Difference between revisions of "Fungi Flashcards"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m |
m |
||
| Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
||<font color="white"> <big> | ||<font color="white"> <big> | ||
*'''''Fats''''' | *'''''Fats''''' | ||
| − | *''''Glycogen''''' | + | *'''''Glycogen''''' |
| − | *''''Protein''''' | + | *'''''Protein''''' |
||[[Fungi - Wikiblood#Structure|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||[[Fungi - Wikiblood#Structure|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Line 47: | Line 47: | ||
*'''''Show phenotypic duality''''' | *'''''Show phenotypic duality''''' | ||
||[[Fungi - Wikiblood#Types of Fungi|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||[[Fungi - Wikiblood#Types of Fungi|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | |<big>'''How would you recognise yeast cells?''' | ||
| + | ||<font color="white"> <big> | ||
| + | *'''''Oval or round in shape''''' | ||
| + | *'''''3µm to 5µm in diameter''''' | ||
| + | *'''''Reproduce by budding''''' | ||
| + | *'''''Yeasts can assimilate sugar and nitrogen and ferment various sugar compounds''''' | ||
| + | *'''''Can produce pseudohyphae''''' | ||
| + | ||[[Fungi - Wikiblood#Types of Fungi|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | |<big>'''What are the three types of fungal spore produced?''' | ||
| + | ||<font color="white"> <big> | ||
| + | *'''''Sexual''''' | ||
| + | *'''''Asexual''''' | ||
| + | *'''''Vegetative''''' | ||
| + | ||[[Fungi - Wikiblood#Fungal Reproduction|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | |<big>'''Fill in the missing words about immunity to fungal infections''' | ||
| + | ||<big>Cutaneous and superficial fungal infections are normally <font color="white">'''''self-limiting'''''</font> with recovery associated with a <font color="white">'''''resistance'''''</font> to re-infection. As hosts often develop delayed-type <font color="white">'''''hypersensitivity'''''</font> this resistance appears to be <font color="white">'''''cell-mediated'''''</font>. </font> | ||
| + | ||[[Insecta#Structure and Function|<span title="Answer article">Link to Answer Article</span>]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 16:28, 16 May 2009
|
|
Fungi
| Question | Answer | Article |
|---|---|---|
| What is mycology? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| What is the function of the cell membrane? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| Which substances are stored in the cytoplasm in granules? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| What are the main characteristics of filamentous fungi? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| What are the main characteristics of dimorphic fungi? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| How would you recognise yeast cells? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| What are the three types of fungal spore produced? |
|
Link to Answer Article |
| Fill in the missing words about immunity to fungal infections | Cutaneous and superficial fungal infections are normally self-limiting with recovery associated with a resistance to re-infection. As hosts often develop delayed-type hypersensitivity this resistance appears to be cell-mediated. | Link to Answer Article |