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Multi And Single Celled Organisms

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

*SINGLE CELLED ORGANISMS

  • Don't need a male+female to reproduce.
  • Offspring is identical to the parent.
  • E.g. Reproduce by buddying 1.*Amoeba
  • E.g. Reproduce by buddying 1.*Yeast
  • Key:each word with a * is on the vocab page

*MULTI CELLED ORGANISMS

  • Need's male's super to fertilize the female's egg so the *foetus can grow
  • The offspring is a different form in some ways+similar in some ways
  • To reproduce, the multi cell organisms need to keep the egg in the womb and slowly grow
  • E.g. Reproduce by giving birth 1.Humans 2.Dogs 3.Cats
  • E.g. Reproduce by laying eggs 1.Hen\Chicken 2.Birds 3.Bat
Photo by Leo Reynolds

HOW ARE THEY SIMILAR

  • Some unicellular organisms are similar to multicellular organisms because they have the ability to move.
  • Both unicellular and multicellular organisms have a cell membranes constructed from a class of molecules called *phospholipids
  • Transcribe DNA into RNA, then translate RNA into protein using structures called ribosomes
Photo by AJC1

VOCAB PAGE

  • *Foetus=variant spelling of fetus (chiefly in British nontechnical use).
  • *Amoeba=a single-celled animal that catches food and moves about by extending fingerlike projections of protoplasm. Amebas are either free-living in damp environments or parasitic.
  • *Yeast=a microscopic fungus consisting of single oval cells that reproduce by budding, and are capable of converting sugar into alcohol and carbon dioxide.
  • *Singled Celled Organisms=only has one cell
  • *Multi Celled organisms= are organisms that consist of more than one cell, in contrast to single-celled organisms
Photo by jakmi

SINGLE CELLED ORGANISM

Photo by Tim Evanson