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Kingdom Protista

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Title: Kingdom Protista


1
Kingdom Protista
  • AP Biology Ch. 28

2
Introduction to the Protists
  • Earliest Eukaryotes
  • Arose about 1 billion years before the first true
    plants, animals or fungi
  • Earliest protist fossils are around 2.1 billion
    years old
  • The first billion years of eukaryote evolution
    appears to have produced several very divergent
    lineages
  • For Example some are animal-like, some
    plant-like and some fungus-like

3
Protists are EXTREMELY DIVERSE
  • The ONLY thing that ALL protists share in common
    is that they are ALL EUKARYOTES
  • Protists are considered to be the simplest
    eukaryotic organisms, HOWEVER
  • At the cellular level, many protists are
    extremely complex
  • Otherwise, diversity is the rule
  • Cellularity most are unicellular, but some are
    colonial and some are multicellular
  • Animal-like, plant-like, fungus-like
    characteristics
  • 60,000 different species!

4
Great Diversity
brown algae diatoms
dinoflagellates ciliates
euglenoids
red algae
green algae
miscellaneous?
5
3 Groupings of Protists
  • Keep in mind that these groupings have NO
    taxonomic significance
  • This means that these groupings do not imply true
    evolutionary relationships, but are just a
    convenient way to talk about members of this
    incredibly diverse and poorly organized kingdom

6
3 Groupings of Protists
  • Animal-like Protists
  • The Protozoans
  • Called animal-like because they ingest food (like
    animals)
  • Includes members like amoeba, paramecium, etc.

7
3 Groupings of Protists
  • Fungus-like Protists
  • These are organisms that obtain nutrition from
    absortption of nutrients from the
    environmentlike fungi do.
  • Includes members like slime molds

8
3 Groupings of Protists
  • Plant-like Protists
  • Also called photosynthetic protists or ALGAE
  • Includes organisms like Volvox and Kelp.
  • All algae share the photosynthetic pigment
    chlorphyll a in common.
  • Differ in their accessory pigments

9
Movement in Protists
  • Most protists (though NOT all) are motile
  • Most protists have either cilia or flagella at
    some point in their life cycle
  • Remember that eukaryotic and prokaryotic flagella
    are NOT homologous
  • Euk. extensions of cytoplasm bundles of
    microtubules (92) covered by cell membrane
  • Prok. crank mechanism attached to cell surface

10
Reproduction in Protists
  • Reproduction is highly varied among protists
  • Mitosis does occur in most protists
  • Protists may be asexual or sexual reproducers
  • Protists may produce cysts
  • Resistant cells that can survive harsh conditions
  • Something like a bacterial endospore

11
Where Protists are Found
  • Anywhere there is water.
  • Maybe just moisture

12
Some Important Protist Groups
  • Plankton
  • Communities of organisms that drift passively or
    swim weakly at the waters surface
  • Basis of marine and freshwater food chains is
    phytoplankton
  • Phytoplankton account for ½ of all photosynthesis
  • Free living protists
  • Symbiotic protists
  • Implies mutualistic or beneficial relationships
  • Parasitic protists
  • Host is harmed

13
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells from Prokaryotes
  • Many structures are unique to eukaryotic cells
  • Membrane enclosed nucleus
  • Mitochondria
  • Chloroplasts
  • ER
  • Cytoskeleton
  • 92 flagella
  • Multiple linear chromosomes
  • Two processes are thought to have led to the
    origin of these structures in eukaryotes.

14
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells from Prokaryotes 2
processes
  • Endomembrane System (ER) may have evolved from
    infoldings of the prokaryotic cell membrane
  • Endosymbiosis
  • Mitochondria and chloroplasts were once small
    prokaryotes
  • Became involved in a symbiotic relationship with
    larger cells

15
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells from Prokaryotes
Endosymbiosis
  • Ancestors of mitochondria Aerobic heterotrophic
    prokaryotes
  • Ancestors of chloroplasts photosynthetic
    prokaryotes (probably cyanobacteria)
  • May have entered larger cell as undigested prey
    or as internal parasites
  • Provided host with nourishment
  • Such endosymbiotic relationships are observed
    today

16
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells from Prokaryotes
Additional Evidence Supporting the Endosymbiotic
Hypothesis
  • Chloroplasts and mitochondria are both the
    appropriate size to be descendents of bacteria
  • Inner membranes of chloroplasts and mitochondria
    have enzymes and transport systems similar to
    modern prokaryotes
  • Mitochondria and chloroplasts replicate by a
    process similar to binary fission
  • Both contain a circular DNA molecule that is not
    associated with histone proteins
  • Ribosomes in both are more like prokaryotes than
    eukaryotes

17
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells
18
Kingdom Protista is BAD Taxonomy/Systematics
  • Kingdom Protista has been a dumping ground for
    organisms that did not fit nicely into any of the
    other eukaryotic kingdom
  • Kingdom Protista is Paraphyletic made up of
    organism groups that do NOT share a common
    ancestor
  • Kingdom Protista is now considered obsolete
  • Scientists are working on sorting out the members
    of Protista into 5 new candidate kingdoms that
    are all monophyletic
  • Remember monophyletic all members come from
    one common ancestor

