Kingdom Protista.

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Presentation transcript:

Kingdom Protista

Kingdom Protista Very diverse group of organisms Hard to classify Some are heterotrophs Some are autotrophs Most unicellular, some multicellular ALL are EUKARYOTES Have a nucleus Have membrane bound organelles

Kingdom Protista There are three main groups: Animal-like ( Protozoa) Plant-like ( Algae) Fungus-like

Animal-like Protists Unicellular heterotrophs Are classified by the way they move Sarcodines ( rhizopods) Ciliates Zooflagellates Sporozoans

Zooflagellates Move with flagella—whiplike structures

Zooflagellates 1, 2, or many flagella Absorb food or can be parasites Reproduce asexually by binary fission

Zooflagellates Trypanosoma *causes African sleeping sickness * carried by the tsetse fly

Zooflagellates Trychonympha( mutualistic) and lives in the guts of termites and helps them digest wood

Sarcodines Move with pseudopodia Pseudopodia means “ false feet” and are extensions of the cytoplasm Movement is called amoeboid movement Can also be used in phagocytosis( getting food) Reproduce by binary fission

Sarcodines Amoeba Radiolarians Heliozoans

Ciliates Move by cilia—tiny hairlike projections off the cell membrane Cilia can also be used for feeding Can be found in fresh and salt water Can have two nuclei Contractile vacuole—help pump extra water out—remember osmotic balance???

Ciliates Paramecium

Ciliates Stentor

Sporozoans Not able to move( no movement ) Are parasitic Reproduce by producing spores spores are haploid reproductive cells

Sporozoans Plasmodium Transmitted by mosquitoes Causes the disease Malaria

Plant-like Protists Also called Algae Classified by color and structure Are autotrophs Most unicellular, some multicellular

Euglenophyta Common name: euglenoids Pigments: chlorophyll ( green ) Unicellular Have eyespot and pellicle Autotroph most of the time, can be a heterotroph Moves with a flagella

Euglena

Pyrrophyta Common name—dinoflagellates “Fire Algae” Unicellular Can live in fresh and marine water Are bioluminescent Some cause algal blooms and “red tide”

Pyrrophyta Gymnodinium can cause red tide The algae release toxins that poison and kill fish and shell fish and is a problem for the enviroment.

Chrysophyta Common name— “golden algae” Pigments—yellow-green to golden brown Unicellular Cell walls made of pectin Asterionella

Bacillariophyta Common name—Diatoms Unicellular Cells walls made of silica—can be used to make toothpaste and cosmetics Two cell walls fit together ( like a petri dish)

Rhodophyta Common name— “red algae” Pigments—phycobilins, chlorophyll a Multicellular Used to make agar—used in ice creams and puddings as a thickener

Rhodophyta Coralline Algae Irish Moss

Phaeophyta Common name— “ brown algae” Pigments—fucoxanthin, chlorophyll a & c Multicellular Largest and most complex of all algae Uses—iodine, food, and algin ( in some food products )

Phaeophyta Fucus Lamanaria

Phaeophyta Rockweed Sargassum

Chlorophyta Common name— “ green algae” Pigments—chlorophyll a & b Multicellular Has cellulose in cell walls Can live in fresh or salt water Believed to be the ancestors of the Plant Kingdom

Chlorophyta Volvox Ulva( sea lettuce) Spirogyra Chlamydomonas

Fungus-like Protists Heterotrophic Decomposers Two types: Slime Molds Water and Downy Molds