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Protists
Protists belong to
the Kingdom Protista, which include mostly unicellular organisms that
do not fit into the other kingdoms.
Characteristics of
Protists
- mostly unicellular,
some are multicellular (algae)
- can be heterotrophic
or autotrophic
- most live in water
(though some live in moist soil or even the human body)
- ALL are eukaryotic
(have a nucleus)
- A protist is
any organism that is not a plant, animal or fungus
Protista = the very
first
Classification of Protists
- how they obtain nutrition
- how they move
Animallike Protists
- also called protozoa (means "first animal") - heterotrophs
Plantlike Protists - also called algae - autotrophs
Funguslike Protists - heterotrophs, decomposers, external digestion
.Animallike
Protists: Protozoans
Four Phyla of Animallike
Protists
Classified by how they move
- Zooflagellates - flagella
- Sarcodines - extensions
of cytoplasm (pseudopodia)
- Ciliates - cilia
- Sporozoans - do not move
Zooflagellates
move using one or two flagella
absorb food across membrane
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Leishmania

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Sarcodines
Ameba (See Ameba
Coloring Sheet)
moves using pseudopodia
( "false feet" ), which are like extensions of the cytoplasm
--ameboid movement
ingests food by surrounding and engulfing food (endocytosis),
creating a food vacuole
reproducing by binary
fission (mitosis)
contractile vacuole - removes excess water
can cause amebic dysentery in humans - diarrhea and stomach upset from
drinking contaminated water
Other sarcodines: Foraminferans, Heliozoans
Ciliates
Paramecium (See Paramecium
Coloring Sheet)
move using cilia
has two nuclei: macronucleus, micronucleus
food is gathered through the :mouth pore, moved into a gullet,
forms a food vacuole
anal pore is used for removing waste
contractile vacuole removes excess water
exhibits avoidance behavior
reproduces asexually (binary fission) or sexually (conjugation)
outer membrane -pellicle- is rigid and paramecia are always the same
shape, like a shoe
Sporozoans
do not move on their own
parasitic
Malaria is a sporozoan, infects the liver and blood
More Notes
Animallike
Protists and Disease
Plantlike Protists: Unicellular
Algae
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