EXAM 3: Chapter 11 Flashcards

1
Q

Detritus

A

Debris of dead tissues left by plants on the soil surface and within the soil pores

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2
Q

Detritivores

A

A primary consumer whose principal food source is detritus

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3
Q

Collembolans

A

Jumping organisms with “spring tails” that allows them to jump very far

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4
Q

Ecological engineers

A

Animals that majorly alter their physical environment which influences the habitats of other organisms; termites and ants create krotovinas, dung beetles carry animal feces to different places and bury them; earthworms shred and push soil around

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5
Q

Protozoa

A
  • Mobile, single-celled creatures that capture and engulf their food
  • Most are considered larger than bacteria but do not have true cell walls and are more biologically advanced
  • amoebas, ciliates, and flagellates that swim in water-filled pores
  • usually active immediately around plant roots
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6
Q

Nematodes (different types/roles)

A
  • Plant-parasitic nematodes can infest the roots of plant species with a spearlike, sharp mouth
  • ## Predator nematodes feed on animals by invading larvae with hard teeth and a large mouth
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7
Q

Actinomycetes

A

Generally aerobic heterotrophic bacteria in a specific order of Actinobacteria; filamentous and often profusely branched that look similar to fungi but have a different genetic makeup; no nuclear membrane

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8
Q

Fungi

A

Eukaryotic cells with a nuclear membrane and cell walls, more closely related to humans than bacteria is to archaea
- typically absorb small soluble organic molecules like simple sugars or amino acids

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9
Q

Algae

A

Eukaryotic cells with nuclei inside a clear membrane that are equipped with chlorophyll

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10
Q

Microbial metabolism

A

The biochemical degradation by soil organisms

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11
Q

Rhizobium

A

Bacteria that help supply legume plants with N

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12
Q

Rhizobacteria

A

Bacteria adapted to living in the rhizoplane; can offer enhanced nutrient uptake or hormonal stimulation or inhibit root growth and function by noninvasive chemical interactions

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13
Q

Rhizosphere

A

Zone of soil immediate and most influenced by living roots

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14
Q

Mucigel

A

Secretions from root-cap cells and epidermal cells near apical zones that lubricates the root’s movement through the soil improve root-soil contact and stabilize and protect the soil and root systems from certain toxic chemicals

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15
Q

Cyanobacteria

A

(Blue-green algae)

Contains chlorophyll that allows photosynthesis, tolerance to saline and arid environments

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16
Q

Mushrooms/Mushroom Fungi

A

Fungi associated with forest and grassland where moisture and organic residues are ample

17
Q

Hyphae

A

An extensive network that permeates the underlying soil or organic residue

18
Q

Mycorrhizae (two types)

A

The beneficial association between certain fungi and the roots of higher plants

  • Ectomycorrhiza group, where their hyphae penetrate the roots and develop in the free space around the cells of the cortex but do not penetrate the cortex cell walls (stubby white structures with a Y shape)
  • Enodmycorrhiza group (arbuscular mycorrhizae), where their hyphae actually penetrate the cortical root cell walls and form highly branched structures known as arbuscules
19
Q

Actinomycetes antibiotics

A

Penicillin

20
Q

N-fixing legumes

A

Soybean

21
Q

Actinomycetes symbiosis with Alder trees

A

Provide nutrients that can trade with that of other trees