Title: THE KINGDOMLESS PROTISTS
1THE KINGDOMLESS PROTISTS
2 3- The first eukaryotes arose somewhere around two
billion years ago perhaps about the same time the
atmosphere oceans became Oxygen rich. - Protists are extremely diverse. They are found in
most aquatic environments as well as in moist
soils, and leaf litter. - Many protists are unicellular but others are
multicellular (think kelp) and may be up to 60 m.
long. - They are aerobic and have mitochondria (sites of
ATP production)
4Protists are diverse
5They also have diverse metabolic mechanisms
- Photoautotrophs (the plant-like protists, and
algae) - Heterotrophs (animal-like protists, protozoans)
- Mixotrophs combine photosynthesis and
heterotrophic nutrition (fungus-like protists)
6Plant like protists
7Animal like protists
8Fungi like protists
9- Most have flagella or cilia. These locomotor
appendages are different than those of bacteria
in that they are extensions of the cytoplasm and
have a 92 arrangement of the microtubules.
10Trichomonas with flagella
11Cilia
12- Mitosis occurs in most protists
- Reproduction varies asexual, sexual, syngamy
(where two gametes unite, shuffle genes, and then
reproduce asexually). Diverse sexual life
histories can be found among the different
species.
13Reproduction (asexual and sexual with syngamy)
14Sexual Reproduction in Plasmodium
15- Many form cysts which can withstand harsh
conditions
16Cysts
17- The protists play diverse ecological roles and
are found in almost all aquatic environments,
many species are important components of plankton
(zoo- and phytoplankton)
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19How did these first eukaryotes evolve?
- Autogenous model - eukaryotes arose from
prokaryotes that showed a specialization of
membranes (derived from the infoldings of the
plasma membrane).
20- Endosymbiotic model - small prokaryotes lived
symbiotically within larger prokaryotes.
Evidence in support of this includes the
existence of endosymbiots, similarities between
bacteria and mitochondria and chloroplasts
(similar cell sizes between mitochondria,
chloroplasts, and average bacterium, all
reproduce by binary fission, similar ribosomal
components, one of the algal-like protists,
Cyanophora, looks like a chloroplast, and
circular DNA
21- The origin of eukaryotes may actually have
involved a combination of the two.
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23Tentative phylogeny of the eukaryotes
24 25Diplomonoadida and ParabasalaGiardia and other
diplomonads are unique (they have modified
mitochondria called mitosomes , and two haploid
nuclei), Trichomonas vaginalis is the most well
known parabasalid. Both of these are parasites
with Giardia causing hikers diarrhea and
Trichomonas causing a vaginitis.
26 Euglenozoans are divided into Eugelnids and
Kinetoplastids and include autotrophic,
hetertrophic (including parasites), and
mixotrophic protists that utilize flagella for
movement
- Euglenids . These protists produce
polysaccharide, paramylon, for glucose storage
that is characteristic of this taxon. Some of
these organisms are mixotrophs (see above). Most
of the euglenoids are found in freshwater.
27- Kinetoplastids possess one large mitochondrion
that contains a mass of DNA called a kinetoplast.
They are heterotrophic. Some are free-living,
some symbiotic with other organisms (e.g., living
in the guts of termites) and some are parasitic
e.g., Trypanosoma (African Sleeping Sickness and
Chagas disease).
28Euglena and Trypanosoma
29- Supergroup Chromalveolates
30- Alveolates Unicellular protists with subsurface
sacs or cavities (alveoli). The function of the
alveoli is unknown but they may have a role in
stabilizing the cell membrane and regulating the
cells water and ion content. These protists are
ecologically diverse. They are divided into
three subgroups
31- The apicomplexans are about 3,900 species which
are heterotrophic, all parasitic (of animals),
nonmotile, and have very complex life cycles with
sexual and asexual stages and multiple hosts.
Examples Plasmodium species (malaria and
Toxoplasma (flu-like symptoms, birth defects)
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33- The ciliates. These protists have cilia for
movement and food acquisition. They are also
heterotrophic. They have tough but flexible
pellicles. They are found in freshwater
environments and are unique in that they posses
several nuclei (a macronucleus and several
micronuclei). An example is Paramecium.
