Title: Kingdom Protista
1PROTISTS
2Protist classification
- eukaryotic
- mostly unicellular
- The protist kingdom is a dumping ground
includes organisms that have exceptions to the
many rules that scientists attempt to apply to
them.
3 Kingdom Protista
- Animal like -- Protozoa (zooplankton)
- Plant like-- Alga (phytoplankton)
- Fungi like -- Slime and Water Molds
4Protozoa
- Heterotrophic (eat dead things or other
organisms) - No cell walls
- Are all capable of asexual reproduction usually
by binary fission
5What distinguishes these?
By locomotion
6Animal-like Protists-Protozoa
Phylum Sarcodinian -move with pseudopods -ex.
amoebas ( foraminifera and radiolaria) -One
type of amoeba causes dysentery. Phylum
Ciliphora - ciliates (cilia) -ex Paramecium,
Blepharisma, Stentor Vorticella. Phylum
Zooflagellates - flagellates also called
zoomastigina. Many cause disease in humans. -ex
Trypanosoma which causes African s.s. or
Giardia Phylum Sporozoa -nonmotile, spore
bearing, -all parasitic -ex. Plasmodium which
causes malaria.
7Sarcodinian
- Locomotion
- pseudopodia all
- allows for great flexibility
- Types (life styles)
- Amoeba marine/terres/parasitic
- Distinctive feature
- Ameobiod movement
- Cytoplasmic streaming
8Sarcodinian
Nucleus Water Vacuole Food vacuole Pseudopodia Con
tractile Vacuole (not shown)
- Examples
- Amoeba proteus
- Entamoeba hixtolyca (causes amoebic dysentery)
9Ciliaphorans
- Locomotion
- cilia
- Lifestyle
- most free living
- aquatic
- Distinctive feature
- two nuclei
- macro boss
- micro sex. repro
- Examples
- Paramecium
- Stentor, Vorticella
- Blepherisma
10Cilliates
Oral groove
11Paramecium Conjugaton
12Zooflagellates(zoomastigote)
- Locomotion
- flagella
- Lifestyle
- most free-living
- some parasitic
- Distinctive features
- most carried by vectors
- from reservoir
- Examples
- Trypanosoma African s.s.
- Giardia
13Vector
- An organism
- usually an arthropod or mollusca
- Carries a pathogen
- without being effected by it
- Example Bubonic plague
- Flea carries the disease
14Flagellates
15Sporozoans (Apicomplexians)
- Locomotion
- none (flagella in some phases)
- Lifestyle
- all parasitic
- Examples
- Plasmodium vivax
- causes Malaria
- Toxoplasma gondii
- causes toxoplasmosis
16Sporozoans
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18Mosquito Facts
- Mosquitoes are responsible for more human death
than any other living creature. - Male mosquitoes do not bite. The real risk is
from female mosquitoes which bite when in search
of a blood meal to provide protein for their
eggs. - Most adult mosquitoes live for about two weeks.
- There are over 2,500 species of mosquitoes in the
world. - The welts that appear after a mosquito leaves
isn't from the bite - it's an allergic reaction
to saliva the mosquito injected under the skin to
prevent the blood from clotting - Mosquitoes like dark areas and will suck the
juice out of plants in order to live - including
tree leaves, grass, shrubs, etc
19AlgaePlant like Protists
- Autotrophic (all have chlorophyll a)
- Have cell wall
- Alga are divided by pigments, cell wall types,
and food storage compounds - FYI
- Thallus - body portion of an algae
- Blue green algae are not protists at all-- they
are Cyanobacteria, a moneran (lab) - Watch the green algae, because of their
similarities with them, they are probably the
ancestors of modern plants
20Algae Plant-like Protists
- Unicellular
- Phylum Euglenophyta
- Euglena
- Phylum Chyrsophyta (Bacillariophyta)
- golden algae
- diatoms
- Phylum Pyrrophyta
- fire algae
- Dinoflagellates
- Multicellular
- Phylum Rhodophyta
- red algae
- red seaweed.
