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SpirillaModerator: BioTeam
25 posts • Page 1 of 3 • 1, 2, 3
SpirillaHello. My name is Victoria and I have to do a project (which I really don't like because I never do well in bio) on spirilla. I am searching on google myself but information is limted. If you know any sites with loads of information - like "what does it do" or "fascinating facts" do post. Google doe snot have everthing.
Come one people, we can work together. If i find anything I will give you a update. Thanks you very very much A lack of bio knownlage . . . VTech. Wait, is it Spirillar? If so my teacher can't spell.
Microbiology is not my area. But on this site i found that spirilla is the definition of spirillum. Which is a fairly rigid helically twisted bacterial cell often, but not necessarily, a member of the genus Spirillum.
I'll let you know if i find any more info.
The Spirilla is my second favorite mocrobe...ameba always wins
It is a member of Kingdom Protista. The spiral you see when you look at it in a microscope is the helical arrangement of the chloroplasts. What else do you need to know for your project?
biostudent84 I love you. *Hugs.*
Well for our questions, don't have to do them all but still. Where is it found, what does it do (i.e can it kill you , does it have a useful purpose etc etc) Which workplace are especially affected by this bacteria. Then i have to fidn 10 intersting facts about it.
As biostudent pointed out it is not a bacteria, but a protist. Sorry, i do not know anything about it, except what kingdome it belongs to.
@Kyle You have a favourite microbe? You know they have therapy for that kind of thing... "As a biologist, I firmly believe that when you're dead, you're dead. Except for what you live behind in history. That's the only afterlife" - J. Craig Venter
Kyle, do you feel yourself closer to these favourite things, I mean is it just a feeling or do you have reasons for choosing them?
It matters not how strait the gate
How charged with punishment the scroll I am the Master of my fate I am the Captain of my soul.
I'm sorry to sound rude Biostudent but you have to many posts to go through and I have no time. I have an art show to work on, loads of projects (this project is just one of them) plus I have books to read and lost books to find, basic homework and nagging teachers. Plus having some extralimy personal problems. no I am not trying to make you feeel sorry for me. I guess I will just get the info some where else.
About bacteria belonging to the genus Spirillum To start a quick search on Entrez pubmed gave this: [url]http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Search&db=books&doptcmdl=GenBookHL&term=spirilla+AND+148387%5Buid%5D&rid=mmed.section.1976[/url The first link given by google may be of interest too: http://biology.kenyon.edu/Microbial_Biorealm/bacteria/proteobacteria/Spirillum/Spirillum.htm And this definition: Spirillum minus, a species of uncertain status that is a normal parasite of the nasopharynx of rats and mice; it is the etiologic agent of the spirillary form of rat-bite fever. According to the Bergey's manual, 2 other genera are related to Spirilla : Azospirilla and Aquaspirilla. Spirillum minus probably belonging to the latter, surprisingly, the genus spirilla containing only one species Spirillum convolutans Good luck to find the 10 interesting facts (shape is one, besides that? HTH Patrick[/i]
LOL!!!!!!! That was humor touched with a bit of sarcasm. Although, I have been trying to get you all a search tool to search for backposts. But I still wouldn't expect anyone to even do that to find my likes and disklikes
wow thanks A LOT!! One thing has gotten out of the way and my life is some what closer to easyness. (Is that even a word?)
Well, I think it is because I am fascinated by what these things can do. Spirilla is an organism that has developed a spiral structure out of chloroplasts. It's so much different than the chloroplasts packed into the leaves of a plant, or randomly placed about in a euglena. Amebas (Disclaimer: Ameoba is the British spelling) are organisms that eat by totally engulfing their food. The only other example of this happening is in leukocytes...and they only break down "food," not digest it. Not to mention the Volvox, which are photosynthetic organisms that colonize into spherical hollow balls with daughter colonies growing in them. Hemoglobin! A highly complex, and globular, molecule. It has the ability to snatch fresh oxygen out of your lungs and take it to anywhere and everywhere in your body! @MrMystery: You ask me how I can have a favorite microbe. My only response is to ask you how you can not.
25 posts • Page 1 of 3 • 1, 2, 3
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