Class 7/Extended Notes
Protista
Note on Protista
Kingdom Classification - Protista
Kingdom Classification - Protista
Characteristics
- Unicellular: Most organisms in this kingdom are single-celled.
- Eukaryotic: They possess a true nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles.
- Nutrition: Can be autotrophic (photosynthetic), heterotrophic (ingestive or absorptive), or mixotrophic.
- Locomotion: May have flagella, cilia, or pseudopods for movement.
- Habitat: Primarily aquatic, found in freshwater, saltwater, and moist terrestrial environments.
Major Groups of Protists
Protists are a diverse group of eukaryotic organisms. They are classified into major groups, or "supergroups," based on their evolutionary relationships.
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Excavata:
- Characteristics: Asymmetrical, single-celled organisms with a feeding groove. Includes heterotrophic predators, photosynthetic species, and parasites.
- Examples: Giardia intestinalis, Trichomonas vaginalis, Euglena.
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Chromalveolata:
- Characteristics: Divided into Alveolates (with a membrane-enclosed sac) and Stramenopiles (with a "hairy" flagellum).
- Examples:
- Alveolates: Dinoflagellates, Apicomplexans (Plasmodium), Ciliates (Paramecium).
- Stramenopiles: Diatoms, brown algae (kelp), golden algae.
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Rhizaria:
- Characteristics: Amoebas with threadlike or needle-like pseudopodia.
- Examples: Foraminifera, radiolarians.
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Archaeplastida:
- Characteristics: Descended from a common ancestor that engulfed a cyanobacterium. Includes red algae, green algae, and land plants.
- Examples:
- Red Algae: Multicellular seaweeds.
- Green Algae: Chlamydomonas, Volvox.
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Amoebozoa:
- Characteristics: Use amoeboid movement.
- Examples: Slime molds, various types of amoebae.
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Opisthokonta:
- Characteristics: Includes animals, fungi, and several protists. Have a single posterior flagellum in motile cells.
- Examples: Choanoflagellates.
Amoeba
Amoeba is a common example of a protist, known for its changing shape.
Basic Structure
- Irregular Shape: Lacks a fixed shape, constantly changing due to the formation of pseudopods.
- Cell Membrane: The outer boundary that encloses the cytoplasm.
- Cytoplasm: Divided into two parts:
- Ectoplasm: The clear, outer, non-granular layer.
- Endoplasm: The inner, granular, more fluid layer containing organelles.
- Nucleus: A single, large, dense, and usually spherical structure that controls cell activities.
- Contractile Vacuole: Regulates water balance (osmoregulation) by expelling excess water.
- Food Vacuoles: Formed during feeding, containing ingested food particles.
Life Processes
- Nutrition (Holozoic):
- Ingestion: Amoeba engulfs food particles (e.g., bacteria, algae) using pseudopods, forming a food cup that becomes a food vacuole.
- Digestion: Lysosomes containing digestive enzymes fuse with the food vacuole, breaking down complex food into simpler substances.
- Absorption: Digested food diffuses into the cytoplasm.
- Assimilation: Absorbed food is utilized for energy, growth, and repair.
- Egestion: Undigested waste is expelled from the cell at any point on the surface.
- Locomotion: Moves by forming temporary finger-like projections called pseudopods (false feet). The cytoplasm flows into these pseudopods, pulling the cell forward.
- Respiration: Occurs through the general body surface. Oxygen dissolved in water diffuses into the cytoplasm, and carbon dioxide diffuses out.
- Excretion: Waste products (e.g., ammonia) are removed by diffusion through the cell membrane. The contractile vacuole also helps in expelling excess water and some metabolic wastes.
- Reproduction:
- Binary Fission: Under favorable conditions, the nucleus divides, followed by the division of the cytoplasm, resulting in two identical daughter Amoebae.
- Multiple Fission (Encystment): Under unfavorable conditions, Amoeba withdraws its pseudopods, becomes spherical, and secretes a protective three-layered cyst wall around itself. Inside the cyst, a nucleus divides repeatedly, forming many small daughter nuclei. Each nucleus then develops into a small Amoeba (pseudopodiospores). When favorable conditions return, the cyst wall breaks, releasing the young Amoebae.
Location:
/Class-7/Extended-Notes/2_3_Kingdom_Protista.mdx