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Learn about the characteristics, classification, reproduction, and diversity of protists, including animal-like protists such as protozoa and ciliates. Explore how these organisms obtain energy and move.

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  1. How to Use This Presentation • To View the presentation as a slideshow with effects select “View” on the menu bar and click on “Slide Show.” • To advance through the presentation, click the right-arrow key or the space bar. • From the resources slide, click on any resource to see a presentation for that resource. • From the Chapter menu screen click on any lesson to go directly to that lesson’s presentation. • You may exit the slide show at any time by pressing the Esc key.

  2. Resources Chapter Presentation Visual Concepts Transparencies Standardized Test Prep

  3. Chapter 25 Protists Table of Contents Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Section 2 Animal-like Protists Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Section 4 Protists and Humans

  4. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Objectives • Define protist. • Describe a hypothesis for the origin of eukaryotic cells. • Explain how protists are classified. • Describe the two major ways by which protists obtain energy. • List three structures protists use for movement. • Describe how protists reproduce.

  5. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 A Diverse Group of Eukaryotes • Protists are unicellular or simple multicellular eukaryotic organisms that are not plants, fungi, or animals. • Made of eukaryotic cells, containing nucleus and other organelles

  6. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Characteristics of Protists Click below to watch the Visual Concept. Visual Concept

  7. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 A Diverse Group of Eukaryotes, continued • The First Eukaryotes • Evidence suggests that the first protists arose from endosymbiotic prokaryotes.

  8. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Origin of Eukaryotic Cells Click below to watch the Visual Concept. Visual Concept

  9. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Classification • Protists are classified by the characteristics that make them fungus-like, plant-like, or animal-like.

  10. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Characteristics • Unicellular and Multicellular • Most protists are unicellular, but some form large, multicellular bodies.

  11. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Comparing Organisms that are Unicellular and Multicellular Click below to watch the Visual Concept. Visual Concept

  12. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Characteristics, continued • Nutrition • Many protists are autotrophs, organisms that make their own food. • Phototrophs – use sunlight for energy to make food • Chemotrophs- use chemicals for energy to make food • Other protists are heterotrophs, organisms that must get their food by eating other organisms or their byproducts.

  13. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Characteristics,continued • Motility • Protists use flagella, cilia, or pseudopodia for locomotion.

  14. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Reproduction • Many protists reproduce asexually… • Binary fission:asexual reproduction where a single cell splits into two cells • Multiple fission:a form of cell division that produces more than two offspring from one cell

  15. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Reproduction (cont…) • Sexual Reproduction… • Offspring are genetically different • Conjugation:two individuals join and exchange genetic material stored in a small second nucleus, then the cell divides into four offspring • Some protists do this during stressful environmental conditions

  16. Section 1 Characteristics of Protists Chapter 25 Protist Reproduction

  17. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Objectives • Discussthe key characteristics of Protozoa, Ciliophora, Sarcomastigophora, and Apicomplexa. • Describehow protozoa use pseudopodia to move and to capture food. • Explainhow ciliates move and reproduce. • Describehow mastigophorans move and capture food. • Describethe role of apicomplexans in disease.

  18. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Protozoa • Animal-like protists can be found in the phylum Protozoa. • Protozoa use large, rounded, cytoplasmic extensions called pseudopodia forboth movement and feeding.

  19. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Protozoa, continued • Protozoan Diversity • Protozoans include organisms that inhabit the oceans, lakes, soil and even the human intestines. • Example - amoeba

  20. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Ciliophora Characteristics • Animal-like protists include the phylumCiliophora. • Ciliates move using cilia, which are short, hairlike, cytoplasmic projections that line the cell membrane.

  21. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Paramecium

  22. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Ciliophora Characteristics (cont.) • Ciliates have the most elaborate organelles, (ex. oral groove, mouth pore, gullet, food and contractile vacuoles, & anal pore) • including two types of nuclei. • Large macronucleus – contains multiple copies of DNA • Directs cell metabolism & development • Smaller micronucleus – exchanges genetic material (DNA) during conjugation

  23. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Feeding Habits of a Ciliate Click below to watch the Visual Concept. Visual Concept

  24. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Ciliophora, continued • Reproduction • Ciliates reproduce asexually by binary fission and sexually by conjugation. • Example: paramecium

  25. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Sarcomastigophora • Animal-like protists include the phyla Protozoa,Sarcomastigophora. • For locomotion, sarcomastigophorans use flagella. • Example: Trypanosomes • These organisms cause African Sleeping Sickness • Spread by tsetse flies

  26. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Phylum Apicomplexa • Animal-like protists include the phylaApicomplexa. • These protists are animal parasites. • Example: Plasmodium; these cause malaria

  27. Section 2 Animal-like Protists Chapter 25 Types of Animal-like Protists Click below to watch the Visual Concept. Visual Concept

  28. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Objectives • Describefour main body forms of algae. • List the common name for each of the seven phyla of plantlike protists. • Explainhow green algae and plants are similar. • Describefour phyla of funguslike protists. • Compareplasmodial slime molds, cellular slime molds, and water molds.

