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Kingdom Protista, Part 1

Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

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Page 1: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Kingdom Protista,Part 1

Page 2: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

General Characteristics• Eukaryotic• Unicellular (to colonial)• Autotrophic or

Heterotrophic• Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Page 3: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Classified into 3 main groups

1. Animal-like… heterotrophs capable of locomotion

2. Plant-like… photosynthetic autotrophs3. Fungus-like… decomposers that

reproduce by sporesSome protists may exhibit more than one characteristic, such as...….it is possible to be both animal-like and

plant-like.

Page 4: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Animal-like Protists(26-2)

classified by method of movement

Page 5: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Phylum Rhizopoda (formerly Sarcodina) : ex. Amoeba

Page 6: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

The Amoeba usespseudopodia for locomotion.

Page 7: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

The Amoeba in 3D – notice the pseudopods

Page 8: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA
Page 9: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Amoeba surround and engulf their food… the process is called phagocytosis.

Page 10: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

An Amoeba eating a Paramecium.

Page 11: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Ciliophora

• all use cilia for movement

• have many specialized structures, including mouths, anal pores, contractile vacuoles, and two nuclei (a large macronucleus and small micronuclei)

• Ex. – Paramecium and Stentor

Page 12: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Phylum Ciliophora: ex. Paramecium

Page 13: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

3D view – taken by a scanningelectron microscope

Page 14: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

A closer look at the Cilia…. its means of locomotion

Page 15: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA
Page 16: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA
Page 17: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

another Ciliate: Stentor

Page 18: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Phylum Zoomastigophora

• have flagella

• some species of zooflagellates have mutualistic relationships

• ex.- Trichonympha digests cellulose in the guts of termites

Page 19: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Others are parasites, like Trypanosoma, which causes

African Sleeping Sickness (coma).

Page 20: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Trypanosoma

Page 21: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Trypanosoma

Tsetse Fly: carries Trypanosoma to humans; in other words, it’s a Vector

White Blood Cell

Red Blood Cells

Trypanosoma

Page 22: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA
Page 23: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Phylum Sporozoa

• are parasites• have no means of locomotion• form spores that are dispersed by

one or more hosts • ex. Plasmodium, which causes

malaria

Page 24: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Portions of the Life Cycle of Plasmodium vivax

It’s Vector: Anopheles Mosquito

Plasmodium vivax

Red Blood Cells

Page 25: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA
Page 26: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Phylum Foraminifera

• have a protective shell or TEST, usually made of calcium carbonate

• layers of tests can deposit on the ocean floor– these can form limestone and chalk, like the

White Cliffs of Dover– Some species of forams are good indicators of

oil deposits below

Page 27: Kingdom Protista, Part 1. General Characteristics Eukaryotic Unicellular (to colonial) Autotrophic or Heterotrophic Appeared about 1.5 BYA

Cliffs of Dover