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Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Jan 17, 2018

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Olivia Cook
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Page 1: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.
Page 2: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Chapter 28

Page 3: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.
Page 4: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Protista!

Page 5: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

•Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water•Observe the protists in the water!•Draw at least 6 diagrams total of protists you observe under 10X and 40X magnifications (3 in each?)•Make your drawings as detailed as possible and label parts you think you can identify. Be sure to include the magnification under which you are observing.

•Research protists and try to classify the organisms you drew!

Survey of Protists!

Page 6: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Why is “Protista” no longer considered a kingdom?

Page 7: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Most are unicellular but can be colonial or multicellular

Protista

Page 8: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

1.Photosynthetic, plant-like protists (algae)

2.Ingestive, animal-like protists (protozoa)

3.Absorptive, fungus-like protists

Protista

Page 9: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Some are motile, others are not; most have cilia or flagella at some point in their lives

Protista

Page 10: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Life Cycles1.Mitosis2.Sexual reproduction3.Meiosis and syngamy (formation of a zygote from 2 gametes)

Protista

Page 11: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Habitats – most are aquatic, including oceans, ponds, lakes, damp soil, leaf litter, etc1.Important constituents of plankton; phytoplankton (photosynthetic protists) are the bases of most marine and freshwater food webs2.Symbionts inhabiting body fluids, tissues, and cells of hosts (relationships vary from mutualistic to parasitic)3.Parasitic parasites include the malaria parasites (several species of plasmodium), Giardia lamblia (synonymous with Giardia intestinalis) which causes diarrhea, Trichomonas vaginalis (an STD), and several Trypanosoma species which cause sleeping sickness

Protista

Page 12: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Plasmodium

Page 13: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Giardia lamblia

Page 14: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

African trypanosomiasis : symptoms in two stageshaemolymphatic phase: fever, headaches, joint pains, and itching; severe swelling of lymph nodes; Winterbottom's sign, the tell-tale swollen lymph nodes along the back of the neck, may appearIf untreated: anemia, endocrine, cardiac, and kidney dysfunctionsneurological phase: parasite invades the central nervous system; term 'sleeping sickness' comes from these symptoms: confusion, reduced coordination, disruption of the sleep cycle with bouts of fatigue punctuated with manic periods lead to daytime slumber and night-time insomniaWithout treatment, invariably fatal; progressive mental deterioration leading to coma and death; damage caused in the neurological phase is irreversible

Trypanosoma – Sleeping Sickness

Page 15: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

The Origin and Early Diversification of Eukaryotes

Page 16: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Unique to Eukaryotes

Page 17: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Membrane-bound nucleusEndomembrane systemMitochondriaChloroplastCytoskeleton9+2 flagellaMultiple chromosomes and linear DNA assoc. with proteins

Life cycles with mitosis, meiosis, and sex

Unique to Eukaryotes

Page 18: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Trends Leading to Increased Complexity

Page 19: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Trends Leading to Increased Complexity

Page 20: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Trends Leading to Increased Complexity

Page 21: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

The Endomembrane System

Page 22: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

The Endomembrane System

Page 23: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Endosymbiosis

Page 24: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Endomembrane System and Endosymbiosis

Page 25: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.
Page 26: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.
Page 27: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

•Leucoplast – (food cupboard) – stores starches •Chromosplast – (paint can/food coloring) – gives flowers their colors •Chloroplast – (solar panel) – converts light energy into chemical energy in the form of sugar and starch.

Plastids

Page 28: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

•Existence of current endosymbiotic relationships•Mitochondria and chloroplast size vs. prokaryotes• Inner membranes of mito/chloro contain enzymes and transport systems like modern prokaryotes (ETC anyone?)•Mito/chloro replicate similarly to binary fission•Mito/chloro have single circular genome like prokaryotes•Mito/chloro have t-RNA, ribosomes, and other “machinery” necessary to synthesize proteins

Evidence for Endosymbiosis

Which evidence is strongest?

Which evidence is weakest?

Page 29: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Chimera

Page 30: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Cyanobacteria – ancestors of chloroplasts

Alpha Proteobacteria – ancestors of mitochondria

Eukaryotic Cell Organelle Ancestors

Page 31: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.
Page 32: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.
Page 33: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

Protista!

Page 34: Chapter 28 Protista! Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water Observe the protists.

•Make a wet mount slide of the “pond” water (from your very own GCM ditch) using about 2 drops of “mucky” water•Observe the protists in the water!•Draw at least 6 diagrams total of protists you observe under 10X and 40X magnifications (3 in each?)•Make your drawings as detailed as possible and label parts you think you can identify. Be sure to include the magnification under which you are observing.

Survey of Protists!