Micro-organisms and Society
Assess how micro-organisms affect society and the contributions of science to understanding them.
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Types of Micro-organisms
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Types of Micro-organisms — Grade 6 Science: Micro-organisms and Society
"Remember how adaptations and symbiosis helped organisms survive? Now meet the tiny roommates who make survival possible — or occasionally miserable."
Micro-organisms (also written microorganisms or micro-organisms) are tiny living things so small you need a microscope to see them. In our last lesson we learned how animals and plants adapt and form relationships to survive. Now we zoom in (literally) to see how micro-organisms join that survival story: sometimes as helpful partners, sometimes as predators, sometimes as invisible recyclers keeping ecosystems humming.
What this page covers
- The main types of micro-organisms you’ll encounter in Grade 6 life science
- Simple ways to tell them apart
- Real-life roles: food, health, environment, and relationships with other organisms
This builds on your understanding of adaptations, symbiosis, and predator-prey relationships by showing how microbes fit into the web of life.
Quick overview: the major types
- Bacteria
- Viruses
- Fungi (including yeasts and molds)
- Protozoa
- Algae
- Archaea (the extreme survivalists)
Each group has different features and roles. Think of them like the cast of a tiny neighborhood: some are bakers, some are recyclers, some are troublemakers, and some are badass survivalists living in hot springs.
1) Bacteria — tiny single-celled all-rounders
- What they are: Single-celled organisms without a nucleus (prokaryotes).
- Size: Very small, but larger than viruses.
- How they reproduce: Mostly by binary fission (one cell splits into two).
- Where found: Everywhere — soil, water, inside you, on your skin.
Real-life roles:
- Helpful: Gut bacteria help digest food and produce vitamins. Some bacteria fix nitrogen in soil so plants can grow. Yogurt and cheese use bacteria to make yummy food.
- Harmful: Some cause illnesses like strep throat. But not all bacteria are bad — many are essential.
Analogy: Bacteria are like versatile neighborhood workers — bakers, plumbers, and sometimes pranksters.
2) Viruses — the debate team members of life
- What they are: Tiny particles made of genetic material (DNA or RNA) inside a protein coat.
- Are they alive? Not in the same way as cells. Viruses cannot reproduce on their own; they need to hijack a host cell.
- How they spread: Sneezes, touching, insects, contaminated surfaces — depends on the virus.
Real-life roles:
- Harmful: Cause colds, influenza, measles, and other diseases. (Modern medicine fights some with vaccines.)
- Useful/neutral: Viruses are used in gene research and can even help kill harmful bacteria in certain therapies.
Tiny but dramatic: Viruses are like burglars — they break into a house (a cell) and use the home to make copies of themselves.
3) Fungi — more than mushrooms
- What they are: Organisms that can be single-celled (yeasts) or multicellular (molds, mushrooms). They have a nucleus (eukaryotes).
- How they feed: Many absorb nutrients from dead or living things.
Real-life roles:
- Helpful: Yeast makes bread rise and is used in fermentation for beer and wine. Fungi break down dead plants and animals — natural recyclers.
- Harmful: Some fungi cause infections (athlete’s foot) or spoil food.
Analogy: Fungi are the compost crew — they break things down and recycle nutrients.
4) Protozoa — single-celled animal-like microbes
- What they are: Single-celled eukaryotes that often move using cilia, flagella, or pseudopods.
- Where found: Usually in water or moist environments.
Real-life roles:
- Some are predators of bacteria and help control populations.
- Some cause disease (for example, the protozoan that causes malaria is spread by mosquitoes).
Think of protozoa as tiny hunters and grazers in ponds and soil.
5) Algae — the plantlike microbes
- What they are: Mostly single-celled or simple multicellular organisms that perform photosynthesis (make their own food using sunlight).
- Where found: In water, soil, and on surfaces where there's light.
Real-life roles:
- Produce much of Earth’s oxygen through photosynthesis.
- Form the base of many aquatic food chains.
- Sometimes cause harmful algal blooms when conditions are right.
Analogy: Algae are microscopic solar panels powering aquatic life.
6) Archaea — extreme survival specialists
- What they are: Single-celled prokaryotes like bacteria but chemically and genetically different.
- Where found: Extreme environments — hot springs, salty lakes, deep-sea vents — but also in ordinary places.
Why they matter: Archaea show how life can adapt to extreme conditions — another link to our study of adaptations. They also help cycle important chemicals in the environment.
How to tell groups apart (simple checklist)
- Does it have a nucleus? Yes → eukaryote (fungi, protozoa, algae). No → prokaryote (bacteria, archaea).
- Can it live and reproduce only inside other cells? Yes → likely a virus.
- Does it perform photosynthesis? Yes → algae.
- Is it multicellular with visible structures like mushrooms? Yes → fungi (multicellular forms).
Micro-organisms, adaptation, and relationships
Microbes show adaptations just like bigger organisms. For example:
- Bacteria that live in your gut are adapted to low oxygen and help digest food — a mutualistic relationship (both benefit).
- Archaea in hot springs have proteins that function at high temperatures — an extreme adaptation.
- Some fungi form symbiotic relationships with plant roots (mycorrhizae) that help plants absorb water and nutrients — another example of symbiosis from earlier lessons.
"This is the moment where the concept finally clicks": microbes are not background characters — they participate in the same survival strategies (adaptation, symbiosis, competition) we studied for animals and plants.
Quick, real-world examples students will know
- Yogurt: made by bacteria.
- Bread rising: thanks to yeast (a fungus).
- Fish kills from algal blooms: too much algae can use up oxygen.
- Hot spring microbial mats: archaea and bacteria living in extreme heat.
- Colds and flu: caused by viruses.
Try this at home (safe and simple)
- Leave a slice of bread in a warm, moist place and observe mold (fungi) after a few days — record changes.
- Grow yogurt from store-bought yogurt and milk (with adult supervision) to see bacteria at work.
Always follow safety rules: no tasting unknown growths, wash hands, and have an adult supervise.
Key takeaways
- Micro-organisms include bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, algae, and archaea.
- They have different structures and ways of living — some are cells, viruses are not fully ‘alive’ by themselves.
- Microbes are everywhere and are crucial for health, food production, decomposition, and many ecosystems.
- They participate in adaptations and symbiotic relationships just like larger organisms.
Final nugget to remember
Micro-organisms are tiny, but their roles are huge: from helping plants grow to making bread rise — and from causing disease to creating oxygen. They’re the invisible cast that keeps Earth’s show running.
Quick memory tip
B-V-F-P-A-A = Bacteria, Viruses, Fungi, Protozoa, Algae, Archaea — say it like a secret code for microbial types.
Want a challenge question? Explain one way a micro-organism can be both helpful and harmful, and give an example.
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