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Chapter 24 Protists.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 24 Protists."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 24 Protists

2 Kingdom Protista “Simple” eukaryotes Mostly unicellular
Some form colonies Some are coenocytic Multiple nuclei in one mass of cytoplasm A few are multicellular

3 Most protists live in aquatic environments
Sixty major groups of protists Important in the biosphere Food for other organisms Photosynthetic protists supply oxygen

4 Locomotion Modes of nutrition Pseudopodia Flagella Cilia
A few are nonmotile Modes of nutrition Autotrophs Heterotrophs

5 Chlamydomonas

6 Interactions with other organisms
Free-living Mutualism Commensalism Parasitism Habitats Most live in the ocean or freshwater ponds, lakes, and streams Parasites live in host’s bodily fluids

7 Modes of reproduction Many protists reproduce both sexually and asexually Syngamy (union of gametes) Some protists are solely asexual

8 Endosymbiont theory Certain organelles arose from symbiosis with prokaryotes Mitochondria arose from aerobic eubacteria Chloroplasts arose from cyanobacteria

9 Primary and secondary endosymbiosis

10 Classifying eukaryotes
Ultrastructure Fine details of cell structure Molecular data Ribosomal RNA Nuclear genes The protist kingdom is probably paraphyletic

11 Eight monophyletic groups of eukaryotes

12 Zooflagellates Mostly unicellular heterotrophs Move using flagella
Now separated into several monophyletic groups Excavates Discicristates

13 Excavates live in oxygen-free environments
Diplomonads No mitochondria No Golgi complex One or two nuclei Up to eight flagella Giardia is a parasite

14 Giardia

15 Discicristates have disc-shaped mitochondrial cristae
Euglenoids About 1/3 are photosynthetic Inhabit freshwater ponds and puddles Trypanosoma causes African sleeping sickness

16 Euglena gracilis

17 Alveolates have flattened vesicles under the plasma membrane
Ciliates Move by hairlike cilia Micronuclei for sexual reproduction Macronuclei control metabolism Reproduce sexually by conjugation

18 Paramecium, a ciliate

19 Alveolates Dinoflagellates Apicomplexans
Mostly unicellular with two flagella Mostly photosynthetic Apicomplexans Parasitic Spore-forming Plasmodium causes malaria

20 Dinoflagellates

21 Heterokonts are motile with two different kind of flagella
Water molds Mycelium absorbs organic material Reproduce asexually with biflagellate zoospores Reproduce sexually with oospores Phytophthora causes plant diseases

22 Mycelium around a dead insect
Saprolegnia

23 Heterokonts Diatoms Golden algae
Mostly unicellular with shells containing silica Some diatoms are part of plankton Golden algae Mostly unicellular, biflagellate algae Both freshwater and marine

24 Diatoms

25 Heterokonts Brown algae Multicellular seaweed
Ecologically important in cooler ocean waters Kelps have leaflike blades, stemlike stipes, anchoring holdfasts, gas-filled bladders

26 Brown algae

27 Cercozoa are amoeboid cells that often have hard outer shells, called tests, through which cytoplasmic projections extend

28 Cercozoa Foraminferans Actinopods Many-chambered tests with pores
Cytoplasmic extensions to move and obtain food Actinopods Mostly marine plankton Axopods to obtain food

29 An actinipod

30 Plants have chloroplasts bounded by inner and outer membranes
Land plants, red algae, and green algae are monophyletic Red algae and green algae are in kingdom Protista

31 Red algae are mostly multicellular seaweeds
Ecologically important in warm tropical waters Red algae with calcium carbonate in their cell walls are important for reef building

32 Red algae

33 Green algae are diverse in size, structural complexity, and reproduction
May be the ancestors of land plants Multicellular forms do not have cells differentiated into tissues, unlike plants

34 Green algae

35 Amoebas move and obtain food using cytoplasmic extensions called pseudopodia
Capture and engulf food by surrounding it and forming a vacuole around it Entamoeba histolytica causes amoebic dysentery

36 Plasmoidal slime mold Feeding stage is a multinucleate plasmodium that extends up to one foot in diameter In the reproductive stage, stalks called sporangia produce haploid spores

37 Plasmoidal slime mold

38 Cellular slime molds Feeding stage is individual amoeboid cells
During moisture or food shortage, they aggregate into a migrating pseudoplasmodium Forms stalked fruiting body containing spores

39 Cellular slime mold


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