The word eukaryote is a technicality: it refers to the idea that our cells, and the cells of animals, fungi, and plants, contain a special structure called a nucleus (karyon, or “kernel,” in Greek). This nucleus, as we will soon learn, is a storage site for chromosomes. Bacteria lack nuclei and are called prokaryotes—that is, “before nuclei.” Compared with bacteria, we are fragile, feeble, finicky beings capable of inhabiting vastly more limited environments and restricted ecological niches.