figure 26.21

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Figure 26.21 Archaea Bacteria Eukarya COMMON ANCESTOR OF ALL LIFE Land plants Green algae Red algae Forams Ciliates Dinoflagellates Cellular slime molds Amoebas Animals Fungi Euglena Trypanosomes Leishmania Sulfolobus Thermophiles Halophiles Methanobacterium Green nonsulfur bacteria (Mitochondrion) Spirochetes Chlamydia Cyanobacteria Green sulfur bacteria (Plastids, including chloroplasts) Diatoms

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Figure 26.21. Eukarya. Land plants. Dinoflagellates. Forams. Green algae. Diatoms. Ciliates. Red algae. Amoebas. Cellular slime molds. Euglena. Trypanosomes. Animals. Leishmania. Fungi. Green nonsulfur bacteria. Sulfolobus. Thermophiles. (Mitochondrion). Spirochetes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Figure 26.21

Figure 26.21

Archaea

Bacteria

Eukarya

COMMONANCESTOR

OF ALLLIFE

Land plantsGreen algae

Red algae

ForamsCiliates

Dinoflagellates

Cellular slime moldsAmoebas

Animals

Fungi

EuglenaTrypanosomes

Leishmania

Sulfolobus

Thermophiles

Halophiles

Methanobacterium

Greennonsulfur bacteria

(Mitochondrion)

SpirochetesChlamydia

Cyanobacteria

Greensulfur bacteria

(Plastids, includingchloroplasts)

Diatoms

Page 2: Figure 26.21

Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes

• Unicellular, some colonial

• Typically 0.5um diameter

• Various shapes

• Well organized, all life functions are within one cell

Page 3: Figure 26.21
Page 4: Figure 26.21

Bacterial Shapes

Page 5: Figure 26.21

Domain Archea

• Share some traits with Bacteria and some with eukaryotes

Bacteria Archaea Eukarya

RNA Polymerase One Several Several

Introns Rare Present Present

Response to antibiotics

Growth inhibited

Not inhibited Not inhibited

Histones asso. With DNA

Absent Present in some

Present

Page 6: Figure 26.21

The Archaea

• Live in extreme environments• Extremophiles

• Extreme halophile• Extreme thermophile• Methanogens

Page 7: Figure 26.21

Domain Bacteria

• Include the majority of familiar bacteria

• Some are pathogenic

• Some are beneficial

Page 8: Figure 26.21

Cell Structure• Cell wall, Bacteria have peptidoglycan• Gram staining can divide into 2 groups

• Gram positive – simple walls, less peptidoglycan• Gram negative – less peptidoglycan, structurally more

complex, outer layer of lipopolysaccharide• Capsule or slime layer

• Protect against dehydration, stick to surface, shield against attacks by immune systems

• Motility by flagella• Fimbrae used to attach cell to surface• One large, circular DNA

Page 9: Figure 26.21

A few examples of Bacterial Types

Page 10: Figure 26.21

Roles in the Biosphere

• Chemical Recycling• Carbon cycle• Nitrogen cycle

• Ecological Interactions• Symbiotic relationships• Pathogens

Page 11: Figure 26.21

Domain Eukarya

• Protista

• Fungi

• Planta

• Animalia

Page 12: Figure 26.21

Protista

• Remember that the field of taxonomy is constantly evolving

• Eukarya is divided into 5 supergroups that include planta, animalia, fungi and protista

• Most protista are unicellular• All are eukaryotic

Page 13: Figure 26.21
Page 14: Figure 26.21

Excavata• Based on morphological studies of the cytoskeleton

• Some have “excavated” feeding groove

• Each group is monophyletic

• Diplomonads/Parabasalids – lack plastids, have modified mitochondria, often anaerobic• Giardia, Trichomonas

• Euglenozoans – rod or crystalline structure inside the flagella• Kinetoplastids - Trypanosoma• Euglenid - Euglena

Page 15: Figure 26.21
Page 16: Figure 26.21

Chromalveolates

• Evolved from Secondary Endosymbiosis – common ancestor engulfed a single celled red algae

• Monophyletic groups

• Alveolates, Stramenopile

Page 17: Figure 26.21

Alveolates• Membrane bound sacs

under the plasma membrane

• Dinoflagellates – cellulose plates, groves for flagella

• Apicomplexans – complex life cycle, animal parasites

• Ciliates – use cilia for movement, feeding; two types of nuclei and conjugation

