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🔬Prokaryotes🔬📝 Test 1📖

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🔬Prokaryotes🔬📝 Test 1📖

Instructions

🚀 Boost your learning with this clear, step-by-step plan! Follow these pointers and tap into every resource to make your practice sessions as effective as possible.


🔍 1. Dive into Explanations

📖 Detailed Breakdown: Every question includes in‑depth explanations for why each option is right or wrong.

👀 Review All: Even if you nailed the answer, read the rationale for incorrect choices—they often reveal common pitfalls.

🔄 Reinforce Concepts: Jot down any new insights or surprising facts to cement your understanding.


📚 2. Gather Your Tools

✏️ Notebook & Pen/Pencil: Perfect for scratch work, quick diagrams, or scribbling key formulas.

📱 Timer or Clock: Keep track of pacing—aim for steady progress rather than speed alone.

🚫 Distraction-Free Zone: Silence notifications, tidy your workspace, and let everyone know you’re in study mode.

💧 Water & Snacks: Healthy fuel and hydration keep your brain running smoothly.


🚀 3. Tackle the Questions

Read Thoroughly: Absorb the question stem and every answer choice before deciding.

Eliminate Wrong Answers: Cross out obviously incorrect options to narrow your focus.

Pace Yourself: Don’t sprint—give each question the consideration it deserves.

Flag & Skip: If you’re stuck, mark the question and return later.


💡 4. Expert Tips

Attempt Everything: Even guesses help you learn—use the explanations afterward to close knowledge gaps.

🌐 Link Concepts: Relate new material to what you already know; this builds a stronger mental map.

🎯 Set Milestones: Break the session into chunks (e.g., 10 questions per batch) and reward yourself briefly between sets.


🔧 5. Tech & Connectivity

📡 Stable Internet: A strong connection ensures you can load questions and explanations without hiccups.

💻 Device Ready: Charge your laptop/phone and close unused apps or tabs for optimal performance.


🔄 6. Review & Reflect

🧐 Analyze Mistakes: For every error or guess, write a note on why you went wrong.

📚 Revise Weak Spots: Loop back to related chapters or videos to shore up shaky concepts.

📊 Track Progress: Keep a simple log (e.g., date, score, topics missed) to monitor your growth over time.


⭐ 7. Bonus Boosters

🧘 Short Breaks: Follow the Pomodoro Technique—25 minutes of work, 5 minutes off—to stay fresh.

🤝 Peer Discussion: Explain tricky questions to a study partner or group; teaching is a powerful tool.


⚠️ Important Note

🛑 If you spot any mistakes in the questions, please let us know right away! Your feedback helps us keep everything accurate and up to date.


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1. The Archaea living in extreme conditions are called:

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2. The sulfur bacteria which obtain energy by oxidizing hydrogen sulfide instead of water are called:

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3. When a tuft of flagella is present at both ends, the condition is called:

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4. Chemosynthetic bacteria get energy by oxidation of compounds like:

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5. The phase in which bacteria show exponential growth is called:

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6. Human insulin is produced by:

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7. Bacterial flagella are made up of:

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8. Surface appendages of bacteria meant for cell-to-cell attachment during conjugation are called:

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9. The region where the bacterial genome resides is termed as:

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10. Five Kingdom Classification was introduced by which scientist?

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11. Bacteria reproduce asexually by:

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12. Gram-positive bacteria show maximum stain color due to:

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13. Griffith’s experiment with Pneumococcus demonstrated:

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14. Cyanobacteria can grow in hot water with temperatures up to:

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15. Mitosis cannot take place in bacteria because they lack:

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16. The entire cell wall of prokaryotes is often regarded as a single huge molecule or molecular complex called:

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17. Pigeon odor is released from the water bloom of:

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18. Bacteria maintain their survival by the formation of:

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19. A cell wall that is composed of sugar and amino acids is called:

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20. When the entire body of the bacterium is covered by flagella, such bacterium is called:

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21. Blue-green algae, besides chlorophyll, possess another pigment called:

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22. Milk is pasteurized by heating for 15 seconds at the temperature of:

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23. Rhizobium belongs to the sub-group of bacteria called:

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24. The interval between two successive divisions of a bacterial cell is called:

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25. Most disease symptoms appear during:

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26. Endotoxins are released only when bacteria:

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27. What distinguishes Archaea’s plasma membrane from bacteria?

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28. How does Rhizobium contribute to nitrogen fixation?

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29. What is the ecological role of sulfur bacteria in sulfur cycling?

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30. How do cyanobacteria fix nitrogen in aquatic environments?

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31. Food is preserved in the form of glycogen by:

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32. The simplest oxygen-producing organisms are:

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33. How does bacterial conjugation contribute to genetic diversity?

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34. The word Archaea originates from the Greek word ‘Arkhaios’ which means:

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35. Who coined the term Animalcules for microorganisms like Bacteria and protozoa?

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36. Which of the following are characteristics of prokaryotes?

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37. Life on Earth would not be possible in the absence of which of the following?

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38. How many species of prokaryotes have been discovered and identified?

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39. Prokaryotes in their primitive stages of development diverged into which two of the following domains?

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40. Which of the following is the difference between Bacteria and Archaea?

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41. Archaea possess the ability to survive in which of the following environments?

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42. The Archaea living in harsh environments are called:

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43. The Archaea living in moderate and supporting environments are called:

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44. Extremophiles are divided into which two of the following?

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45. Methanogens are found to live in which type of environments?

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46. Which scientist was the first to see bacteria using a microscope he made?

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47. Which of the following are the most abundant organisms?

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48. Proteobacteria are:

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49. Chlamydia is a group of bacteria; it is:

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50. Alpha-Proteobacteria are which of the following?

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51. Delta-Proteobacteria are which of the following?

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52. Beta-Proteobacteria are which of the following?

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53. Gamma-Proteobacteria are which of the following?

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54. Actinomycetes cause which of the following diseases?

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55. The genus of bacteria which lacks cell walls is:

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56. Streptomyces are cultured for obtaining which of the following?

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57. Which organisms are responsible for increasing the oxygen levels of Earth’s atmosphere from 1% to the current 21%?

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58. The capsule which is less tightly bound with the bacterial cell wall is called:

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59. The cell wall of bacteria is made up of which of the following?

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60. How did Antonie van Leeuwenhoek advance the study of bacteria?

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61. Which bacteria are more resistant to antibiotics than others?

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62. Which of the structures listed below is not found in all bacteria?

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63. A flagellum is composed of how many parts?

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64. The size of Spirochete is:

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65. Germ theory of disease has how many postulates?

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66. The shape of Coccobacillus is like:

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67. A cubical packet of 8 cocci is called:

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68. When bacteria are arranged in the form of a chain, this arrangement is called:

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69. Which among the following don’t have flagella?

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70. What is the primary function of bacterial flagella?

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71. What are the structural components of a bacterial flagellum?

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72. Which mechanism allows bacteria to move without flagella?

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73. How do bacteria exhibit chemotaxis?

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