to absorb into the cell wall. C) Alcohol does not wash the crystal violet die out of the cell wall. D) Crystal violet turns the bacterium a yellow color.
A clinical microbiologist is studying a microbe that can cause infections and gastrointestinal disease in humans, and which can also survive and reproduce in mice. A dormant cyst form of the microbe infects human hosts through fecal-oral transmission if they come in contact with mouse droppings and don’t wash their hands before eating. The organism grows in long filaments when grown at 20-28 deg C, and forms round/ovoid cells when grown at temperatures above 28 deg C. Sexual reproduction (fusion of haploid gametes) occurs in both humans and mice. A cell wall is present, and cells contain nuclei. This microbe could be which of the following?     Bacterium     Fungus     Virus     Protozoan
Calculate the surface/ volume ratio of the spherical Neisseria gonorhoe bacterium. Compare this with the surface -to-volume ratio of the large eukaryote ameba  Neisseria gonorhoe bacterium = 0.5 micrometer in diameter eukaryote ameba = 150 mm in diameter

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Microbiology: An Introduction (13th Edition)

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Bacterial Endospore Formation -Biology Pundit; Author: Biology Pundit;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_sinRhE8zA;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Taxonomy of Bacteria: Identification and Classification; Author: Professor Dave Explains;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IJRzcPC9wg;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY