(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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how bacteria & archaea reproduce
binary fission
do not have a nucleus or membrane bound organelles; although they are very small, they can get energy and reproduce, and many can move
prokaryote
the process that eukaryotes (such as you, me, your dog, and your favorite houseplant) use to divide their nuclear DNA during cell division.
mitosis
what viruses are made of
genetic material and a protein coat
organisms that are so small, we can only see them under a microscope
microorganisms
organisms that can be infected by viruses
people, plants animals, prokaryotes
a domain of prokaryote that have unique chemicals in their cell walls
archaea
what happens to a host cell in the lytic cycle
it is destroyed
one of the key differences between bacteria and archaea
cell walls
common bacteria shapes
round, spiral, or rod
how bacteria get food
consumer, producer, decomposer
a microscopic particle that cannot replicate on its own
virus
a domain of prokaryotes that usually have a cell wall and that reproduce by cell division
bacteria
a place you might find archaea
extreme environments such as deep sea vents
things a virus CANNOT do
use energy from nutrients, grow, respond to stimuli, function on its own
first step of binary fission
copying the cell's genetic information
the reason why a plant cannot catch a cold
many viruses cannot spread from one type of organism to another
any cell or organism that possesses a clearly defined nucleus.
eukaryote
a living thing that a virus or parasite uses for resources or shelter
host
where bacteria can be found
almost everywhere on Earth
one parent copies itself to form a genetically identical offspring.
asexual reproduction
first step in viral replication
a virus enters a cell or the viruses genetic material is injected into a cell
how bacteria can get new genetic material
In transformation, the recipient bacterium takes up extracellular donor DNA. In transduction, donor DNA packaged in a bacteriophage infects the recipient bacterium. In conjugation, the donor bacterium transfers DNA to the recipient by mating.
when a host cell is full of new viruses, the viruses burst out of the host cell. This step is called . . .
lysis