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35- The dinoflagellates. Many are part of the
phytoplankton but some are heterotrophic. Most
are marine but some live in freshwater. Most are
unicellular. Blooms of these organisms cause
problems (e.g., ride tides) and one particularly
nasty species, Pfisteria piscicida is a carnivore
that causes fish kills, lesions on humans who
come into contact with it and even neurological
problems. Other species are responsible for
toxic alga blooms called red tides.
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37- Stramenopiles at some stage all of these protists
have flagella with distinctive hair-like
projections. They are important as primary
producers
38- Diatoms. They are yellow to brown in color.
They have unique glass-like walls of silica and
are also components of phytoplankton. They
reproduce asexually. An example of dead diatoms
is diatomaceous earth. Dead diatoms also contain
Carbon that is pumped to the benthos
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40- Brown algae. They are the largest and most
complex protists (e.g., true multicellularity).
Sea weeds are members of the brown, red and green
algae. Most are marine. An example is kelp
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42- Golden algae. There are freshwater and marine
species. They are also components of the
plankton. Some are photosynthetic but many are
mixotroph
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44- Oomycetes. These are the water molds, white
rusts, and downy mildews. They were previously
considered to be fungi and some are very
destructive plant pathogens.
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46- Group Rhizaria.
- These are amoebas that move and feed by
pseudopodia. Note that there are other amoebas
in another group
47- Forams. 90 are fossils. They are
heterotrophic, marine and have porous shells
(with pseudopodia extending through pores of the
shell) with CaCO3 (calcium carbonate). The
shells are called tests
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49- Radiolarians have delecate skeletons often made
of silica and are components of plankton that
form slender pseudopodia (called axopodia).
Including heliozoans (sun animals freshwater)
and radiozoans (primarily marine species)
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51- Supergroup Archaeplastida
52- Green algae contain chlorophyll a and b, and
carotenoids. - There are more than 7,000 species most of which
are mostly aquatic, fresh water but there are
also marine green algae and symbiotic species. - They range in morphological complexity from
single-cells to colonial forms to true
multicellularity. - They often have complicated life cycles (most
have both asexual and sexual stages) and some
have alternations of generations like plants like
other taxa of algae
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54- Red algae. There are about 60,000 species. Most
are multicellular
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56- Supergroup Unikonta
- includes animals, fungi, and some protists.
57 58- Gymnamoebas are the simplest unicellular
protests. They lack flagella and move and feed
via lobe-like pseudopodia. There are many
free-living species that are found in freshwater,
marine environments, and moist soil.
59Entamoebas are parasitic amoebas
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61- Mycetozoa. Like many of the protists, this group
is so diverse that it should be a kingdom. Slime
molds (fungus animals) are neither fungi or
animals. They use pseudopodia for feeding and
movement. They have complex life cycles
62- Plasmodial slime molds are usually pigmented, are
heterotrophic with a feeding stage, an ameboid
mass or plasmodium composed of a relatively large
super cell with multiple nuclei (mitosis occurs
but not cytokinesis) and when harsh conditions
arise, sporangia form which produce spores.
These spores will germinate when conditions are
appropriate for the feeding stage (plasmodium)
and the resulting cells will eventually form a
new plasmodium
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64- Cellular slime molds. When contrasted with
plasmodial slime molds, the cellular slime molds
have (1) only one diploid stage (the zygote), (2)
have a feeding stage consists of individual cells
functioning as individual units that forms a
multicellular aggregate when is food is scarce,
(like a plasmodium except that there are multiple
cells instead of one super cell with multiple
nuclei), and (3) have fruiting bodies that
function in asexual reproduction. They also have
no flagellated stages in their life cycles
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66Two important evolutionary trends from the
protists
- Unicelluar gt Filamentous gt Colonial without
division of labor gt Colonial with division of
labor gt True Multicellularity (which evolved
independently several times) - Asexual gt Sexual Reproduction. Note the
complicated life cycles of some of the protists.
Also note the evolution of anisogamy
(particularly oogamy) from isogamy