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NIS - BIOLOGY Lecture 93 – Lecture 94 Introduction to Protists Ozgur Unal 1
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Protists 2 Protists are classified more easily by what they are not than by what they are. Protists are: not animals not plants not fungi.. The Kingdom Protista includes more than 200,000 known organisms. All protists are eukaryotes. Some produce asexually (by mitosis) and some exchange genetic material during meiosis.
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Protists 3 Protists are divided into three groups according to the way they obtain their nutrients: Animal-like protists (protozoa) Plantlike protists Funguslike protists Animal-like protists: Aka protozoans.. Heterotrophs.. Usually ingest bacteria, algae or other protozoans.. Example: Amoeba is a unicellular protozoa
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Protists 4 Plantlike protists: Commonly referred to as algae.. Can be unicellular or multicellular.. Example: The giant kelp Funguslike protists: These are similar to fungus because they absorb their nutrients from other organisms. These organisms are not classified as fungi because they contain centrioles. Fungus and funguslike protists also differ in the composition of their cell wall.
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Habitats of Protists 5 Protists typically are found in damp or aquatic environments, such as decaying leaves, damp soil, ponds, streams and oceans. They live in symbiotic relationships. Microsporidia are microscopic protozoans that cause disease in insects. What benefit can we get from microsporidia? Green algae live in the hair of a sloth. What type of symbiotic relationship does algae+sloth represent?
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Origin of Protists 6 Remember endosymbiotic relationship? Some scientists think that mitochondria and chloroplast found in some eukaryotes (including protists) were once individual organisms. Protists might have been the first eukaryotes to appear billions years ago. Check out Figure 19.3!! Notice that all of the protists have a common ancestral eukaryotic cell.
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