19
Problems with Protist Classification
  • Too Diverse!
  • doesnt reflect any evolutionary relationship
    amongst all kingdom members
  • paraphyletic

Somethingsnot right here!
20
New Protist Classification (from 6th ed.)
1 Kingdom Split into 8 Kingdoms?
21
Candidate Kingdom Archaezoa
  • Uniting characteristic of these members
  • All lack mitochondria
  • Called archaezoa to emphasize their ancient
    ancestry
  • The lineages of these protists go back to before
    the endosymbiotic creation of mitochondria

22
Candidate Kingdom Euglenozoa
  • Common characteristic of all Euglenozoans is
    flagella
  • Most members are autotrophic, but may also be
    heterotrophic (by absorption or ingestion)
  • Euglenoids and Kinetoplastids
  • Famous parasite in this group
  • Trypanosoma
  • Causes African Sleeping Sickness
  • Two hosts required TseTse Fly and Human

23
Euglena
  • Click HERE to see Euglena Movies

24
Trypanosome
  • Click HERE for more on Trypanosomes

25
Candidate Kingdom Alveolata
  • Common characteristic
  • all possess small membrane bound cavities
    (alveoli) under their cell surfaces
  • Contains 3 large groups
  • Dinoflagellates
  • Photosynthetic flagellates
  • Apicomplexans
  • parasites
  • Ciliates
  • All members move by means of cilia

26
Dinoflagellates
  • Found in phytoplankton at oceans surface
  • Responsible for Red Tides
  • Toxins produced by dinoflagellates cause massive
    fish kills and may harm humans also
  • Pfiesteria
  • Characteristics
  • Cellulose cell plates armor
  • 2 flagella perpendicular to each other
  • Results in spinning motion

27
Dinoflagellates
28
Apicomplexans
  • ALL parasites
  • Used to be called sporozoans
  • Famous member
  • Plasmodium
  • Causes malaria
  • 2 hosts required
  • Mosquito
  • Human
  • Liver and blood cells

29
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30
Ciliates
  • All have cilia
  • Most live as solitary cells in fresh water
  • 2 nuclei
  • Micronucleus
  • Required for sexual process
  • Not involved in maintenance, growth or other
    routine functions
  • Macronucleus
  • Controls everyday functioning of the cell

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32
Reproduction in ciliates
  • Mostly binary fission
  • Macronucleus splits (NO mitosis)
  • Sometimes conjugation
  • Micronucleus is exchanged between individuals
  • No REPRODUCTION no babies - just exchange of
    genes
  • Meiosis and syngamy (fusion of genetic material)
    do occur in the micronucleus

33
Conjugation
34
Protists that Use Pseudopods Classification not
certain according to your text
  • Amoebas etc. are in this group that does not have
    a candidate kingdom yet.
  • Pay attention to feeding and locomotor mechanisms

35
Pseudopods
  • Extensions of cytoplasm
  • Used for movement and feeding
  • Organisms that use pseudopods are generally
    heterotrophs. They eat
  • Bacteria
  • Other protists
  • Detritus (decaying matter)
  • May also be PARASITES

36
Groups of Protists with Psueudopods
  • Rhizopods
  • The amoeba
  • Actinopods
  • ray foot possess rays or extensions
  • Foraminiferans
  • Calcium carbonate shells

37
The Rhizopods
  • Amoeba
  • ALL unicellular
  • Can move directionally (taxis)
  • Reproduce asexually only
  • Both freshwater and marine habitats
  • Some can be parasitic amoebic dysentery spread
    by contaminated food, water, etc.
  • Click HERE to see an amoeba movie

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39
The Actinopods
  • ray foot - Named for the slender pseupodia that
    radiate from them (axipodia)
  • Internal skeleton
  • Plankton
  • Microorganisms stick to the axipodia and are
    phagocytized.

40
The Actinopods
  • Includes the heliozoans
  • Freshwater
  • Silica (glassy) or chitin skeletons
  • Includes the radiolarians
  • Mostly marine
  • Silica skeletons
  • At death, skeletons of actinopods sink to the
    seafloor where the accumulate into ooze that is
    hundreds of meters thick in places.

