Chapter 28 The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Kingdom Protista 3 GROUPS OF PHYLA: ANIMAL-LIKE, PLANT-LIKE AND FUNGAL-LIKE PROTISTS ARE: UNICELLULAR, COLONIAL, OR MULTICELLULAR; EUKARYOTIC; MOSTLY HETEROTROPHIC;
Advertisements

Protists Protist are single cell eukaryotes.
Protists Chapter 28. In the beginning… van Leeuwenhoek when observing protozoa: –“no more pleasant site has met my eye than this” (1681) –“My excrement.
In General Usually unicellular Reproduction: Some asexual, some sexual, some both Kingdom for life that doesn’t fit in animals, plant or fungi kingdom.
Kingdom Protista Chapter 19.
Chapter 28 The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity.
Eukaryotic Diversity Chapter 28. Protists Protists – eukaryotes; more complex than prokaryotes. 1 st – unicellular - called protists – in 1 big kingdom.
Unicellular eukaryotes
Kingdom Protista Most diverse kingdom.
Kingdom Protista Anything but a prokaryote, fungus, plant or animal!
Algae- Plant- like Protists Textbook 17.4 pp
Protists. Protists are the Most Diverse of all Eukaryotes Eukaryotes that are not plants, animals or fungi are classified as protists.
Mader: Biology 8 th Ed. The Protists Chapter 22. Mader: Biology 8 th Ed. Outline General Biology Evolution Diversity – Green Algae – Red Algae – Brown.
Kingdom Protista. Protist Characteristics 200,000 species come in different shapes, sizes, and colors eukaryotes All are eukaryotes – have a nucleus and.
KINGDOM PROTISTA “The Junk Drawer” of Classification.
Protista is one kingdom in the domain Eukarya.
What are protists? Very diverse group of organisms containing over 200,000 species Most are unicellular.
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Protists Domain Eukarya.
In General Usually unicellular Reproduction: Some asexual, some sexual, some both Kingdom for life that doesn’t fit in animals, plant or fungi kingdom.
Protists Chapter 25 Table of Contents Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Section 2 Animal-like Protists Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists.
Chapter 28 The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity.
Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Protists Domain Eukarya.
Unit 6: Microorganisms and Fungi Chapter 20: Protists.
Kingdom Protista.
Chapter 28 Protists. Ancestors to modern protists, plants, animals and fungi. Oldest known are 2.1 billion years old (acritarchs). – Most DIVERSE eukaryotes.
Exploring Diversity Protists.
I. Endosymbiosis A. Occurred in early eukaryotes Pelomyxa - lacks mitochondria.
A who’s who of the Protista Kingdom. What are The five kingdoms? Monera PROTISTA Fungi Plantae Animalia.
The Origin of Eukaryotes 1. Internal membranes evolved from inward folds of the plasma membrane. 2. Endosymbiosis – chloroplasts and mitochondria evolved.
Kingdom Protista Chapter 20. General Characteristics of Protists: ALL Eukaryotes that cannot be classified as a plant, animal, or fungus. They have a.
PROTISTA. Protista Characteristics Eukaryote that is not an animal, plant, or fungus most unicellular, some multicellular heterotrophic, autotrophic or.
Kingdom Protista Eukaryotes that are not members of the kingdoms Plantae, Animalia, or Fungi Characteristics –Live in moist environment –Either free-living.
Protists. 1.A protist is any organism that is not a plant, an animal, a fungus, or a prokaryote.
THE ORIGINS OF EUKARYOTIC DIVERSITY Protists. Protists are eukaryotes and thus are much more complex than the prokaryotes. The first eukaryotes were unicellular.
Evolution of Eukaryotic Diversity Kingdom Protista
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Kingdom: Protists Domain Eukarya.
3 large groupings of Protists -protozoans (animal like) -slime molds and water molds (fungi like) -algae (plant like) Members of a Kingdom that is under.
Chapt. 28 – The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity
CHAPTER 28 THE ORIGINS OF EUKAYOTIC DIVERSITY Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Section A: Introduction to the.
Protists By: Lauren Kelly, Katie Chicojay, Jessie Sandberg, and Kirsten Gronlund.
The weird, Wacky, wonderful world of… Kingdom Protista! Animal-like Animal-like Protists Plant-like Plant-like Protists Fungus-like Fungus-like Protists.
Kingdom Protista Spring 2012.
Protists Ch.25.
THE ORIGINS OF EUKARYOTIC DIVERSITY
Chapter 28 - Protists. Important vocabulary pitfall.
The Protists Eukaryotes. Most unicellular. Most aerobic.
l Chapter 28 l The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity.
AP Biology Domain Bacteria Domain Archaea Domain Eukarya Common ancestor Protists Domain Eukarya.
1 Chap 28 The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity Introductory Study Comments 1.Use any first year biology notes you may have because the amount of detail.
Protists Chapter 28. What you need to know! Protista is no longer considered an independent kingdom. They are part of the Eukaryotes doman and are very.
Warm Up and HW What are the defining characteristics of Kingdom Protista? What are the defining characteristics of Kingdom Protista? HW: Current Event,
Kingdom Protista Chapter 19. General Characteristics of Protists: ALL Eukaryotes that cannot be classified as a plant, animal, or fungus. They have a.
► Chapter 28~ The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity.
50  m. Figure 28.1c Too diverse for one kingdom: a slime mold (Physarum polychalum)
Protists Domain Eukarya Domain Bacteria Archaea Eukarya
Lecture #12 Date ________
I. Endosymbiosis A. Occurred in early eukaryotes
PROTISTS.
Protists Origin of eukaryotic cells
Kingdom: Protists Domain Eukarya Domain Bacteria Archaea
Kingdom Protista.
Chapter 25 Table of Contents Section 1 Characteristics of Protists
Dramatic video fairly dramatic video
Protists Origin of eukaryotic cells
Chapter 28~ The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity
Kingdom Protista.
Kingdom: Protists Domain Eukarya Domain Bacteria Archaea
Protists The first Eukaryotes.
Kingdom ProtistA.
THE ORIGINS OF EUKARYOTIC DIVERSITY
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 28 The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity

