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Published byLynn Brittney Perkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Kingdom Protista
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September 12, 20122 Protists most diverse kingdom all eukaryotic mostly unicellular aquatic organisms asexual reproduction generally by binary fission 3 different groups 1. plant-like 2. animal-like 3. fungi-like
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September 12, 20123 1. Plant-like Protists: Algae all autotrophs contain chlorophyll have cell walls 2 major groups a) unicellular algae b)multicellular algae phytoplankton seaweed diatoms brown algae
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September 12, 2012 4 Plant-like Protists: Algae a) unicellular algae very important because: 1. begin every aquatic food chain 2. produce 67% of atmospheric O 2 3. overpopulation causes algal blooms which can cause: i) dead algae decomposed by saprophytes consume large amounts of O 2 – none left for fish swamp produced ii) produce toxins which kill fish can also be harmful to humans ex. red tide
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September 12, 20125 Plant-like Protists:Seaweed b) multicellular algae (seaweed) no real tissues i.e. colonies food source for fish and humans cell walls of red algae used to make: i. agar ii. gel caps iii. cosmetics Volvox
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September 12, 20126 2.Fungus-like Protists (Slime Moulds) multicellular body (like giant amoeba) called a plasmodium roll over forest floor feeding on dead organic matter move very slowly (few mm/day) reproduce asexually with spores (like fungi) in fruiting bodies
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September 12, 20127 3. Animal-like Protists all heterotrophs classified by how they move a) pseudopods: move with cytoplasmic projections called pseudopods (false feet) ex. amoeba some pathogenic i.e. amoebic dysentery
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September 12, 20128 Animal-like Protists b) flagellates move with long whip-like flagella some parasitic pathogens ex. African sleeping sickness trypanosome Giardia lamblia (beaver fever)
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September 12, 20129 Animal-like Protists c) ciliates move with cilia (short hair-like projections) that can cover cell ex. paramecium
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September 12, 201210 Animal-like Protists d) sporozoa reproduce by asexually by spores have no means of locomotion many parasites, which depend on host body fluids to move ex. Malaria anopheles mosquito RBC
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September 12, 201211 Paramecium Structure cilia contractile vacuole cytoplasm micronucleus macronucleus oral groove gullet food vacuole forming anal pore food vacuole
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September 12, 201212 Paramecium spiral movement
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September 12, 201213 Paramecium Reproduction Binary fission (asexual reproduction) Conjugation (sexual reproduction) have two nuclei exchange micronucleus with another paramecium 2 new organisms (genetically identically ) same 2 organisms (genetically different )
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September 12, 201214 Amoeba Structure nucleus ectoplasm endoplasm contractile vacuole food vacuole pseudopod cytoplasm Note: contractile vacuole collects all the H 2 O that diffuses in by osmosis contracts & pumps H 2 O out to stop amoeba from bursting
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September 12, 201215 Amoeba Feeding phagocytosis food pseudopod pseudopod surrounds food food enters a food vacuole enzymes break down food in vacuole
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September 12, 201216 Amoeba Reproduction Binary Fission (asexual) one amoeba divides into 2 identical amoebas
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