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Microbial Ecological Roles updated lesson plan
Microbial Ecological Roles updated lesson plan

... Genes can give us important information about the specific role an organism plays in its environment. Each microbe’s ecological role is closely related to what they do. Some common functions of marine microbes are nitrogen fixation, photosynthesis, and heterotrophy. Complete each part below. Record ...
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... not a constant part of water microflora but their presence is usually connected with wastewater inflow rich in animal and human excrement. Their survivability depends upon physical-chemical environmental conditions. Phages are very resistant to environmental factors; hence water samples containing v ...
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... bacteria than their predecessors. It appears that MRSA strains adopt antibiotic resistance at cost to their fitness in order to adapt to new hostile environments. This is a principle and research impacts the public’s perception of antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic resistance is based on adaptation a ...
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... –Neutral fat, after digestion to monoglyceride and free fatty acids Absorption of Water and Electrolytes •A normal person or animal of similar size takes in roughly 1 to 2 liters of dietary fluid every day plus another 6 to 7 liters of fluid is received by the small intestine daily as secretions fro ...
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... All living beings are cellular (most biologists do not regard viruses as being “alive’). The broadest definition of the structure of a cell is that it is a bag made of lipid enclosing a thick water based soup of lifes chemicals and processes. This is an absurdly inadequate definition though, which f ...
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Aminoglycosides(氨基糖苷类)

... Pharmacokinetics of tetracyclines deposited and staining developing teeth (even when taken by the mother during ...
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Human microbiota



The human microbiota is the aggregate of microorganisms, a microbiome that resides on the surface and in deep layers of skin (including in mammary glands), in the saliva and oral mucosa, in the conjunctiva, and in the gastrointestinal tracts. They include bacteria, fungi, and archaea. Micro-animals which live on the human body are excluded. The human microbiome refer to their genomes.One study indicated they outnumber human cells 10 to 1. Some of these organisms perform tasks that are useful for the human host. However, the majority have been too poorly researched for us to understand the role they play, however communities of microflora have been shown to change their behavior in diseased individuals. Those that are expected to be present, and that under normal circumstances do not cause disease, but instead participate in maintaining health, are deemed members of the normal flora. Though widely known as microflora, this is a misnomer in technical terms, since the word root flora pertains to plants, and biota refers to the total collection of organisms in a particular ecosystem. Recently, the more appropriate term microbiota is applied, though its use has not eclipsed the entrenched use and recognition of flora with regard to bacteria and other microorganisms. Both terms are being used in different literature.Studies in 2009 questioned whether the decline in biota (including microfauna) as a result of human intervention might impede human health.Most of the microbes associated with humans appear to be not harmful at all, but rather assist in maintaining processes necessary for a healthy body. A surprising finding was that at specific sites on the body, a different set of microbes may perform the same function for different people. For example, on the tongues of two people, two entirely different sets of organisms will break down sugars in the same way. This suggests that medical science may be forced to abandon the ""one only"" microbe model of infectious disease, and rather pay attention to functions of groups of microbes that have somehow gone awry.
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