BIOB34H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Chemotroph, Multicellular Organism, Asexual Reproduction

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18 Jun 2019
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Plants, fungi, and protists are also eukaryotic. Although animals are eukaryotic, it is not a defining characteristic: multicellular* Plants and fungi are also multicellular (not a unique characteristic) If this is done in a non-specialized cell within a multicellular organism, it will be able to survive: diploid-dominant and sexual reproduction. Animals are mostly diploid-dominant through their dna cycle (other than gametes every other stage is diploid) Animals could also be haploid dominant (eg. honeybees) Asexual reproduction (eg. whiptail lizards: lack cell walls* some species of bacteria and archaea also lack cell walls (not a defining character, chemoheterotrophic and holozoic. Chemo: energy from organic molecule + hetero: the carbon from organic molecules we consume back into the environment in an inorganic form. Holozoic: animals ingest digest absorb materials: motile* and quickly responsive to external stimuli (usually due to muscle and/or nervous tissue) Animals are motile at some point in their life, they are not motile throughout their entire life.

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