1 / 26

Protists

Protists. Animal-like Protists. Protozoans Heterotrophic (Obtain food from other organisms) Four. Protozoa with Pseudopods. A pseudopod is a temporary bulge of the cell membrane filled with cytoplasm It is used for feeding and movement Another Name: Sarcodines

kylene
Download Presentation

Protists

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Protists

  2. Animal-like Protists • Protozoans • Heterotrophic (Obtain food from other organisms) • Four

  3. Protozoa with Pseudopods • A pseudopod is a temporary bulge of the cell membrane filled with cytoplasm • It is used for feeding and movement • Another Name: Sarcodines • A member of this group: Ameoba

  4. Protozoa with Cilia • Hair-like projections that move in a wavelike pattern. It is used for movement, feeding, and to sense the environment. • The large nucleus controls the everyday tasks and the small nucleus functions in reproduction. • Ciliates is another name • Paramecium are a common member.

  5. Protozoa with Flagella • A flagellum is a long, whip-like structure that is used for movement • Zooflagellates have one to eight long, whip-like flagella to help them move. They live inside the bodies of other organisms. • Symbiosis: A close relationship between two species where at least one species benefits.

  6. Diverse Protozoa • Move • The way they LIVE and MOVE • Sporozoan: Parasites that feed on the cells and body fluids of their hosts.

  7. Fungus-Like Protists • Get their food from their environment • Heterotrophs • Fungus; move

  8. Fungus-Like Protists • Water Molds • Water or moist places • They grow as tiny threads that look like a fuzzy covering on a living organism

  9. Fungus-Like Protists • Slime Molds • In moist soil and on decaying plants and trees • When food is scarce, they will creep together and form a multicellular mass • They move in an amoeba-like way by forming pseudopods and oozing along the surfaces of decaying material. • Spore: Tiny cell that can grow into a new organism

  10. Plant-Like Protists • Algae • Chloroplasts; sun • Autotrophs (make their own food)

  11. Plant-Like Protists Euglenoids • No Cell Wall • Unicellular • Use a flagella for movement • They are unique because when sunlight isn’t available, they become heterotrophic and EAT.

  12. Plant-like protists • Dinoflagellates • Bodies are covered by stiff plates • They live in the water • Have two flagella and contain chlorophyll as well as other pigments • Random fact: They can glow in the dark!

  13. Plant-Like Protists • Diatoms are unicellular with glass-like cell walls. • They move by shooting chemicals out of their cell walls. This gives them a kind of jet propulsion.

  14. Plant-Like Protists • Green algae • Where do they live? Freshwater, saltwater, at the bases of trees/in moist soil • Most are unicellular, some form colonies, and a few are multicellular

  15. Plant-Like Protists • Red algae • They are multicellular SEAWEEDS • Their red color is beneficial because: • They can live deep below the ocean’s surface • The red pigment is good at absorbing a small amount of light.

  16. Plant-Like Protists • Brown algae • A pigment is a chemical that produces color • In the Pacific coastal waters, brown algae makes the GIANT KELP.

  17. Autotroph (write this in the plant-like protist section) • An organism that has the ability to make its own food.

  18. Protist Review Questions • Define heterotroph and autotroph. Give an example of each. • Describe how protists are different from animals, plants, and fungus. • Explain the difference between unicellular and multicellular. • What are the three concepts of the cell theory. Spore: tiny cell that can grow into a new organism

  19. Define heterotroph and autotroph. Give an example of each. • A heterotroph cannot make its own food, so it has to get it from another organism. • An autotroph can make its own food. • Examples: • Heterotroph: Animals or Fungus • Autotroph: Plants

  20. Describe how protists are different from animals, plants, and fungus. • Protists are much simpler than plants, animals, and fungus. • They are typically unicellular, while plants, animals, and fungus are multicellular.

  21. Explain the difference between unicellular and multicellular. • Unicellular: A single celled organism • Multicellular: Many cells make up one organism

  22. What are the three concepts of the cell theory. • Every living thing is made up of one or more cells. • Cells carry out the functions needed to support life • Cells come only from other living cells

  23. What characteristics do all protozoans share? • Heterotrophic • Able to move from place to place

  24. 3 characteristics of fungus-like protists • Heterotrophic • Cell Walls • Reproduce with spores

  25. What characteristic do algae share with plants • Autotrophic

  26. Would you classify euglena as an animal-like protist or as a plant-like protist? Explain. • Answers will vary.

More Related