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Chapter 19: protists and eukaryotic cells

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Mitochondria and chloroplasts have their own distinct circular DNA ... Some amoebas have no mitochondria but have free-living aerobic bacteria in them ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 19: protists and eukaryotic cells


1
Chapter 19 protists and eukaryotic cells
  • Small creatures that help and hurt you

2
Three categories of protists (older
classification)
  • Protozoa
  • Heterotrophic
  • Lack plastids
  • Non-photosynthetic
  • Slime molds and oomycetes
  • Seen below the dog vomit slime mold Fuligo spp.
  • Non-photosynthetic
  • Look like fungi but not related
  • Algae (formerly put in with plants)
  • Photosynthetic
  • Autotrophic
  • Non-motile

3
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4
Protist size
  • Unicellular (Euglena)
  • Colonial (Volvox)
  • Filamentous (Chaetophora)
  • Multicellular (Coelochaete)

5
Plankton
  • An ecological term to denote
  • Marine organisms that float
  • Phytoplankton
  • Zooplankton

6
Movement of protists
  • Flagella
  • Cilia
  • Sessile

7
Groups of Protists
  • Unknown exact evolutionary relationships
  • Probably polyphyletic (waste-basket) groups that
    dont have true genetic or evolutionary
    relationships

8
Euglenoids
  • Flagellated
  • Have uniquely shaped mitochondria
  • Contain paramylon as starch
  • Some are autotrophs others heterotrophs
  • Ecologically important

9
Cryptomonads
  • Single-celled flagellates
  • Important ecologically --other plankton eat them
  • Usually quite small and inconspicuous

10
Alveolates (inc. dinoflagellates)
  • Heterotrophs and autotrophs with different types
    of plastids
  • Include things like red tide
  • Very toxic ocean blooms
  • Probably will be a big problem in the future with
    warmer water temps (global warming) and more
    human development

11
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12
Dinoflagellates and red tide
  • Big problem for manatees and huge hit to
    Floridas tourism industry

13
Another bad dinoflagellate Pfiesteria
  • Huge fish kills off Carolina coast
  • Probably due to hog industry washing waste into
    estuaries and ocean water
  • Very, very toxic
  • Neurotoxin that can kill people
  • Causes Parkinsons like symptoms
  • Memory loss, tremors

14
Haptophytes
  • Coccoliths (carbonate scales) that form great
    chalk deposits (White cliffs of Dover)
  • Flagellates with golden plastids

15
Stramenopiles
  • From tiny flagellates to big marine algae
  • Very odd grouping
  • Includes oomycete, Phytophthora (the fungus that
    caused the Irish potato faminerotten potatoes
    shown here)

16
Stramenopiles (continued)
  • Diatoms
  • Silica (glass) walled (tests)
  • Diatamaceous earth

17
Stramenopiles (continued)
  • Giant brown algae known as kelp
  • Can grow to hundreds of feet in length
  • Form the great kelp forests in cold water
    currents (e.g. California coast)

18
Others
  • Green algae (chlorophytes)
  • Ancestor to all land plants (charophycean algae0
  • Red algae (rhodophytes)
  • Dont produce flagellate cells

19
Ecological roles of algae
  • Phagotrophyparticle feeding
  • Osmotrophyuptake of small dissolved nutrients
    (e.g. sugars)
  • Autotrophyphotosynthesis
  • Mixotrophycombinations of the above

20
Phototrophy
  • Some marine algae need accessory pigments to
    absorb different wavelengths of light
  • E.g. fucoxanthin in brown algae
  • Phycobilin in red algae
  • Beta-carotene in greens

21
Cell coverings
  • Cellulose in green algae (which is why land
    plants have this)
  • Silica
  • Calcium carbonate
  • Agar is a polysaccharide
  • Must get from natural sources (too difficult to
    synthesize)

22
Food storage
  • Starch in green algae (again they are the
    ancestor to plants)
  • Stains with iodine
  • Oil droplets in diatoms (large source of oil)

23
Asexual reproduction
  • Spores produced in protists
  • Red seaweeds produce monospores, nonflagellated
    cells that drift with ocean currents
  • Cysts survive harsh conditions
  • Zoospores are flagellated

24
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25
Endosymbiosis Origin of Eukaryotic Cells
26
Evidence for Endosymbiosis
  • Mitochondria and chloroplasts have their own
    distinct circular DNA
  • These DNA sequences are similar to cyanobacterial
    DNA
  • Some of this DNA is incorporated into nucleus
  • Some amoebas have no mitochondria but have
    free-living aerobic bacteria in them (i.e. could
    be an intermediate)

Stentor (a protist) with green algae living
inside
27
Evidence for Endosymbiosis (cont.)
  • Chloroplasts and mitochondria have two membranes,
    the inner membrane is similar to prokaryotes
  • Mitos and chloroplasts reproduce by binary
    fission, like prokaryotes

28
SEX! (really life cycles)
  • 3 ways of doing it
  • Zygotic
  • Sporic
  • Gametic

29
Zygotic life cycle
  • Example Spirogyra
  • Green algae

30
Zygotic
  • Only zygotes are diploid (e.g. Spirogyra)
  • The rest of the plant is haploid!

31
Sporic life cycle
  • Large seaweed in Laminaria for example is
    sporophyte
  • Microscopic gametophytes produce gametes
  • Similar to land plants

32
Sporic life cycle Laminaria
Lookey here gametophytes
33
Gametic life cycle
  • Like animals
  • Fucus is an example
  • Only the gametes are haploid
  • In other words, there is no gametophyte

34
Gametic life cycle Fucus
Lookey here NO gametophytes, just gametes
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