Zooflagellates and Choanoflagellates By Maddy Smith Basic Facts-Zooflagellates Unicellular (few are colonial) Spherical or elongated bodies Central nucleus Whiplike ...
Paramecium. Paramecium. Protozoans. Zooflagellates move using flagella ... Amoeba & Paramecium. eukaryotes with animal-like characteristics- are all heterotrophs ...
Kingdom Protista TSW identify and describe the characteristics of Protists What is a Protist? Any organism that is not a plant, animal, fungus, or prokaryote First ...
The Protozoans Ciliates Amoeboid Protozoans Flagellated Protozoans Kingdom Protozoa Defining Characteristics All are unicellular eukaryotes What is a prokaryote?
Protists Protists are the Most Diverse of all Eukaryotes Eukaryotes that are not plants, animals or fungi are classified as protists Protists are the Most Diverse of ...
20-1 The Kingdom Protista What Is a Protist?-Any organism that is not a plant, animal, fungus, or a prokaryote-Catch All Kingdom mostly unicellular, eukaryotes
Title: No Slide Title Author: Cary Harr Last modified by: Thomas Curran Created Date: 11/3/1999 8:59:30 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show
Title: Math Jeopardy Subject: Math 5A Author: Susan Collins Eleanor Savko Last modified by: install Created Date: 8/19/1998 5:45:48 PM Document presentation format
The Kingdom Protista Chapter 20 What is a Protist? Any organism that is not a plant, an animal, a fungus, or prokaryote. Are eukaryotes that are not members of the ...
Sporozoans Sporozoans are animal-like protists that have part of their life cycle inside the cells of their hosts. ... Phytophthora caused the potato blight in Ireland.
Protists can be generally classed into one of three groups: Animal-like Fungus-like Plant-like Animal-like Protists Animal-like protists are those that must ingest ...
Protists Protist Characteristics Live in water Eukaryotic Most are unicellular, some are multicellular (algae) Protist Characteristics Some are autotrophic (can make ...
Kingdom Protista Chapter 20 Kingdom Protista Catch all Eukaryotes Unicellular and Multicellular Autotrophic or heterotrophic Some have cell walls Many have ...
Interest Grabber Section 20-1 Food for Thought What do you do when you get hungry? You probably go in search of food. Different organisms have different ways of ...
Chapter 19: Protists Chapter 20: Fungi Chapter 19 Objectives Identify the characteristics of Kingdom Protista. Compare and contrast the different groups of protists.
Autotrophs (PHS), heterotrophs (phagocytosis), parasitic (malaria) even ... Reproduce sexually by conjugation or by syngamy (gametes) Protista Facto! ...
On a dark, quiet night you sit at the stern of a tiny ... What's responsible for this eerie display? You've just had a close encounter with one group of some ...
Protists and Algal Blooms Chapter 7 After completing the lesson, students will be able to: describe the characteristics of animal-like, funguslike, and plantlike ...
Chapter 20 Diversity is the Key What is a protist? Unicellular Eukaryotic Classified into 3 general categories Animal like Plant like Fungus like *Based on mode ...
Ch 18: Protists Protists unicellular eukaryotic Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes Classification 115,000 species Major debate regarding how they should be classified ...
Origin and Diversification of Eukaryotes: Protists Eukaryotic Cells Nucleus and membrane bound organelles Well developed cytoskeleton structural support that ...
Ch. 20 - Protists 20 1 The Kingdom Protista What Is a Protist? diverse group may include more than 200,000 species eukaryotes most protists are unicellular ...
Title: Virus, Bacteria, and Fungi Author: Madison High School Last modified by: Leann Dodd Created Date: 4/3/2003 9:05:23 PM Document presentation format
Title: Virus, Bacteria, and Fungi Author: Madison High School Last modified by: Leann Dodd Created Date: 4/3/2003 9:05:23 PM Document presentation format
Protists are unicellular organisms that have a nucleus. Kingdom: Protista * * * * Similar to Bacteria Unicellular One of the first groups of living things on Earth.
19-3 Diseases Caused by Bacteria and Viruses Pathogens: disease-causing agents. Bacteria: help in digestion, control growth of other bacteria. Pasteur: showed that ...
... so numerous that the water looks red, thus this algal bloom (meaning there are large numbers of them, having nothing to do with flowers, which they do not ...
Announcements/Questions. Lecture 12: Kingdoms Protista, Fungi ... Spores produced by the species in this category are not quite so easy to categorize by shape. ...
Title: Prentice Hall Biology Author: Prentice Hall Last modified by: LCPS Created Date: 9/4/2001 1:42:48 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show
Title: Prentice Hall Biology Author: Prentice Hall Last modified by: Christian Masterson Created Date: 9/4/2001 1:42:48 PM Document presentation format