I. Introduction to the protists A. Systematists split protists into many kingdoms 1. In the five kingdom system, anything that wasn’t a prokaryote, plant, animal, or fungus was grouped as a protist. 2. Systematists now divide protists into as many as 20 separate kingdoms. Figure 28.2 (p. 547) – The kingdom Protista problem.

B. Protists are the most diverse of all eukaryotes Figure 28.1 (p. 546) – Too diverse for one kingdom: a small sample of protists.

General Description of Protists 1. Very few general characteristics can be cited without many exceptions. 2. Most protists are unicellular, but some are colonial or even multicellular. - Many protist cells are very complex  individual cell must perform all the basic functions performed by specialized cells of plants and animals.

3. Nutrition - Protists may be autotrophic, heterotrophic, or mixotrophic organisms. Mixotrophic organisms combine photosynthesis and food ingestion a. Photosynthetic: algae (plant-like) b. Ingestive: protozoa (animal-like) c. Absorptive: fungus-like 4. Motility a. Most protists are motile; they have either flagella or cilia.  Eukaryotic and prokaryotic flagella are not homologous structures.

5. Life Cycle a. Some protists are asexual. b. Some reproduce sexually by meiosis and then go on to reproduce asexually. c. Cysts form at some point during the life cycle of many protists. Cysts are resistant cells that are capable of surviving harsh conditions. 6. Habitat a. Most protists are aquatic. b. Plankton are organisms that drift or swim near the surface of the water  Phytoplankton are responsible for half of the world’s photosynthesis and O 2 production. The following Figure (28.3) gives details for a common Protist (Euglena) and should be a model for what you remember of single-celled Protists

II. Origin and early diversification of eukaryotes A. Endomembranes contributed to larger, more complex cells -Endomembranes evolved from infoldings of prokaryotic membranes. - Endomembranes allowed for compartmentalization of cellular functions. This contributed to the evolution of increasing complexity and development of new functions  This is a great example of the development of emergent properties! Figure 28.4 (p. 549) – A model of the origin of eukaryotes.

B. Mitochondria and chloroplasts evolved from endosymbiotic bacteria 1. Heterotrophic prokaryotes were engulfed and function as mitochondria. 2. Photosynthetic prokaryotes were engulfed and function as chloroplasts. C. Eukaryotic cell is a chimera of prokaryotic ancestors  The term chimera refers to the mixture of three prokaryotes. a. Original contributes genome b. One becomes mitochondrion c. One becomes chloroplast Figure 28.5 (p. 551) – Secondary endosymbiosis and the origin of algal diversity. Note: Chloroplast is called a plastid

2. After the first eukaryotes formed, there was a great wave of diversification. Figure 28.8 (p. 554) – A tentative phylogeny of eukaryotes.

