Exponential Growth: Binary Fission Explained

  • 10th Grade
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| Questions: 20 | Updated: Mar 8, 2026
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1. What is the primary function of a flagellum on a bacterial cell?

Explanation

If a bacterium lives in a watery environment and needs to reach food, then it requires a way to swim. If the flagellum acts like a tail-like propeller, then its primary job is movement.

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About This Quiz
Exponential Growth: Binary Fission Explained - Quiz

Under optimal conditions, a single bacterial cell can become two in as little as twenty minutes, and understanding how that happens reveals the elegant simplicity of prokaryotic reproduction. Binary fission explained covers the coordinated process of chromosome replication, cell elongation, and septum formation that divides one bacterial cell into two... see moregenetically identical daughters. How well do you understand the molecular machinery driving binary fission, how bacteria coordinate DNA replication with cell division, and what the exponential mathematics of bacterial growth means for population dynamics in both natural ecosystems and clinical infection scenarios? see less

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2. When studying bacterial flagella and pili, we find that pili are generally shorter and more numerous than flagella.

Explanation

If flagella are long whips for swimming and pili are tiny hairs for sticking, then it makes sense for the sticking hairs to be shorter and cover more of the cell surface.

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3. The hair-like structures used by bacteria to attach to surfaces or other cells are called ______.

Explanation

If a bacterium needs to stay in one spot despite moving water, then it must have a way to grip. If those gripping structures are short and thin, then they are called pili.

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4. How do bacterial flagella and pili help a bacterium survive in a host's body?

Explanation

If a host's body has moving fluids, then the bacteria will be pushed out unless they can anchor themselves. If pili provide that "anchor" to the host's cells, then the bacteria can stay and cause an infection.

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5. Which of the following are true regarding the movement of a bacterial flagellum?

Explanation

If the motor at the base of the flagellum spins, then the tail rotates to push the cell forward. If the motor reverses, then the cell can change its path; however, these bacteria swim in liquid and cannot fly.

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6. In the context of bacterial flagella and pili, the process of moving toward a chemical like food is called ______.

Explanation

If "chemo" refers to chemicals and "taxis" refers to movement, then a bacterium using its flagella to find sugar is performing chemotaxis.

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7. What is a "sex pilus" used for in the bacterial world?

Explanation

If two bacteria need to exchange genetic information to survive better, then they must physically connect. If a specialized pilus acts as a bridge for this DNA transfer, then it is a sex pilus.

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8. The presence of bacterial flagella and pili is one reason why some bacteria are better at causing diseases than others.

Explanation

If a bacterium has tools to move toward a target and stick to it, then it is more likely to successfully infect a host. If it lacks these tools, then it is easily removed by the host's natural defenses.

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9. Bacterial flagella are made of a specific protein called ______.

Explanation

If the tail is a long fiber made of repeating protein units, then scientists name that protein after the structure itself. If the structure is the flagellum, then the protein is flagellin.

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10. Why are bacterial flagella and pili considered "appendages" of the cell?

Explanation

If an appendage is defined as a part that is attached to and projects from a body, then these external hairs and tails are the appendages of the single-celled bacterium.

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11. Which of the following are functions of pili (or fimbriae)?

Explanation

If pili are designed for contact and connection, then they allow for sticking to environments and sharing genes; however, they do not have a role in metabolism or water pumping.

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12. Scientists use the arrangement of bacterial flagella and pili to help identify different types of bacteria under a microscope.

Explanation

If some bacteria have one flagellum at the end and others have many all over, then that pattern is a unique physical trait. If traits are unique, then they can be used to classify and name the species.

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13. A bacterium that has flagella all over its entire surface is described as having a ______ arrangement.

Explanation

If "peri-" means around, then a bacterium with tails sticking out from every side is called peritrichous.

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14. If a bacterium's "motor" for its flagellum breaks, how will its life change?

Explanation

If the flagellum is the only tool the cell has for swimming, and the motor is what makes it spin, then a broken motor means the cell becomes stationary. If it can't move, then it can't seek out nutrients.

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15. Which of these characteristics describe the "pili" part of bacterial flagella and pili?

Explanation

If pili are hair-like fibers for sticking, then they are short, thin, and made of pilin. They are not designed for swimming and are usually much shorter than flagella.

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16. In the phrase bacterial flagella and pili, which structure is primarily responsible for forming "biofilms" (slimy colonies)?

Explanation

If a biofilm is a community of bacteria stuck together on a surface, then the cells must have a way to glue themselves down. If pili are the primary tool for sticking, then they are essential for forming biofilms.

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17. Only prokaryotic cells, like bacteria, can have flagella.

Explanation

If some eukaryotic cells (like human sperm) also have flagella for movement, then the structure is not exclusive to bacteria, though the internal design is very different.

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18. To understand bacterial flagella and pili, we look at the ______ motor, which is the part embedded in the cell wall that turns the flagellum.

Explanation

If the "engine" of the tail is located at the base of the structure within the cell's outer layers, then it is logically called the basal body or basal motor.

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19. What happens when a bacterium performs a "tumble" during movement?

Explanation

If a bacterium's flagella reverse direction, then the bundle of tails falls apart and the cell spins. If the cell spins, then it ends up facing a new direction before it starts swimming again.

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20. Final summary: why are bacterial flagella and pili important for a bacterium's survival?

Explanation

If the cell can find food, stay in a safe place, and trade DNA for antibiotic resistance, then its chances of survival increase. Seeing light and building walls are handled by other parts of the cell.

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What is the primary function of a flagellum on a bacterial cell?
When studying bacterial flagella and pili, we find that pili are...
The hair-like structures used by bacteria to attach to surfaces or...
How do bacterial flagella and pili help a bacterium survive in a...
Which of the following are true regarding the movement of a bacterial...
In the context of bacterial flagella and pili, the process of moving...
What is a "sex pilus" used for in the bacterial world?
The presence of bacterial flagella and pili is one reason why some...
Bacterial flagella are made of a specific protein called ______.
Why are bacterial flagella and pili considered "appendages" of the...
Which of the following are functions of pili (or fimbriae)?
Scientists use the arrangement of bacterial flagella and pili to help...
A bacterium that has flagella all over its entire surface is described...
If a bacterium's "motor" for its flagellum breaks, how will its life...
Which of these characteristics describe the "pili" part of bacterial...
In the phrase bacterial flagella and pili, which structure is...
Only prokaryotic cells, like bacteria, can have flagella.
To understand bacterial flagella and pili, we look at the ______...
What happens when a bacterium performs a "tumble" during movement?
Final summary: why are bacterial flagella and pili important for a...
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