Title: Chapter 18: Protists
1Chapter 18 Protists
2Taxonomic thinking
Animals
Plants
Fungi
Protists
Monera
3Phylogenetic Thinking
EUKARYA
ARCHAEA
BACTERIA
Animals
Plants
Protists
Fungi
4Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes
5 Prokaryotes
- Kingdoms Monera (bacteria)
- cell membrane and cell wall.
- Prokaryotic cells lack nucleus and membrane
bound "organelles, - Some have flagella for locomotion or hair like
pili for adhesion. - Cells multiple shapes cocci (round), baccilli
(rods), and spirilla (helical cells). - Note prokaryotes will not have
microtubules in flagella
BACK
6 Eukaryotes
- Cells have nuclei and membrane-bound organelles
7What are Protists?
8What are Protists?
- Greek word meaning first
- First kingdom of eukaryotes
- Unicellular
- Nuclei
- Organelles
- Reproduce by mitosis
- Multiple chromosomes
- Protists often have a very complicated internal
structure a single cell must do all the
functions that we have many different cell types
to do.
Increasing in diversity
9All protists live in water, or moist soil, or
moist interiors of other organisms
Surface watersteem with microscopic protists
In some near-shore areas, gigantic protists form
underwater forests
Protists areparticularlyabundant intidal
habitats
10Classification
- 115,000 species
- Major debate regarding how they should be
classified - animal-like zooplankton or protozoans
- plant-like phytoplankton
- ?
11Increasing diversity
- Protists share characteristics with more then one
multicellular kingdom - - plant-like
- -fungus-like
- -animal-like forms
12Animal-like Protists
13Plants-like Protists
14Fungus-like Protists (slime molds)
15Protists exhibit wide variation in morphology,
size, and nutritional strategies
16Protists are divided into groups largely based on
locomotion
- 1) Sarcodines
- Blob-like asymmetrical
- Assume infinite variety of shapes
- Ex. Amoebae
- 2) Flagellates
- Ex. Euglena
- 3) Ciliates
- Ex. Paramecium
- 4) Sporozoans
- Have no organs for locomotion in adult form
- Many are parasitic
17Figure 27.1
PROTISTS
Kinetoplastids
Diplomonads
Slime molds
Brown algae
Parabasalids
Fungi
Amoebae
Dinoflagellates
Red algae
BACTERIA
Animals
Ciliates
Oomycetes
Green algae
ARCHAEA
Euglenids
Diatoms
Land plants
Apicomplexa
18We will observe the following four
- Ciliates
- 1) Paramecium caudatum
- 2) Stentor coeruleus
- Sarcodines
- 3) Amoeba proteus
- Flagellates
- 4) Euglena gracili
19 Paramecium
- Live in FRESH water
- Osmosis causes water to move into the paramecium
- Contractile vacuole collects the extra water so
that the paramecium doesnt lyse - Covered in cilia used for locomotion and for
directing food into the oral cavity - Most are free-living (not parasites)
20Amoeba
- Sizeable amount of cytoplasm
- Cytoplasmic streaming pushes on the cell membrane
resembling arms - A clear nucleus
- False foot pseudopods to move and capture prey
- Feeding endocytosis surround food creates a
food vacuole. - Ameoba reproduce by binary fission
21Euglena
- Plant-like
- Long flagellum excellent swimmers
- A red-spot (photoreceptor) helps euglena detect
sunlight so its chloroplasts can make glucose
using photosynthesis
22Stentor coeruleus (S.coeruleus)
- trumpet-shaped or cylindrical highly contractile
- contractile vacuole anterior-left fresh water