Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

PROTISTS.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "PROTISTS."— Presentation transcript:

1 PROTISTS

2 What is a Protist? Protists are eukaryotes that cannot be classified as animals, plants, or fungi Recall: Eukaryotes have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles All protists live in moist surroundings Protists=diversity Examples of this 1) Some are unicellular while others are multicellular 2) Some are heterotrophs, some autotrophs, some both 3) Some cannot move while others move extremely fast

3 What is a Protist? Due to this diversity, classifying these organisms has been extremely difficult Scientists have decided to classify them into the following 3 groups: Animal-like protists Plantlike protists Fungus-like protists

4 Nutrition Many protists are autrophs, organisms that make their own food. Other protists are heterotrophs, organisms that must get their food by eating other organisms or their byproducts

5 Movement and Reproduction
Protists use cilia, flagella, or pseudopodia to move. Reproduction is done either sexually, asexually, or both. They reproduce asexually by binary fission and sexually by conjugation

6 Animal-Like Protists Heterotrophs
Most can move from place to place to obtain food Animal-like protists are also called protozoans Unicellular Protozoans can be classified into four groups, based on the way they move and live: Protozoans: With Pseudopods With Cilia With Flagella That are parasites

7 Protozoans With Pseudopods
Protozoans with pseudopods are known as sarcodines Sarcodines move and feed by forming temporary bulges in the cell-cytoplasmic streaming Pseudopod=false foot Pseudopods form when cytoplasm flows toward one location and the rest of the organism follows

8 Protozoans with Pseudopods
Pseudopods enable sarcodines to move and trap food Some fresh-water sarcodines have a contractile vacuole A structure that collects the extra water and then expels it from the cell Ex) Amoeba

9

10 Protozoans with Cilia Known as the Ciliates
Use cilia, hair-like projections from cells, to move and obtain food Act like tiny oars Cells are complex Example Paramecium

11 Paramecium Paramecium are a ciliate that: Has two contractile vacuoles
Has two nucleus Large nucleus controls the cell Small nucleus functions in reproduction Reproduce mostly by binary fission but occasionally by conjugation

12

13 Protozoans with Flagella
Called the flagellates Protists that use long, whiplike flagella to move May have one or more flagella Some live inside other organisms (symbiosis) Others may harm its host it is in

14 Protozoans That Are Parasites
This group is characterized more by the way they live than their movements They are all parasites that feed on the cells and body fluids of their host Move in a variety of ways Many have more than one possible host Ex) Plasmodium: protist that causes malaria

15

16 Plantlike Protists Commonly called algae Extremely diverse
Like plants, they are all autotrophs Most are able to use the sun’s energy to make their own food Some are unicellular while others may be multicellular

17 Plantlike Protists Some live in colonies of a few cells up to thousands of cells Wide variety of colors depending on their pigments Green, yellow, red, brown, orange, or even black Play a significant role in many environments

18 Diatoms Unicellular protists with glasslike cell walls
Some float near the surface of water bodies while others attach to rocks in shallow water Can move by oozing chemicals out of slits in their cell walls and glide in the slime When they die, there cell walls collect on the bottom of oceans or lakes to form diatomaceous earth Diatomaceous earth is used in household scouring products, insecticides, and as a polishing agent

19

20 Dinoflagellates Unicellular algae surrounded by stiff plates that look like a suit of armor Variety of colors All have two flagella held in grooves between their plates When flagella beat, they twirl like toy tops as they move through the water They glow in the dark

21

22 Euglenoids Green, unicellular algae found mostly in fresh water
Can be heterotrophs under certain conditions but mainly autotrophs Consists of a flagellum, a nucleus, chloroplasts, eyespot (used to find light for photosynthesis)

23 Structure of a Euglena

24 Characteristics of Algae
Algae can be unicellular, colonial, filamentous, or multicellular Seven Phyla of Plant-like protists: Chlorophyta Bacillariophyta Euglenophyta Phaeophyta Rhodophyta Dinoflagellata Chrysophyta

25 Red Algae Almost all are multicellular seaweeds
Found as deep as 260 meters; red pigment good for absorbing sunlight at low depths Substances extracted from red algae is used to make ice cream and hair conditioner

26 Green Algae Very diverse
Most are unicellular; some form colonies; others are multicellular Most live in either fresh or salt water Few live on land on rocks, crevices in tree bark, or in moist soils Very closely related to plants; contain same type of chlorophyll

27 Green Algae

28 Brown Algae Many organisms commonly called seaweed is brown algae
Has plantlike structures Giant kelps are an example of brown algae Some substances in brown algae are used as thickeners in puddings and other foods

29 Funguslike Protists Fungus are the “sort of like” organisms
Heterotrophs like animals; cell walls like plants Spore is a tiny cell that is able to grow into a new organism Have the ability to move at some time in their lives

30 Slime Molds Brilliant colored
Live on forest floors and other moist, shady places Feed on bacteria and other microorganisms Produce spores when conditions become harsh

31 Water Molds and Downy Mildews
Both usually live in water or moist places Grow as tiny threads that look like fuzz Attack many food crops


Download ppt "PROTISTS."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google