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The weird, Wacky, wonderful world of… Kingdom Protista!

The weird, Wacky, wonderful world of… Kingdom Protista!. Animal-like Protists Plant-like Protists Fungus-like Protists. What is a protist??. A eukaryote that is NOT a member of… Kingdom Animalia Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi

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The weird, Wacky, wonderful world of… Kingdom Protista!

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  1. The weird, Wacky, wonderful world of…Kingdom Protista! Animal-like Protists Plant-like Protists Fungus-like Protists

  2. What is a protist?? A eukaryote that is NOT a member of… Kingdom Animalia Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi …because it does not meet the requirements for these Kingdoms.

  3. Protist Diversity • Approximately 200,000 species • They come in different shapes, sizes, and colors! • All are eukaryotes – they have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles

  4. Protozoans: Animal-like Protists

  5. Protozoans • What does “zoa” mean? • Unicellular – made up of one cell. (How is this different from animals?) • Heterotrophs – they eat other organisms or dead organic matter • Classified by how they move

  6. Phyla of Protozoans Sarcodines (Amoebas) Zooflagellates Ciliates Sporozoans

  7. Sarcodines (Amoebas) • No cell wall • Move using pseudopods – plasma extensions (what does the word mean??) • Engulf bits of food by flowing around and over them

  8. Zooflagellates • Use a whip-like extension called a flagella to move around quickly • Some cause diseases

  9. Trichomonas foetus : cow disease

  10. Trichomonas vaginalis: an STD

  11. African Sleeping Sickness (Trypanosoma)

  12. Ciliates • Move through water by beating tiny hairs called cilia. • Ciliates (like a paramecium) are found in fresh and salt water. • Not parasitic! • Contractile vacuole pumps water out of cell

  13. Paramecium caudatum

  14. Sporazoans: the parasiteS • Non-motile - Do not move on their own. • Live inside a host • One type called Plasmodium causes the disease malaria.

  15. The mosquito is the host for the sporozoan. When the mosquito bites a person, they can get malaria.

  16. Malaria in red blood cells

  17. Algae Plant-like Protists

  18. What are Algae? • Can be Unicellular or Multicellular • Photosynthetic – make their own food • No roots, stems, or leaves • Each has chlorophylland other photosynthetic pigments

  19. Phylaof Algae Euglenaphytes Diatoms Dinoflagellates Red, Brown, & Green Algae

  20. Euglenaphyta • Unicellular • Aquatic • Move around like animals with two flagella • No cell wall (unlike plants!) • Can ingest food from surroundings when light is not available (So, they are autotrophs OR heterotrophs!)

  21. Diatoms • Unicellular & photosynthetic • Abundant and beautiful – like little jewels! • Cell walls have patterns and lines • Their cell walls are made of silicon (Si) • Photosynthetic pigment called carotenoids – give them a golden color

  22. Dinoflagellates: The Spinning Ones • Unicellular protists • Spin around using two flagella • Some are photosynthetic and some are heterotrophic • Some are bioluminescent! • Some kinds are responsible for red tides – toxic “blooms” of dinoflagellates that can be dangerous.

  23. Red tides caused by toxic dinoflagellates. This red tide killed some fish.

  24. Some dinoflagellates create their own light. This is called bioluminescence. These pictures were taken in Puerto Rico in a place called “Bioluminescent Bay”.

  25. Red Algae • Reddish seaweeds • Live in ocean • Multicellular • Have red and blue pigments, so they are autotrophs

  26. Brown Algae • Multicellular brown seaweed • They have air bladders to help them float at the surface (where the light is located!). • Examples: Giant Kelp (where sea otters hide), Sargassum

  27. Green Algae • Lives in fresh and saltwater • Unicellular and multicellular • Live alone or in groups called colonies • Very similar to plants - perhaps the ancestors of plants!

  28. Multicellular Unicellular & Colonial

  29. Fungus-like Protists

  30. Characteristics in Common • All form delicate, net-like structures on the surface of their food source • Obtain energy by decomposing organic material (heterotrophs)

  31. PhylaofFungus-like Protists Plasmodium Slime Molds Cellular Slime Molds Water Molds & Downy Mildews

  32. Slime Molds • Live in cool moist, shady places where they grow on damp, organic matter • Very gross, colorful, and super cool

  33. PlasmodiAL Slime Molds • Form plasmodium: a mass of cytoplasm that contains many diploid nuclei but no cell walls or membranes – its feeding stage • Creeps by amoeboid movement – 2.5 cm/hour

  34. PlasmodiAL Slime Molds continued… • May reach more than a meter (!!!) in diameter • Form reproductive structures when surroundings dry up • Spores are dispersed by the wind and grow into new plasmodium

  35. 6-Vomit Slime Mold (why would someone name it this?!)

  36. Dog Vomit Slime Mold

  37. Often, slime molds grow on mulch because it is so high in organic nutrients.

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