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Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists...

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Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa
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Page 1: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Chapter 8

Animal-Like Protists:The Protozoa

Page 2: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists

• The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion years ago when the Archaea and Eukarya diverged.

• Our understanding of the evolutionary relationships among protists is currently in flux (figure 8.1).

Page 3: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.1 The Challenge of Protists Classification.

Page 4: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists

• Some protists are plant-like because they are primarily autotrophic (they produce their own food).

• Others are animal-like because they are primarily heterotrophic (they feed on other organisms).

Page 5: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Life Within a Single Plasma Membrane

• Protozoa occur as both single cells and entire organisms.

• A protozoan is a complete organism in which all of life activities are carried on within a single plasma membrane.

• Organelles specialized for the unicellular lifestyle carry out many protozoan functions.

Page 6: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.2A Protozoan.

Page 7: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Life Within a Single Plasma Membrane (continued)

• Most protozoa absorb dissolved nutrients through endocytosis.

• Some protozoa ingest food in a specialized region called a cytopharynx.

• Digestion and transport of food occurs in food vacuoles that form during endocytosis.

• After digestion, the vacuoles are called egestion vacuoles.

Page 8: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Life Within a Single Plasma Membrane (continued)

• Both sexual and asexual reproduction occur among the protozoa.

• Protozoa can reproduce by binary fission, budding, multiple fission or schizogony, and by sexual methods (figures 8.3 and 8.4).

Page 9: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.3 Asexual Reproduction in Protozoa.

Page 10: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.4 Binary Fission of a Ciliate.

Page 11: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Symbiotic Lifestyles

• Many protozoa live in symbiotic relationships with other organisms, often in a host parasite relationship.

• Symbiosis is an intimate association between two organisms.

• In parasitism, one organisms lives in or on a second organism called the host.

• The definitive host harbors the sexual stages of the parasite.

Page 12: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Symbiotic Lifestyles (continued)

• Off spring from the sexual stage may enter another host called the intermediate host where they reproduce asexually.

• Commensalism is a symbiotic relationship in which one member benefits and the other member is neither benefited or harmed.

• Mutualism is a symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit.

Page 13: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Protists and Protozoan Taxonomy

• The super group Excavata includes the oldest eukaryotes.

• Classification of Animal-Like Protists (Protozoans) is shown in Table 8.1.

• Members of the Fornicata have flagella, a feeding grove, and are uninucleate.

• They feed by a flagella-generated current.• An example is the protozoan Giardia

intestinalsis.

Page 14: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Table 8.1

Page 15: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.5 The protozoan Giardia intestinalsis.

Page 16: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Protists and Protozoan Taxonomy (continued)

• The Amoebozoa have amoeboid motility with lobopodia, are naked or testate, have mitochondria with tubular cristae, are uninucleate or multinucleate, and many form cysts.

• Amoeba proteus is the classical example of an Amoebozoan (figure 8.11).

• Other examples of protozoan's are shown in figures 8.6-8.8.

Page 17: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.11bAmoeba proteus.

Page 18: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.6 The protozoan Trichomonas vaginalis.

Page 19: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.7 The structure of Euglena.

Page 20: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.8a The life cycle of Trypanosoma brucei.

Page 21: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.8bStructure of a flagellate.

Page 22: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Protists and Protozoan Taxonomy (continued)

• Foraminiferans and radiolarians are common marine Rhizaria that posses pseudopodia (figure 8.12).

• The Alveolata is a large group that includes the dinoflagellates (figure 8.14), Apicomplexa (figure 8.15 which shows the different stages in the life cycle of the malaria parasite), and Ciliophora (figure 8.16).

Page 23: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.12 A Forminiferan Test.

Page 24: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.14A Dinoflagellate.

Page 25: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.15 Malaria life cycle.

Page 26: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Protists and Protozoan Taxonomy (continued)

• The ciliates represent some of the most complex protozoa.

• Ciliates possess cilia, a macronucleus, and one or more micronuclei (figure 8.16).

Page 27: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.16b Ciliophora.

Page 28: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Protists and Protozoan Taxonomy (continued)

• Ciliates reproduce asexually by transverse binary fission, and occasionally by budding.

• Ciliates reproduce sexually by conjugation (figure 8.20)

Page 29: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.20Conjugation in Paramecium.

Page 30: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Further Phylogenetic Considerations

• Precise evolutionary relationships are difficult to determine for the protozoa.– The fossil record is sparse.– Ribosomal RNA sequence comparisons

indicate that each of the four protists super groups probably had separate origins (figure 8.21).

Page 31: Chapter 8 Animal-Like Protists: The Protozoa. Evolutionary Perspective of the Protists The protists are a polyphyletic group that arose about 1.5 billion.

Figure 8.21Tentative Phylogeny of the Eukaryotic Tree of Life Based on 18S rRNA Sequence Comparisons


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