Page 18: Figure 26.21
Page 19: Figure 26.21

Conjugation in ciliates

Page 20: Figure 26.21

Stramenopile

• Important photosynthetic organisms• Characteristic flagellum with numerous, hairlike

projections• Diatoms, Golden and Brown algae, Oomycetes•

Page 21: Figure 26.21

Diatom• Unicellular algae

• Wall made of silica

• Diatomaceous earth

• 100,000 living species

Page 22: Figure 26.21

Golden Algae• Yellow and brown

carotenoids

• Biflagellated

• Mostly unicellular, some colonial

Page 23: Figure 26.21

Brown Algae• Multicellular marine

‘seaweed’• Carotenoid pigments• Thallus - plantlike algal

body• No stem, root or leaves• Leaflike blades with

airfilled floats, and holdfast

• Food, thickening agent

Page 24: Figure 26.21

Alteration of Generations

Page 25: Figure 26.21

Oomycetes• Water mold, white rust,

downy mildew• Previously fungi• Cell walls are cellulose• Convergent evolution• No plastids, no

photosynthesis

• Phytophthora – caused potato blight in 19th century, known as the Irish famine

Page 26: Figure 26.21

Rhizarians• Defined by similarity in

their DNA• Vary in morphology• Monophyletic group

• Radiolarians• Forams or foraminifera• Cercozoans

• Often referred to as amoebas because have threadlike pseudopodia

Page 27: Figure 26.21

Red and Green Algae

• 475 mya, a heterotrophic protist acquired a cyanobacterial endosymbiont = red and green algae

• Archaeplastida – red, green algae and land plants evolved from a common ancestor

Page 28: Figure 26.21

Red Algae• Red color due to

phycoerythrin, masks chlorophyll

• Pigments absorb red/green light which absorb deeper

• Multicellular, diverse lifecycles

• Porphyra or Nori

Page 29: Figure 26.21

Green Algae• Cellular structure

similar to that of land plants

Page 30: Figure 26.21

Unikonts

• Related to fungi and animals, very diverse

• Some research says these were the first eukaryotes to diverge from other eukaryotes.

• Amoebozoans – lobe shaped pseudopodia• Entamoeba – parasitic • Gymnamoeba - soil, freshwater, marine• Slime molds – cellular and plasmodial

Page 31: Figure 26.21

Plasmodial Slime Mold Life Cycle

Page 32: Figure 26.21
Page 33: Figure 26.21

Plants

• Land plants evolved from green algae ancestor• Adaptations for movement to land

• Ability to survive out of water• Brighter light• More carbon dioxide that water• Soil rich in nutrients• Few herbivores and pathogens in the beginning

• Challenges to living out of water• Scarcity of water• Lack of structural support

Page 34: Figure 26.21

Four traits that appear in land plants, but not in ancestral algae

Page 35: Figure 26.21

1. Alternation of generations and multicellular, dependent embryos

Page 36: Figure 26.21

2. Walled spores produced in sporangia

Page 37: Figure 26.21

3. Multicellular Gametangia

Page 38: Figure 26.21

4. Apical Meristems

Page 39: Figure 26.21

Table 29.1

Page 40: Figure 26.21
Page 41: Figure 26.21

Moss • Moss consists of

gametophytes

• Blades are often one cell thick

• Often have a thick cuticle

Page 42: Figure 26.21
Page 43: Figure 26.21

Liverworts

• Liver-shaped gametophytes are elevated on thallus

• Marchantia

Page 44: Figure 26.21

Hornwort• Long tapered

sporophyte

• Lacks seta, only sporangium is present

Page 45: Figure 26.21

Seedless Vascular Plants

• Sperm are flagellated and must swim through a film of water to fertilize the egg

• Lycophyta – club mosses, spike moss and quillworts

• Pterphyta – ferns, horsetails, Psilophyta (whisk ferns)

Page 46: Figure 26.21

Lycophyta

• Often are epiphytes – use other plants as substrate but are not parasites

• Upright stems with small leaves

Page 47: Figure 26.21

Pterophyta

• Ferns, Horsetails, Whisk ferns

Page 48: Figure 26.21

Importance of Seedless Plants• Devonian and

Carboniferous periods, forming the first forests

• Rapidly removed carbon dioxide from atmosphere, resulting in glacial periods

• Eventually became coal

Page 49: Figure 26.21

Adaptations of Seed Plants

Page 50: Figure 26.21

Seed Plants

• Gymnosperms – naked seeds on cones• Ginkgophyta• Cycadophyta• Gnetophyta• Coniferophyta