41
Foraminiferans
  • All marine
  • Named for porous shells
  • Made of calcium carbonate
  • Strands of cytoplasm extend through pores in
    shell

42
Candidate Kingdom Myceteozoa (actually a newly
added 6th candidate kingdom)
  • The Slime Molds
  • Plasmodial Slime Molds
  • Cellular Slime Molds
  • Basic Characteristics
  • Resemble fungi
  • Appearances ONLY due to CONVERGENT evolution
    NOT homologies
  • Closest relatives of the slime molds are probably
    the amoebas

43
Plasmodial Slime Molds
  • Brightly pigmented
  • Orange and yellow
  • Heterotrophic
  • Two body forms
  • One for obtaining food
  • The other for reproductioin

44
Plasmodial Slime Molds
  • Plasmodium the amoeboid mass that acts as the
    feeding stage of the slime mold
  • Can get several cm large
  • Actually unicellular!
  • Cytoplasmic streaming helps distribute nutrients
    and oxygen throughout the slime mold.
  • Engulfs food via phagocytosis

45
Plasmodial Slime Molds
  • If food source is gone or conditions become poor
    for the plasmodium
  • It ceases growth
  • Differentiates into a stage that functions in
    sexual reproduction

46
Cellular Slime Molds
  • Feeding stage composed of solitary cells that
    function individually
  • When food is depleted, the cells for an aggregate
    the functions as a unit.
  • The cells always maintain their individual
    identity which is different from the plasmodial
    slime mold
  • Haploid cells dominate (only zygote is diploid)
  • Fruiting bodies function in asexual reproduction

47
Cellular Slime Molds life cycle
48
Cellular Slime Mold - Stages
49
Candidate Kingdom Stramenopila
  • Includes photosynthetic autotrophs and some
    heterotrophs
  • Common characteristic is fine hair-like
    projections on flagella
  • Evidence suggests that the photosynthetic members
    of this kingdom did NOT get their c-plasts from
    the cyanobacteria like all other photoautotrophs
  • Instead theirs are descended from red algae

50
Photosynthetic Members of Kingdom Stramenopila
  • Diatoms
  • Yellow/brown
  • Walls are made of silica and an organic matrix
  • Shoebox and lid
  • Shells make sediments called diatomaceous earth
  • Filtering medium abrasive (toothpaste!)

51
Diatom Photos
52
Photosynthetic Members of Kingdom Stramenopila
  • Golden Algae
  • 2 flagella attached at one end of the cell
  • Can absorb or ingest food particles
  • mixotrophic
  • Some colonial species

53
Photosynthetic Members of Kingdom Stramenopila
  • Brown Algae
  • Multicellular
  • Marine
  • Kelp
  • Called Seaweeds
  • This title is also used to refer to green and red
    algae

54
Photosynthetic Members of Kingdom Stramenopila
  • More on seaweeds / kelp
  • Inhabit intertidal zones very challenging
  • 60 meters long
  • Cell walls gelatinous to help cushion against
    waves
  • Food source and
  • Thickeners for pudding, salad dressing, ice cream
  • Also lubricants
  • Complex structures are ANALOGOUS to plants
  • Thallus plant-like seaweed body
  • Holdfast root like structure anchors plant
  • Stipe stem-like structure
  • Blades leaf-like structure
  • Air-filled floats hold blades up toward light

55
Kelp
56
Kelp Life Cycle
57
Hetertrophic Members of Kingdom Stramenopila
  • Oomycota
  • Water molds most are decomposers (often seen on
    dead aquarium fish)
  • White rusts plant parasite
  • Downy mildew plant parasite
  • All heterotrophic
  • Filaments/hyphae are analogous to fungi, cell
    walls are made of cellulose (NOT chitin)
  • Diploid is dominant form haploid is dominant in
    fungi
  • Have flagellated cells fungi dont
  • Large egg fertilized by a small sperm

58
Water Mold Life Cycle
Water mold on Dead fish
59
Candidate Kingdom Rodophyta Red Algae
  • No flagella but did not evolve before flagella
    existed
  • DNA analysis suggests that red algae are not that
    ancient. Flagella were lost during evolution
  • Accessory pigment (phycobillins) make the red
  • Red absorbs short waves of light most efficiently
  • These are the only waves that make it to deep
    water
  • Red algae will appear very dark at great depths
    but be almost green in shallower water
  • The deeper the algae the redder its color

60
Red Algae
61
Red Algae
62
Candidate Kingdom Chlorophyta?
  • Green Algae
  • Classification is still in question
  • Separate from plants or with plants?
  • Certainly the plants and the green algae share a
    common ancestor
  • Chloroplasts are very similar

63
Green Algae
  • 7000 species
  • Most are freshwater
  • Some even enter into a mutualistic relationship
    with fungi to form a lichen
  • May be unicellular, colonial or multicellular
  • Complex life histories (repro cycles)
  • Most reproduce by way of biflagellated gametes
  • Some even use amoeboid gametes

64
Examples of Green Algae
  • Chlamydomonas
  • Primitive species
  • All life stages haploid except zygote

65
Chlamydomonas Life Cycle
66
Reproductive Modes Observed in Green Algae
  • Isogamy
  • Fusion of gametes of similar size
  • Anisogamy
  • Fusion of gametes of different size
  • Oogamy is one type
  • Egg is large and non motile sperm flagellated

67
Multicellularity Arose Many Times
  • More variations are possible for complex
    structures than simpler ones
  • Evolution of eukaryotes broke one barrier to
    diversification Multicellularity broke another
  • The link between unicellular and multicellular
    organisms is colonial organisms
  • Division of Labor
  • Different cells take on different jobs and become
    very proficient at those jobs
  • Example loss of flagella in some cells combined
    with more efficient performance of other cell
    functions

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