Top Banner
What Are Protists? • Kingdom Protista • “odds and ends” • Eukaryotic organisms • Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer
22

What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Dec 30, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

What Are Protists?

• Kingdom Protista

• “odds and ends”

• Eukaryotic organisms

• Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer

Page 2: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

• Several important characteristics: – membrane-bound organelles– complex cilia and flagella– sexual reproduction with gametes– Multi – cellularity

Page 3: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Reproduction

• Asexually by binary fission, budding, and fragmentation

• Sexually by fusion of gametes

Page 4: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Sexual Reproduction• Occurs as a response to environmental stress• Zygospore

– Adaptation that allows the zygote to survive freezing, drying out, and sun exposure

• Multicellular protists can reproduce both sexually and asexually via alternation of generations. – consists of multi - cellular haploid and multi - cellular

diploid phases.

Page 5: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Classifying Protists

• How they they obtain nutrition

– Photosynthesis

– Breakdown organic material

– Capture and eat other protists

• Ecological role

Page 6: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Animal – Like Protists

• Protozoa “first animals”

• Ingest other organisms to obtain energy

• Unicellular, most can move, and most reproduce asexually by binary fission

Page 7: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Amoeboid Protists

• Move by using extensions of their cells called pseudopodia

– Pseudopodia are also used to surround and engulf food particles

• Live in fresh water, in salt water, and in soil

• Free-living, but some are parasites

Page 8: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Ciliates

• Some of the most complex single - celled organisms

• Most or all of the body is covered by short, hair - like structures called cilia

• Move and hunt for food by beating their cilia

Page 9: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Flagellates

• Protists that have whip-like structures called flagella.

• Some flagellates also have cilia or form pseudopodia.

• Can be free-living or parasitic

Page 10: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Sporozoans

• Animal-like protists that form spore – like cells when they reproduce

• They lack flagella, cilia, and pseudopodia and do not move.

• All sporozoans are parasitic and cause diseases. (Malaria)

Page 11: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Plant – like Protists• Include the organisms known as phytoplankton

and algae.

• Obtain energy through photosynthesis

• Vary in the types of pigments used in photosynthesis and the kinds of molecules used to store energy

• Diatoms, Dinoflagellates, algae

Page 12: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Diatoms

• Photosynthetic, unicellular protists with unique double shells

• Their shells are made of silica or calcium carbonate and have distinct patterns.

Page 13: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Dinoflagellates

• Unicellular protists that typically have two flagella.

• Most are photosynthetic, but some are heterotrophic

• Most have protective coats that contain silica.

Page 14: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Euglenoids

• Freshwater protists that have one or two flagella.

• Many are photosynthetic, heterotrophic, or both.

• Some have an eyespot that helps direct them toward light.

Page 15: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Red Algae

• Most are multicellular and are usually found in warm ocean waters.

• The pigments in red algae absorb blue light that penetrates deep into water.

• Red algae grow at greater depths than other algae.

• Some have calcium carbonate in their cell walls.

– These coralline algae play an important role in the formation of coral reefs.

Page 16: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Brown Algae

• Multicellular protists that are found in cool ocean environments.

• The largest brown algae are kelp that can reach 60 m (197 ft) in length.

• The body of a kelp has is made up of a holdfast, a stipe, and blades

Page 17: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Green Algae

• Very diverse group of protist that form a major part of marine plankton.

• Some inhabit damp soil and resemble plants.

• Some are symbiotic within the cells of other organisms.

• Use chlorophyll for photosynthesis, starch to store energy, and their cell walls contain cellulose.

Page 18: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.
Page 19: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Fungus – like Protists

• Absorb nutrients from their environment and reproduce by releasing spores.

• Slime Molds

• Water Molds and Downy Mildews

Page 20: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Protists and Humans• Dysentery

– Contaminated water– Giardia, amebiasis

• Toxoplasmosis– Litter boxes and uncooked meat– Flu – like symptoms

Page 21: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

• Trichomoniasis– Very common S.T.I

• Cryptosporidiosis– Dysentery from uncooked meat and

contaminated water

• Chagas disease– Kissing bug feces– Few to no symptoms then can become chronic

with heart failure, swollen esophagus and large intestine

Page 22: What Are Protists? Kingdom Protista “odds and ends” Eukaryotic organisms Heterotroph, autotroph, or decomposer.

Protists and the Environment• Oxygen production and nutrient recycling

– Produce at least half of the Earth’s oxygen

• Food webs– Primary producers

• Algal blooms– Red tide and eutrophication

• Protists symbiosis– Coral, lichen, ungulate digestion