• Angiosperms• Anthophyta – flowering plants

Page 51: Figure 26.21

Ginkgophyta

• Only surviving species of this phylum

• Ginko biloba

Page 52: Figure 26.21

Cycadophyta• Large cones and

palmlike leaves

• Thrived in Mesozoic era

Page 53: Figure 26.21

Gnetophyta

Page 54: Figure 26.21

Coniferophyta

• 600 species

Page 55: Figure 26.21

AngiospermMonocot

• One cotyledon• Parallel veins• Vascular tissue

scattered• Roots fibrous• Pollen grain has 1

opening• Floral parts in 3s

Dicot

• Two cotyledons• Veins netlike• Vascular tissue in a ring• Taproot present• Pollen grain has 3

openings• Floral parts in 4 or 5

Page 56: Figure 26.21

Fungi• Heterotrophic,

feed by absorption• Multicellular, some

unicellular• Cell wall is chitin• Filaments called

hyphae = vegetative

• Mycelium = reproductive

Page 57: Figure 26.21
Page 58: Figure 26.21

Chytrid

• Globular fruiting body forms multicellular branched hyphae

• Flagellated spores

• Earliest fungal group to diverge?

Page 59: Figure 26.21

Zygomycetes

• Decomposers, parasites, commensal symbionts

• Cause a great deal of food spoilage

• Black bread mold

Page 60: Figure 26.21

Glomeromycetes

• Many plants form mycorrhizal associations with these fungi

Page 61: Figure 26.21

Ascomycetes

• Sac fungi• Cup-shaped fruiting body

Page 62: Figure 26.21

Basidiomycetes• Mushrooms,

puffballs, shelf fungi

• Concentrates growth in hyphae of mushrooms and produces fruiting structures rapidly

Page 63: Figure 26.21

Importance of Fungi

• Decomposers

• Mutualism relationships with plants and animals

• Lichens

• Pathogens

Page 64: Figure 26.21

Animal Diversity

• Multicellular

• Heterotrophic• Animals cannot make all their own organic molecules so the

have to ingest them

• Tissues develop from embryonic layers, muscle and nervous tissues are unique

• No cell walls, instead have internal support, ie. collagen

Page 65: Figure 26.21

Early Embryonic Development

Page 66: Figure 26.21

Invertebrates

Page 67: Figure 26.21

Porifera• Sessile animals

• Lack true tissues

• Suspension feeders

Page 68: Figure 26.21

Cnidaria• Corals, jellies, hydras

• Radially symmetrical

• Single opening serves as mouth and anus

Page 69: Figure 26.21

Lophotrochozoa• Wide range of body

types

• Bilateral

• Digestive tract with two openings

• Flatworms, Rotifers, Annelida, Mollusca

Page 70: Figure 26.21

Edysozoa• Shed a tough external

coat as they grow, called molting

• Nematoda, Arthropoda (insects), Chelicerates (arachnids), Crustaceans

Page 71: Figure 26.21

Deuterostomia• Radial cleavage,

formation of anus from blastopore

• Chordata, Echinodermata

Page 72: Figure 26.21
Page 73: Figure 26.21

Figure 33.UN06

Page 74: Figure 26.21

Vertebrates

• Characteristics of Vertebrates• Notochord – a skeletal structure in all chordate

embryos and some adults

• Dorsal, hollow nerve cord

• Pharyngeal slits or clefts – modified for gas exchange and are known as gill slits

• Muscular, post-anal tail – tail extends past the anus

Page 75: Figure 26.21

Chordate Characteristics

Page 76: Figure 26.21

Lancets

Page 77: Figure 26.21

Tunicates

• Characteristics are seen in larval stage• Adult stage become sessile and vertebral

characteristics are lost

Page 78: Figure 26.21

Craniates

• Chordates with a head

• Hagfish• Skull of cartilage, no jaws or vertebrae

Page 79: Figure 26.21

Vertebrates

• Craniates with a backbone

Page 80: Figure 26.21
Page 81: Figure 26.21

Lampreys

• Craniates with a backbone• Jawless

Page 82: Figure 26.21

Chondrichthyans• Vertebrates with jaws

• “cartilage fish”

• Sharks, rays, skates

Page 83: Figure 26.21

Ray-finned Fish - Osteichthyans• Aactinopterygii• Actinistia• Dipnoi

• Operculum – bony flap over the gills

• Swim bladder

• Lobe vs ray finned

Page 84: Figure 26.21

Tetrapods

• Amphibians

• Amniotes• Reptiles

• Turtles, alligators, crocodiles, birds

• Mammals• Monotremes (egg layers)• Marsupial • Eutherians (placental)