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Protists of the Ocean

Protists of the Ocean. "Eukaryotes that are neither Animals , Fungi , nor Plants ". Ameoba with ingested Diatoms. Paramecium. Lunch!. Plant like Protists Autotrophic oxygen producers. Euglena Algae Single celled Phytoplankton Cyanobacteria Diatoms Dinoflagellates Multi-celled

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Protists of the Ocean

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  1. Protists of the Ocean "Eukaryotes that are neither Animals, Fungi, nor Plants"

  2. Ameoba with ingested Diatoms

  3. Paramecium Lunch!

  4. Plant like ProtistsAutotrophic oxygen producers • Euglena • Algae • Single celled • Phytoplankton • Cyanobacteria • Diatoms • Dinoflagellates • Multi-celled • Sea weeds

  5. Has flagella Mostly lives in fresh water Has light sensitive red eyespot Autotrophic and heterotrophic Euglena

  6. Phytoplankton: Ocean Food! • Derived from the Greek words phyto (plant) and plankton (made to wander or drift), phytoplankton are microscopic organisms that live in watery environments, both salty and fresh. • Some phytoplankton are bacteria, some are protists, and most are single-celled plants. Among the common kinds are cyanobacteria, silica-encased diatoms,dinoflagellates,green algae, and chalk-coated coccolithophores.

  7. Algae: single celled • Prokaryotic • Cyanobacteria • Single-celled to filamentous blue-green alga or cyanobacterium • Photosynthetic • Produce much of the oxygen in the world

  8. Life in a Glass House • Diatoms • Most abundant of single celled protists • Account for 20% of photosynthesis • Silica shells make them great fossils to study

  9. Dinoflagellates • The term "dinoflagellate" means "whirling flagella" • Each has two flagella • Most are photosynthetic • Some are parasitic • Can cause problems with “blooms” • Red tide • produce a neurotoxin which affects muscle function in susceptible organisms. • Humans may be affected by eating fish or shellfish containing the toxins. • paralytic shellfish poisoning, or PSP (from eating affected shellfish, such as clams, mussels, and oysters) • serious but are not usually fatal.

  10. Seaweed • Seaweeds are algae that live in the sea or in brackish water. Scientists often call them "benthic marine algae", which just means "attached algae that live in the sea". • There are about 10,000 species of seaweeds • three basic colors: red, green, and brown • Red and Brown are in salt water • Green often in fresh water

  11. Conjugation – Sexual Reproduction

  12. Filamentous Green Alga

  13. Colonial Algae

  14. Multicellular Green Algae

  15. Kelp Forestskelp forest web cam

  16. Detrimental Aspects of Algae • Blooms of freshwater algae • Red tides and marine blooms • Toxins accumulated in food chains • Damage to cave paintings, frescoes, and other works of art • Fouling of ships and other submerged surfaces • Fouling of the shells of commercially important bivalves

  17. Prorocentrum micans bloom Associated with Hurricane Floyd, which ended a dry summer surface of water slick with this dinoflagellate Red tide bloom

  18. Algal Bloom: Before and After

  19. Red tide

  20. Toxic Phytoplankton & Human poisoning • Paralytic shellfish poisoning - saxitoxin • Neurotxic shellfish poisoning - brevetoxin • Ciguatera fish poisoning - ciguatoxin and maitotoxin • Diarrhetic shellfish poisoning - okadaic acid • Amnesic shellfish poisoning - domoic acid • Cyanobacterial neurotoxins - anatoxins • Cyanobacterial hepatotoxins - microcystin, nodularin • Dermatitis - lyngbyatoxin, aplysiatoxin

  21. Benefits of Algae • used commercially for toothpastes, soaps, ice cream, tinned meats, fabric printing etc, • Food for humans • Food for invertebrates and fishes in mariculture • Animal feed • Soil fertilizers and conditioners in agriculture • Treatment of waste water • Diatomaceous earth (= diatoms) • Chalk deposits • Drugs • The total wholesale value of dried brown algae worldwide collected in the wild or cultivated is less than $100 million dollars.

  22. Brown Tide • Causes: • Species: golden-brown algae • Aureococcus anophagefferens, A. lanunensis • Changes in groundwater, nutrients • Impacts • Zooplankton lose their appetites and die • Reduced sunlight kills plants • Death of bivalves (mussels, scallops etc) • What can we do?: • Less fertilizers!

  23. Amnesic Shellfish Poisoning • Causes • Diatoms (Pseudo-nitzschia multiseries, Paustralis) • Impacts • Toxin- domoic acid causes permanent loss of short term memory and may be fatal • Shell fish, crabs, and fish may be affected • Sea lion, pelicans, and cormorants also • What to do?

  24. Diarrhetic Shellfish Poisoning • Causes • Phytoplankton like Dinophysis acuminata, D. fortii, and Prorocentrum lima • Impacts • Toxins: lots of them • Cause nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhea • Affect mussels, oysters, scallops and the humans and mammals who eat them • What to do?

  25. Neurotoxic Shellfish Poisoning • Causes • Dinoflagellates: Karenia brevis • Impacts • Toxins produced brevetoxin which affects manatees, dolphins, oysters, fish, clams, and birds and humans by consumption or breathing in the sea foam containing the toxin • Causes diarrhea, vomiting, neurologic symptoms, and asthma-like symptoms. NO known antidote but most recover in a few days • What to do?

  26. Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning • Causes • Algae Alexandrium • Impacts • Toxin affects mussels, clams, crabs, oysters, scallops, herring, sardines, marine mammals, and birds, and humans • Symptoms include numbness, paralysis and respiratory failure. No known antidote and death may occur from respiratory arrest within 24 hours • What to do?

  27. Harmful Cyanobacterial Blooms • Causes • Excessive growths of cyanobacteria • Impacts • Toxins affect nerves, liver tissues in mammals, birds, fishes and invertbrates • Humans can be affected by inhaling toxins causing nausea, diarrhea, stomach pain, difficulty breathing, allergic reactions, skin irritation, liver damage, and neurologic symptoms • Increased turbidity so decreased light • What to do?

  28. Pfiesteria piscicida • Causes • dinoflagellate • Impacts • Flu like symptoms, skin rashes, memory loss in commercial fishermen and women. • What to do?

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