  29. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Characteristics of Algae • Algae are autotrophic protists • can be unicellular, colonial, filamentous, or multicellular. • Found in both fresh & salt water • Some have structures to help them anchor, reproduce, & move • Seven phyla of plantlike protists are Chlorophyta, Phaeophyta, Rhodophyta, Bacillariophyta, Dinoflagellata, Chrysophyta, and Euglenophyta.

  30. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists • Phylum Chlorophyta (Green Algae) • The phylum Chlorophyta contains more than 17,000 identified species of protists called green algae. • Both green algae and plants have chlorophylls and accessory pigments, store food as starch, and have cell walls made up of cellulose.

  31. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists, continued • Phylum Phaeophyta (Brown Algae) • The phylum Phaeophyta includes approximately 1,500 species of multicellular (most plant like) organisms called brown algae. • Brown algae are mostly marine organisms, and they include plantlike seaweeds and kelps.

  32. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists, continued • Phylum Rhodophyta (Red Algae) • The 4,000 species in the phylum Rhodophyta are known as red algae. • A few species of red algae live in fresh water or on land, but most red algae are marine seaweeds.

  33. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists, continued • Phylum Bacillariophyta (Diatoms) • The phylum Bacillariophyta contains as many as 100,000 species of unicellular protists called diatoms. • Have silica cells walls called shells that fit together in two pieces • Abundant component of phytoplankton and major producers

  34. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists, continued • Phylum Dinoflagellata (Dinoflagellates) • More than 2,000 species of organisms called dinoflagellates make up the phylum Dinoflagellata. • Some species of dinoflagellates, such as those in genus Noctiluca, can produce bioluminescence, a display of sparkling light often seen in ocean water at night.

  35. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists, continued • Phylum Chrysophyta (Golden Algae) • The phylum Chrysophyta contains about 1,000 species of golden algae. Most golden algae live in fresh water, but a few species are found in marine environments.

  36. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Plantlike Protists, continued • Phylum Euglenophyta (Euglenoids) • The phylum Euglenophyta contains about 1,000 species of flagellated unicellular algae called euglenoids. • Euglenoids are both plantlike and animal-like. Many are autotrophic, like plants, but they lack a cell wall and are highly motile, like animals.

  37. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Structure of Euglena

  38. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Funguslike Protists • Biologists recognize two groups of funguslike protists: slime molds and water molds.

  39. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Funguslike Protists, continued • Phylum Myxomycota (Plasmodial Slime Molds) • Plasmodial slime moldsare multinucleate. • Technically one cell because only 1 cell membrane • As the plasmodium creeps along the forest floor by cytoplasmic streaming, it consumes decaying leaves and other debris by phagocytosis.

  40. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Funguslike Protists, continued • Phylum Dictyostelida (Cellular Slime Mold) • Cellular slime moldslive as individual haploid cells that move about like amoebas. • Each cell moves as an independent organism, creeping over the ground or swimming in fresh water and ingesting food.

  41. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Funguslike Protists, continued • Phylum Oomycota (Water Molds) • Water molds are composed of branching filaments and many of this phylum are parasitic.

  42. Section 3 Plantlike and Funguslike Protists Chapter 25 Funguslike Protists, continued • Phylum Chytridiomycota (Water Molds) • Members of phylum Chytridiomycota, or the chytrids, are primarily aquatic protists characterized by gametes and zoospores with a single, posterior flagellum.

  43. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Objectives • Statefour environmental roles of protists. • Describealgal blooms and red tides and their impact. • Statean important role for protists in research. • Lista use of protists as food and three uses of protist byproducts. • Describefour protist-caused diseases.

  44. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists in the Environment • Photosynthetic protists are foundation of many food chains and produce large amounts of oxygen • Play important role in carbon cycle and form many symbiotic relationships (coral, lichen) • Recycle materials

  45. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists in the Environment, continued • Algal bloomscan lead to the depletion of oxygen in water. • One cause is high nutrient concentrations in water • Red tides (type of algal bloom) produce harmful toxins.

  46. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists in Research • Research on protists has helped biologists understand a number of fundamental cellular functions, such as leukocyte movement (chemotaxis).

  47. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists in Industry • Protists as Food • For thousands of years, humans have been collecting seaweeds for food.

  48. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists in Industry, continued • Protist Byproducts • Protists provide important byproducts, such as alginate, carrageenan, and agar. • These are used in cosmetics, food products, textiles, medical dressings • Diatomaceous earth is used in detergents, paint removers, toothpaste, and as a natural insecticide

  49. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists and Health • Parasitic protists cause malaria, giardiasis, amebiasis, cryptosporidiosis, trichomoniasis, and African sleeping sickness in humans. • Giardiasis • severe diarrhea and intestinal cramps • get from drinking contaminated water • Sleeping sickness • Protist that causes it spread by tsetse fly

  50. Section 4 Protists and Humans Chapter 25 Protists and Health • Malaria • Parasitic protists in the genus Plasmodium cause malaria, which is characterized by severe chills, headache, fever, and fatigue. • Each year, nearly 3 million people die from malaria.

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