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Published byAdelia Park Modified over 9 years ago
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Kingdom Protista
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Some basic facts Protists appeared in the fossil records about 1.5 billion years ago – that makes them more recent than bacteria. They are eukaryotes (have membrane- bound organelles and nucleus). Most of them are microscopic, and unicellular (except for red and brown algae)
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Categories Protists can fall into one of 3 categories: 1. Animal-like Protists 2. Plant-like Protists 3. Fungi-like Protists Amoeba Euglena Slime Mould
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Animal-like Protists Examples include: Amoebas, Paramecium, Giardia, and Plasmodium These are all heterotrophic (derive nutrition from consuming other organisms). Like animals, these protists can move in order to find food. Unlike animals, these are all unicellular.
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Movement Animal-like protists move by using one of the following: –Pseudopods: finger-like projections that drag protist forward and can also trap food –Cilia: tiny hairs that beat in water, and can also move food towards oral opening –Flagella: whip-like tail that propels protist through water
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Pseudopods
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Cilia
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Flagella
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Plant-like Protists Examples: Euglena, Dinoflagellates, Diatoms, and Algaes These are autotrophic (must produce their own food) Can be found in water, soil and tree barks Form the basis of aquatic food chains Important producers of oxygen
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Euglena Are autotrophs in light, and heterotrophs when dark Are unicelluar Some have flagella
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Dinoflagellates Unicellular Have two flagella Covered by stiff plates Found in the ocean
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Diatoms Unicellular Have glass-like cell walls
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Algaes Green algaes – unicellular; may form colonies; live in fresh and salt water Red algaes – multicellular; often called seaweed; live in salt water Brown algaes – multicellular; seaweeds; in salt water
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Green algaeRed algae Brown algae
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Fungi-like Protists These are multi-cellular, heterotrophic and are able to move at some point in their lives Water moulds – live in water or moist environment Slime moulds- lives on moist soil and decaying plants
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Water mould Slime mould
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