- Phylum Phaeophyta
- brown algae
- kelp
- Phylum Chlorophyta
- green algae
- Volvox
21Chlorophytagreen algae
- Pigments (like plants)
- chl a,b
- carotenoids
- Cell wall cellulose (like plants)
- Storage starch (like plants)
- Ancestors of plants
- Can be unicellular, filimentous, colonial, and
multicellular - Motile - uni and colonial
- Habitat fresh water
-
22Algae Structure
- Unicellular
- single cell
- phytoplankton
- Filamentous
- the cells divide but do not separate causing long
strands - cells do not differentiate
- Colonial
- groups of cells acting in a coordinated manner
- Multicellular
- Some differentiation
23Example 1 of Chlorophytagreen algae
Chlamydomonos - Unicellular - Motile,
Flagellated
24Example 2 of Chlorophytagreen algae
- Spirogyra
- Filimentous
- - the cells divide but do not separate causing
long strands - -cells do not differentiate
25Example 3 of Chlorophytagreen algae
- Volvox , Pandorina
- Colonial
- Cells have different roles
- flagellated cells
- photosynthetic
- gametocytes
- Cells not trully differentiated
26Example 4 of Chlorophytagreen algae
- Ulva (sea lettuce)
- Multicellular
- Reproduces by alternation of generations
27Phaeophytabrown algae
- Pigments
- chl a,c
- carotenoids
- Fucoxanthin
28Phaeophytabrown algae
- Examples
- kelp
- parts of kelp
- holdfast, stipe,
- blade,
- bladder
- temperate seaweed
- All multicellular
- habitat
- salt water
- nonmotile
blade
bladder
stipe
holdfast
29Rhodophytared algae
- pigments
- chl a
- carotenoids
- Phycoblins
- cell wall
- CaCO3
30Rhodophytared algae
- examples
- tropical
- red seaweed
- multicellular
- habitat
- salt water
- nonmotile
agar
31Pyrrophytafire algaedinoflagellata
- pigments
- chl a,c
- carotenoids
- peridinum
- cell wall
- cellulose
- food storage
- starch
32Pyrrophytafire algae
- Examples dinoflagellates
- unicellular
- habitat
- fresh/salt
- motile
- biflagellates
33PyrrophytaDinoflagellatesred tide
cause red tideoften phosphorescent Algal
bloom Toxins
34Chrysophyta golden algae
- Pigment
- chl a,b
- carotenoids
- fucoxanthin
- cell wall
- silica cell wall
- food storage
- oil
35Chrysophyta golden algae
- Example diatoms
- Unicellular (some colonial)
- motile raphe
- habitat
- salt/fresh water
-
- reproduction
- asexual
- sexual
FORM Diatomaceous Earth Petroleum Deposits
36Euglenophyta
- Pigment
- chl a
- chl b
- carotenoids
- Cell Wall
- protein pellicle
- Food Storage
- polysaccharide
37Euglenophyta
- Examples
- Euglena,
- Astasia (can lose its chloroplasts and become
heterotrophic) - all unicellular
- motile flagella
- Habitat
- fresh water
eyespot
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39Fungus-like protists
- Heterotrophic with external digestion.
- Absorptive nutrition
- similar lifestyle as fungi
- multicellular multinucleate
- 2 groups (based on cell type)
- Water molds are composed of filaments of cells.
- Phylum Oomycota
- Slime molds are amoeba-like.
- Phylum Myxomycota
- Phylum Acrasiomycota
40Oomycetes
- Known as
- water molds
- have cellulose in cell wall
- ex water molds and downy mildews
- have branching filaments called hyphae
41Oomycetes
- Causes
- one cause of ick grows on decaying aquatic life
42Oomycetes
- Cell wall
- cellulose
- Body structure
- branching filaments
- few cell walls
43Oomycetes
- Causes
- potato blight
- root, fruit, crown rot
- puckeye rot
44Oomycetes
- Causes
- downy mildew
- round worm parasite
45Chytridiomycota
- Known as
- Water Mold
- Reproduction
- flagellated sex cells
- Probable ancestor of modern fungi
Sprogyra with chytrid parasite
46Chytridiomycota
- Habitat
- aquatic
- Cell wall
- chitin like fungi
- Body structure
- long filaments
- Mostly Unicellular
- Mostly Parasites
47Myxomycota
- Example is plasmodial slime molds
- multinucleate
48Myxomycota
- Body structure
- One enormous cell (plasmodium)
- many nuclei
- covered in slime sheath
- leaves a slime track
49Myxomycota
- Life Cycle (reproduction)
- spends most of life as a plasmodium
- produces fruiting bodies with gametes
- gametes behave like amoebas
- two gametes meet--gt produce new plasmodium
50Myxomycota
- Life Cycle (reproduction)
- spends most of life as a plasmodium
- produces fruiting bodies with gametes
- gametes behave like amoebas
- two gametes meet--gt produce new plasmodium
51Acrasiomycota
- Example is cellular slime molds
52Acrasiomycota
- Life Cycle
- most of life as AMOEBA
- one nucleus
- haploid
- in stress, come together
- form slug or grex
- send up fruiting body
- newly hatched cells are amoeba
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