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28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

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28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578). 28.12. Stramenopile flagella. Powdery mildew. 28.17. The life cycle of a water mold. 28.17. The life cycle of a water mold. 28.17. The life cycle of a water mold. Zoospore release. Water mold: Oogonium. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 2: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.12. Stramenopile flagella

Page 3: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Powdery mildew

Page 4: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.17. The life cycle of a water mold

Page 5: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.17. The life cycle of a water mold

Page 6: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.17. The life cycle of a water mold

Page 7: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Zoospore release

Page 8: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Water mold: Oogonium

Page 9: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 10: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Absorption spectra for different algal pigments

Page 11: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3. Diatoms: Diatom diversity (left), Pinnularia (left)

Page 12: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Diatom shell

Page 13: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.13. Freshwater diatoms (colorized SEM)

Page 14: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Diatoms (Bacillariophyta)

Cyclotella Navicula

Page 15: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

You are given an unknown organism to identify.It is unicellular and heterotrophic. It is motile, with well-developed organelles and two nuclei, one large and one small. You conclude that this organism is most likely a member of which major group?

A. diatoms

B. amoebozoans

C. red algae

D. ciliates

E. water molds (oomycetes)

Page 16: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 17: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.14. Dinobryon.A colonial, freshwater golden alga

Yellow (carotene) and brown (xanthophyll) pigments

Page 18: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.15. Brown Algae: Kelp forest

Page 19: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Kelp forest

Page 20: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.16. The life cycle of Laminaria:an example of alternation of generations

Page 21: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.26. The life cycle of Laminaria:an example of alternation of generations

Isomorphic alternation of generationsHeteromorphic alternation of generations

Page 22: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 23: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Protistan Diversity (see book p. 598)

Page 24: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 25: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Chlorarachniophytes

Acquired chloroplasts via secondary endosymbiosis

Page 26: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3. Foraminiferan (forams) will snail-like shell and thread-like pseudopodia

Calcium carbonate shells

Page 27: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

radiolarians

Page 28: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Radiolarian skeleton

Silica shells

Page 29: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 30: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Absorption spectra for different algal pigments

Page 31: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.20. Red algae: Rhodophyta

Chromatic adaptation

Page 32: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.20.Edible seaweed (red algae)

Page 33: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 34: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.21 Colonial and multicellular chlorophytes: Volvox (left), Caulerpa (middle) and Ulva (right)

28_03dVolvoxDaughter_SV.mpg

Page 35: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Spirogyra conjugating

Page 36: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.22. The life cycle of Chlamydomonas: Example of isogamy

Page 37: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

Page 38: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Amoeba

pseudopodium

Page 39: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Amoebas: Use of pseudopodia for feeding

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28.3A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes(see book page 578)

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28.24. Plasmodial slime mold

Page 42: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.24. The life cycle of a plasmodial slime mold, such as Physarum

Page 43: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Slime mold Sporangia

Page 44: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.25 The life cycle of a cellular slime mold (Dictyostelium)

Page 45: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Dictyostelium life cycle

Page 46: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.27. Protists play key roles in ecological relationships(and in public health)

Protists are key producers in aquatic communities. Up to 25% of the world’s photosynthesis is performed by protists.

Organisms in aquatic communities depend on photosynthetic protists for food

Page 47: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.7. Protists play key roles in ecological relationships(and in public health)

High water temperatures (global warming) and pollution cause corals to expel their symbiotic dinoflagellate protists

This results in coral bleaching and, eventually coral death

Page 48: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

28.7. Protists play key roles in ecological relationships(and in public health)

Some examples of parasitic ProtistsEntamoeba histolyticaEntamoeba coliEntamoeba gingivalisEndolimax nanaIodamoeba butschliiNaegleria fowleriGiardia lamblia (intestinalis)Chilomastix mesniliTrichomonas vaginalisLeishmania donovaniLeishmania tropicaLeishmania braziliensisTrypanosoma gambiense and rhodesiense (African trypanosomiasis)Trypanosoma cruzi (American trypanosomiasis)Plasmodium spp. (Malaria)Toxoplasma gondiiPneumocystis cariniiCryptosporidiumSpp spp.Balantidium coli

Entamoeba histolytica (amebic dysentery)

Page 49: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Summary of key concepts (see book p. 598-599)

Page 50: 28.3 A phylogenetic hypothesis of eukaryotes (see book page 578)

Each of the following groups includes many planktonic species EXCEPT

A. golden algae.

B. forams (foraminiferans).

C. dinoflagellates (Pyrrhophyta).

D. kinetoplastids.

E. diatoms.