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Obligate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

As an adjective, obligate means "by necessity" (antonym facultative) and is used mainly in biology in phrases such as:[1]

  • Obligate aerobe, an organism that cannot survive without oxygen
  • Obligate anaerobe, an organism that cannot survive in the presence of oxygen
  • Obligate air-breather, a term used in fish physiology to describe those that respire entirely from the atmosphere
  • Obligate biped, an animal that relies solely on walking or running on its two hind limbs for locomotion
  • Obligate carnivore, an organism dependent for survival on a diet of animal flesh.
  • Obligate chimerism, a kind of organism with two distinct sets of DNA, always
  • Obligate hibernation, a state of inactivity in which some organisms survive conditions of insufficiently available resources.
  • Obligately intracellular parasite, a parasitic microorganism that cannot reproduce without entering a suitable host cell
  • Obligate necrophage, an animal that uses carrion as its sole or main food source and depends on carrion for survival or reproduction
  • Obligate parasite, a parasite that cannot reproduce without exploiting a suitable host
  • Obligate photoperiodic plant, a plant that requires sufficiently long or short nights before it initiates flowering, germination or similarly functions
  • Obligate scavenger, an animal that uses decaying biomass (e.g. carrion, dead plant material) as its sole or main food source and depends on this for survival or reproduction
  • Obligate symbionts, organisms that can only live together in a symbiosis

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "obligate". Oxford Dictionary of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. 2006. doi:10.1093/acref/9780198529170.001.0001.