the protists

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The Protists • Eukaryotes. Most unicellular. Most aerobic. Moist environments Can be photoheterotrophs, photoautotrophs, chemoheterotrophs or mixotrophs. Flagella or cilia. All protists can reproduce asexually, some sexually

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The Protists. Eukaryotes. Most unicellular. Most aerobic. Moist environments Can be photoheterotrophs, photoautotrophs, chemoheterotrophs or mixotrophs. Flagella or cilia. All protists can reproduce asexually, some sexually. Endosymbiosis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Protists

The Protists• Eukaryotes.• Most unicellular.• Most aerobic.• Moist environments• Can be photoheterotrophs, photoautotrophs,

chemoheterotrophs or mixotrophs.• Flagella or cilia.• All protists can reproduce asexually, some

sexually

Page 2: The Protists

Endosymbiosis• Eukaryotic cells evolved from symbiotic

combinations of prokaryotic cells.– Mitochondria aerobic heterotrophic

prokaryotic cells– Chloroplasts photosynthetic prokaryotes

Page 3: The Protists

Evidence for Endosymbiosis

Similarities between modern bacteria and the chloroplasts/mitochondria of eukaryotes:

*size*enzymes*circular DNA molecules*process of division*ribosomes similar

Page 4: The Protists

The Candidate Kingdoms• Archaezoa• Euglenozoa• Alveolata• Stramenopila• Rhodophyta• Green Algae

Page 5: The Protists

Candidate Kingdom Archaezoa

• Giardia • have two nuclei,

flagella, and no mitochondria (…parasites)

Page 6: The Protists

Candidate Kingdom EuglenozoaAutotrophic and/or

heterotrophic flagellates

• Euglena– 1 or 2 flagella

• Kinetoplastsparasitic, e.g. African Sleeping Sickness (bite of tsetse fly)

Trypanosoma

Page 7: The Protists

Candidate Kingdom Alveolata• Dinoflagellates, phytoplankton,

cause red tides, color from xanthophyll.

• Apicomplexans, plasmodium, causes malaria.

• Ciliates, paramecium

Next Group

Page 8: The Protists

Dinoflagellates

http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artsep01/dinof.html http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/indexmag.html

Page 9: The Protists

Apicomplexans

Leishmania

Parasite infected erythrocyte

Page 10: The Protists

Life history of Plasmodium

Page 11: The Protists

Ciliates

Paramecium

Stentor

Vorticella

Page 12: The Protists

Pseudopod “Protists”

Taxonomic lineage unclear, so no clear kingdom found… i.e. “misfits”• Rhizopods, amoebas

• Actinopods, radiolarians and heliozoans (delicate silica shells).

• Foraminiferans, marine with porous calcium shells. Used as index fossils.

• Slime Molds, cytoplasmic streaming

Page 13: The Protists

Rhizopod

Amoeba

Page 14: The Protists

Actinopods

Radiolarians

Page 15: The Protists

Foraminiferans

Page 16: The Protists

Slime Molds• Plasmodial Slime Mold – Myxomycota. Heterotrophic,brightly colored,

multinucleated ameboid mass.

Page 17: The Protists

Candidate Kingdom Stramenopila• Diatoms (bacillariophyta)– unicellular

plankton with box-like silica walls. Diatomaceous earth.

• Golden Algae (chrysophyta) – yellow and brown carotene and xanthophyll pigments

• Brown Algae (phaeophyta)- largests and most complex. Seaweeds and kelps, may be as long as 60m.

• Water Molds (oomycota) – white rusts and downy mildews

Next Group

Page 18: The Protists

Diatoms

                                                   

      

Page 19: The Protists

Golden Algae - Chrysophyta

Page 20: The Protists

Brown Algae - Phaeophyta

Kelp Harvesting

Page 21: The Protists

Kelp Structures• Analogous plant-like structures

– Body = thallus– Root-like structure – holdfast– Stem-like structure – stipe– Leaf-like structure - blades

Page 22: The Protists

Water molds, white rusts and downy mildews

White rust on spinachWater mold

Page 23: The Protists

Candidate Kingdom Rhodophyta

• Red color from pigment

• Marine • Multicellular• Carrageenan

thickener

Page 24: The Protists

Candidate Kingdom Green Algae

*Many scientists advocate inclusion of green algae into the plant kingdom.*More than 7000 species, mostly freshwater.

Ulva

*Unicellular – Chlamydomonas*Colonial – Volvox*Multicellular – Ulva

Page 25: The Protists

Green Algae - Chlorophyta

Chlamydomonas

Volvox

Spirogyra

Page 26: The Protists

Chlamydomonas Life Cycle

Page 27: The Protists

Ulva Life Cycle