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Unicellular Organisms

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Presentation on theme: "Unicellular Organisms"— Presentation transcript:

1 Unicellular Organisms
-Unicellular (one celled) organisms are good models for membrane transport, because they need to perform many functions with one cell, rather than many types of cells.

2 Unicellular organisms possess a high
degree of complexity for one cell. -multicellular organisms have many cells, but each type performs one basic function. The interaction of the cells allows a multicelled organism to live.

3 Euglena: a genus of microscopic organisms in the Protista Kingdom.
Some Common Unicellular Organisms Euglena: a genus of microscopic organisms in the Protista Kingdom. -lives in fresh water, and are especially common in warm seasons, when they populate drainage ditches and ponds.

4 -Euglena has a spindle-shaped body,
and range in size from 1/1000 to 1/100 of an inch (0.025 to mm) long. -most species are green, because they contain chloroplasts, which allows them to produce their own food. They serve as primary producers in many aquatic ecosystems.

5 -Some species also eat small particles of food.
-moves via a flagellum, which is a whip- like appendage that sticks out of the body. -some Euglena also have a specialized “eye spot”, which serves as a light sensor, directing them toward available light.

6 Chloroplasts Flagellum

7 Euglena Hibernation/Reproduction
Hibernation: when conditions are bad (dry or too hot/cold) Euglena forms into a sphere, called the palmelloid stage. Each euglena then discards its flagellum, and forms a mucus outer covering.

8 Euglena undergo reproduction called
“binary fission” Each euglena first creates two of everything, then splits evenly into two halves.

9 2) Paramecium: another genus of
Protists, often called “slipper protists” because of their shape like a bedroom slipper. -usually less than 0.01 inches (.25mm) in length, and covered with very small hair like projections called cilia.

10 Cilia are used in movement, and during feeding.
-Paramecium does NOT have chloroplasts so therefore is a strict consumer. -It eats small particles of food or bacteria from fresh water where it lives. The most common paramecium is Paramecium caudata, which is used for research

11 Paramecium Anatomy

12 Paramecium Reproduction
Paramecium have two ways to reproduce.                                                                  They can reproduce Asexually, and split into two (binary fission) This type of reproduction does NOT involve the swap of genetic material, and makes a clone of the parent.

13 2) The second form of reproduction is
called conjugation, and involves the paramecium swapping genetic material. This type of reproduction does not result in a clone, but an individual with a new set of genetic instructions. This will lead to genetic variation within the population of paramecium.

14 3) Amoeba:one of the simplest of the
protists. -Amoeba possess a very flexible cell membrane, and constantly moving cytoplasm. -moves by “pouring” cytoplasm into extensions of the cell membrane, called pseudopodia.

15 -the shape of the amoeba continually
changes as new pseudopodia are created, and others disappear. Eats by surrounding its prey with pseudopods, and slowly engulfing it. This is called phagocytosis.

16 Amoeba Anatomy

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18 2 1 Pseudopods 3 4 Ameba feeding sequence

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