Protist Basics
Fungi Basics
Reproduction
Relationships
Miscellaneous
100

Define protists:

  • Usually unicellular (but algae is a multicellular protist)

  • Eukaryotes (have membrane-bound organelles & nucleus)

  • Domain = Eukarya

  • Kingdom = Protista












100

What are Fungi, Eukaryotes or Prokaryotes?

Eukaryotic cells

100

What are two ways protists & fungi can reproduce?

Asexual and sexual reproduction

100

What are two types of relationships that protists & fungi are involved in?

Mutualism and parasitism

100

Examples of protists:

Amoebas, slime molds, and euglena

200

What are ways protists gain energy?

Autotrophs, heterotrophs, mixotrophs

200

Fungi are more closely related to _____ than _____

Plants ; animals

200

Asexual reproduction in protists:

  • Undergoes mitosis

  • Goes through conjugation then mitosis (results in genetic diversity)

200

Mutualistic relationships for protists:

  • Where both the host and protist benefits

  • Ex: Protists can live in the intestines of termites and produce enzymes that can help termites digest wood

200

Protists can be categorized as:

  • “Plant-like, animal-like, or fungus-like”

  • Plant or fungus-like = contains cell walls of cellulose

300

What are ways protists benefit us?

  • Photosynthetic protists in aquatic environments produce oxygen and are part of the food chain

  • Act as decomposers

  • Have relationships with other organisms

300

Some fungi can be _____ or _____

Decomposers ; parasites

300

Sexual reproduction in protists:

  • Alternation of generations = when protists have sexual life cycles that switch between diploid and haploid

  • Ex: water molds reproduce sexually by undergoing meiosis and produce male and female gametes- fertilization and make a zygote

300

Parasitic relationships for protists:

  • Where the host does not benefit but the protist does

  • Ex: Protist named Plasmodium that causes malaria (mosquitoes as transmitters/vectors)

300

Many ___ can perform photosynthesis:

protists

400

How can protists harm us?

  • Can cause disease

  • Can damage crops

400

Can fungi be multicellular or unicellular or both?

Both

400

What are three ways fungi can asexually reproduce?

Spore Reproduction, Fragmentation, Budding

400

Mutualistic relationships for fungi:

  • Where the fungi and host both benefit

  • Ex: Mycorrhiza benefits fungi and plants because fungi get food and plants have help gaining access to minerals and water

400

Examples of fungi:

Yeasts, mushrooms, and bread molds

500

What are ways protists move?

  • Pseudopods = changes cell shape by projecting cytoplasm to move in a direction

  • Cilia = hair-like structures around the cell that move the cell like oars on a boat (supported by microtubules)

  • Flagella = tail-like structures that are on one end of the cell and move like a propeller or wavelike motion (supported by microtubules)

  • Some protists move via wind, water, or other organisms

500

Are fungi heterotrophs or autotrophs?

Heterotrophs

500

How can fungi reproduce sexually?

They can undergo meiosis and form haploid spores


500

Parasitic relationships for fungi:

  • Where the host is harmed

  • Ex: Athlete’s foot

500
  • Cell walls of fungi are made up of a carbohydrate called ___, which is also the ___ of some insects

Chitin ; exoskeleton

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