III. Protistan diversity A. Diplomonadida and Parabasala 1. Lack mitochondria - Examples of eukaryotes that evolved without acquiring endosymbiotic heterotrophic bacteria.  Most systematists think they lost them. 2. Giardia lamblia  example of Diplomonad - Humans ingest cysts by drinking feces-contaminated water. - Parasite absorbs body fluids from host (Huge outbreaks occurred in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania recently that required heavy chlorination of water supplies.) Question: Why doesn’t Giardia need mitochondria? Figure 28.9 (p. 555) – Giardia lamblia, a diplomonad.

3. Trichomonas vaginalis  example of Parabasalid - Parasite of the vagina. **Note: These organisms live as parasites and they don’t need to have mitochondria and respire on their own.**

B. Euglenozoa 1. Characterized by one or two flagella and paramylon which is a glucose polymer. Example: Euglena! 2. Most members of this group are photosynthetic (autotrophs). However, 3. Kinetoplastids (Trypanosoma) cause sleeping sickness. It’s symbiotic. By which type of symbiosis does it live? Figure (p. 556) – Trypanosoma, the kinetoplastid that causes sleeping sickness.

C. Alveolata 1. Characterized by small cavities under the cell surface (alveola). 2. Dinoflagellate (phytoplankton) blooms cause “red tide” and produce toxins. Example:

- Pfisteria acts as a carnivore: kills fish, feeds on flesh. -Others form the basis of many food chains in the oceans and function as photosynthetic plankton. -Others are bioluminescent and produce light when disturbed to attract fish that eat predators that eat the Dinoflagellates.

3. Apicomplexa are animal parasites - e.g. Plasmodium causes malaria. Figure (p. 557) – The two-host life history of Plasmodium, the apicomplexan that causes malaria.

4. Ciliophora - Use cilia for movement. - e.g. Stentor and paramecium. These ciliates have one macronucleus and several micronuclei Figure (p. 558) – Ciliates.

D. Stramenopila 1. Diverse group of heterotrophs and phototrophs (algae) - Usually have “hairy” flagella Four taxa are within the stramenopila: 2. Oomycota are water molds; primarily heterotrophs.

The remaining members of this taxon are called Heterokont algae. They are photosynthetic and contain endosymbiotic plastids (chloroplasts). The taxa within the group are: 3. Bacillariophyta (diatoms) have glass-like walls and exist as phytoplankton. - e.g. Pinnularia Figure (p. 561) – Diatoms.

4. Chrysophyta are golden algae that live in colonies - e.g. Dinobryon Figure (p. 562) – A golden alga

5. Phaeophyta are brown algae - Kelp (seaweed) grow up to 60 meters per year and are harvested for food. Figure (p. 563) – A kelp forest.

6. Algal life cycle - Alternation of generations **Need to know this!!** Figure (p. 564) – The life cycle of Laminaria: an example of alternation of generations.

E. Rhodophyta (red algae) 1. No flagella - Porphyra Figure (p. 565) – Red algae.

F. Chlorophyta (green algae) 1. Characterized by green chloroplasts, similar to those found in plants. Exist as unicellular (Chlamydomonas), colonial (Volvox) and multicellular (Caulerpa) organisms. Figure (p. 566) – Colonial and multicellular chlorophytes. These are the forerunners of early plants  Colonies and multicellular chlorophyta evolved to become the higher plants. Again, an example of emergent properties.

G. Some protists use pseudopodia for movement and feeding. The examples that follow are of uncertain phylogeny. 1. Pseudopodia are cellular extensions that may bulge from almost anywhere on the cell. 2. Typically heterotrophs 3. Best known examples are amoebas (Rhizopoda). Figure (p. 569) – Use of pseudopodia for feeding.

H. Mycetozoa are slime molds **Know this life cycle!!** Figure (p. 571) – The life cycle of a plasmodial slime mold, such as Physarum.

**Note: Table 28.1 (p. 573) is a good place to begin memorizing clades and features.**