1 / 33

Kingdom PROTISTA: What are protists?

Kingdom PROTISTA: What are protists?. Domain Eukarya Eukaryotes have a Nucleus and many organelles! Defined by exclusion – Cannot be classified as plants, animals or fungi Diverse in body, obtaining food, and movement. How did eukaryotes evolve?. Probably evolved 2 billion years ago

carl
Télécharger la présentation

Kingdom PROTISTA: What are protists?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kingdom PROTISTA: What are protists? • Domain Eukarya • Eukaryotes have a Nucleus and many organelles! • Defined by exclusion – Cannot be classified as plants, animals or fungi • Diverse in body, obtaining food, and movement

  2. How did eukaryotes evolve? • Probably evolved 2 billion years ago • Arose through endosymbiosis • One organism lives inside another organism • Photosynthetic prokaryote lived inside another prokaryote chloroplast • Aerobic prokaryote lived inside another prokaryote mitochondrion • cDNA and mDNA is similar to Bacteria DNA

  3. How did eukaryotes evolve?

  4. PROTISTA characteristics: body plans • Most are unicellular (example, Paramecium) • Some small multicellular colonies (example, Volvox) • Some large multicellular colonies (example, kelp) paramecium volvox kelp

  5. PROTISTA characteristics: obtaining food Some protists are autotrophs • Absorb energy of sun through pigments • Make their own food through photosynthesis light energy + 6H20 + 6CO2 C6 H1206 + 6O2

  6. PROTISTA characteristics: obtaining food Other protists are heterotrophs • Get their food by eating other organisms • Release energy by cellular respiration C6 H1206 + 6O2 6H20 + 6CO2 + energy(ATP)

  7. PROTISTA characteristics: motility • Some move with long, whip-like flagella • Others move with shorter cilia • Others move by extended pseudopodia pseudopodia flagella cilia

  8. PROTISTA asexual reproduction • Most protists reproduce asexually • Binary fission  1 cell divides into 2 equal size cells • Multiple fission  1 cell divides into more than 2 • How do the offspring compare? • Offspring are genetically identical to parent • Similarity is created by the process of mitosis

  9. PROTISTA sexual reproduction • Some protists can reproduce sexually • Protist conjugation  2 cells join, exchange DNA • How do the offspring compare? • Resultingoffspring are genetically unique • Uniqueness is created by the process of meiosis

  10. Animal-like PROTISTA • Move like animals • Heterotrophic: obtain food like animals • NOT closely evolutionarily linked to animals

  11. Animal-like PROTISTAPhylum Protozoa • Body plan: unicellular • Motility: form pseudopodia • Heterotrophic: absorb food by endocytosis pseudopod

  12. Animal-like PROTISTAPhylum Protozoa

  13. Animal-like PROTISTAPhylum Ciliophora • Body plan: unicellular • Motility: cilia beat in waves • Heterotrophic: cilia sweep food into mouth cilia

  14. Animal-like PROTISTAPhylum Sarcomastigophora • Body plan: unicellular • Motility: one or more flagella • Heterotrophic or parasitic • Some cause disease • Trypanosoma causes sleeping sickness • Giardia contaminates water

  15. Fly takes up blood and injects trypanosomes Epimastigotes reproduce by mitosis in the salivary gland and transform → trypanosomes Trypanosomes enter bloodstream Trypanosomes reproduce by mitosis in blood and spinal fluid Promastigotes leave the fly gut and transform → epimastigotes Fly takes up blood and trypanosomes In fly gut, trypanosomes transform → promastigotes and reproduce by mitosis Trypanosomes spread in circulatory and nervous systems

  16. Animal-like PROTISTAPhylum Apicomplexa • Body plan: unicellular • Motility: no means of locomotion • All are parasitic • Some cause disease • Plasmodium causes malaria • Cryptosporidium contaminates water

  17. Oocysts grow, rupture, release sporozoites Mosquito takes up blood and injects sporozoites Schizonts transform →merozoites.Liver cells rupture Sporozoites invade liver cells Sporozoites transform → schizonts Ookinete invades mosquito gut, transforms → oocyst Mosquito takes in ♂ and ♀ gametocytes Asexual route: merozoites → schizonts → merozoites → blood cells rupture Merozoites invade blood cells Zygote transforms → ookinete Sexual route: some merozoites transform → gametocytes In mosquito stomach, ♂ gamete penetrates ♀ gamete→ zygote

  18. Fungus-like PROTISTA Often called molds but NOT in Kingdom Fungi • Protist cell walls are composed of cellulose • Fungi cell walls are composed of chitin

  19. Fungus-like PROTISTAPhylum Myxomycota (plasmodial slime molds) • Body plan: unicellular or multicellular • Mobile and stationary life stages

  20. Fungus-like PROTISTAPhylum Myxomycota (plasmodial slime molds) • Mobile stage of life cycle • Forms plasmodium: mass of cytoplasm • Creeps by amoeboid-like streaming • Consumes decaying plants by endocytosis

  21. Fungus-like PROTISTAPhylum Myxomycota (plasmodial slime molds) Stationary stage of life cycle • Reproduces when food is scarce • Forms sporophores: spore-bearing structures

  22. Fungus-like PROTISTAPhylum Oomycota (water molds) • Body plan: unicellular and multicellular • Motility: flagella • Parasitize fish and many crop plants

  23. Plant-like PROTISTA • Autotrophic: obtain food like plants • Lack true roots, stems, and leaves

  24. Plant-like PROTISTAFour basic body plans

  25. Plant-like PROTISTATypes of pigments • Chlorophyll absorbs red and blue light • Other pigments absorb other wavelengths • √ Efficient photosynthesis

  26. Pigments Chlorophyll – green Phycobilin – blue-green, yellow, and red Fucoxanthin – brown and olive-green Carotenoid – red, orange, and yellow

  27. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Chlorophyta (green algae) • Diverse body forms: all four • Diverse habitats: aquatic, moist terrestrial, symbiotic relationships • Pigments: chlorophyll and carotenoids • Share common ancestor with plants? (same pigments and cell wall composition)

  28. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Phaeophyta (brown algae) • Body form: multicellular • Pigments: chlorophyll and fucoxanthin • Habitat: cold, nutrient-rich, rocky coasts • Some of the largest algae known

  29. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Rhodophyta (red algae) • Body form: multicellular • Pigments: chlorophyll and phycobilin • Phycobilin can absorb deep-penetrating light • Rhodophyta can live at great depths

  30. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Bacillariophyta (diatoms) • Body form: unicellular or colonial • Pigments: chlorophyll, carotenoids, fucoxanthin • 2-piece shells have radial or bilateral symmetry • Important role as producers in food web

  31. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Dinoflagelleta (dinoflagellates) • Body form: unicellular • Pigments: chlorophyll and carotenoids • Some species produce a red tide • Turn water reddish during population explosion • Red tide toxin can kill large numbers of fish

  32. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Chrysophyta (golden algae) • Body form: unicellular and colonial • Pigments: chlorophyll, carotenoids, fucoxanthin • Resistant cysts allow survival beneath frozen lakes in winter and dry lakes in summer • Store surplus energy as oil

  33. Plant-like PROTISTAPhylum Euglenophyta (euglenoids) • Body form: unicellular • Pigments: chlorophyll, carotenoids • Autotrophic (photosynthetic) and heterotrophic (eyespot and flagellum)

More Related