Excavata
SAR
SAR
SAR/ Archaepldaastida
Unikonta/ Fungi
100

Have an “excavated” feeding groove on one side of cell body



What is Excavata?

100

3 Major Clades of SAR.

What is Stramenopiles, Alveolates, Rhizarians?

100

Characterized by alveoli (membrane-bound sacs just under their plasma membranes)

What is Alveolates?

100

Often symmetrical
• Symmetrical internal skeletons are made of silica
• Mostly marine protists
• Pseudopodia
• Can engulf smaller microorganisms that get attached to the pseudopodia
• Cytoplasmic streaming: carrying the captured prey into the main part of the cell

What is Radiolarians (Rhizarians)?

100

There are two major clades of unikonts

Amoebozoans- Tubulinids and close protist relatives
Opisthokonts- Animals, fungi, and closely
related protist groups

200


• Lack plastids
• Highly reduced mitochondria(mitosomes)
• They lack functional electron transport chains = cannot use oxygen for energy
• Anaerobic biochemical pathways
• Most of them are parasites
• ex. Giardia intestinalis
• 2 equal-sized nuclei
• Multiple flagella

What is Diplomonads?

200

Straw hair” in Latin

• Numerous fine, hairlike flagella

• Paired with a shorter smooth, non-hairy flagellum

• Includes some of the most important photosynthetic organisms on the planet



What is Stramenophiles?

200

• Reinforced by cellulose plates
• Have 2 flagella
• One of them causes them to spin as they move through waters

Ex. Red tide because of carotenoids

Ex. Noctiluca- sea sparkle, bioluminescence

What is Dinoflagellates (Aveolates)?

200

Also called foraminiferans (foramen =little hole,ferre = to bear)

• Have porous shells called tests

• Consists of a single piece of organic material that’s hardened with calcium

carbonate

• Pseudopodia extend through the pores

• Swimming, test formation, and feeding

• Nutrition from the photosynthetic symbiotic algae within the tests



What is Forams (Rhizarians)?

200

Lobe- or tube-shaped pseudopodia (instead of threadlike as in rhizarians)

• Tubulinids

• Ubiquitous (found everywhere) in soil, freshwater, and marine habitats

•Amoeba proteus

Slime Molds (mycetozoans; “fungus animal”)
• Like fungi, they produce fruiting bodies that aid in spore dispersal
• They have diverged into two main branches

Brightly colored (yellow or orange)

• Form a mass called plasmodium

• Extend pseudopodia 





What is Amoebozoans (Unikonta)?

300

• Characterized by a parabasal organ (similar to Golgi apparatus)

• Also have reduced mitochondria(hydrogenosomes)

• Generate some energy anaerobically (hydrogen gas as a by-product)

• Ex. Trichomonas vaginalis (STD aka Trich)

What is Parabasalids?

300

Unicellular algae
• Has a “glass-like” wall made with silicon dioxide
• The wall has two parts that overlap (think of a shoe box)
• Protection from the crushing jaws of predators (1.4 mil kg/m2

What is Diatoms (Stramenopiles)?

300

• Almost all are parasites in animals

• Virtually all animal species examined so far are attacked by them

• Spread through their host as tiny infectious cells called sporozoites

• They have life cycles involving both sexual and asexual stages

• Often requires two or more hosts for completion

• Ex. Plasmodium

• Lives in both mosquitoes and humans



What is Apicomplexans (Alveolates)?

300

Commonly found in marine,

freshwater, and soil ecosystems

• Most of them are heterotrophs

• Parasites of plants, animals, and other protists

• Many are also predators – consume other protists, fungi, and small

animals

• Chlorarachniophytes

• Mixotrophs

• Ingest smaller protists and bacteria & perform photosynthesis

Ex. Paulinella chromatophora

Exhibits endosymbiosis

Autotroph

What is Cercozoans (Rhizarians)?

300

• Most amoebozoans are free-living
•Entamoebas are symbiotic parasites
• Infect all classes of vertebrate animals and some invertebrates
• We are host to at least 6 species of them
• Only one of them,
E. histolytica, is known to be pathogenic
• They cause amoebic dysentery
• Spread via drinking/eating contaminated water and food
• 110,000 deaths worldwide each year
• The third-leading cause of death due to eukaryotic parasites (after malar

What is Entamoebas (Unikonta:Amoebozoans)?

400

• flagellated protists that include predatory heterotrophs, photosynthetic autotrophs, and pathogenic parasites
• A rod with either a spiral or a crystalline structure inside the flagella

What is Euglenozoans?

400

The largest and most complex algae

• Multicellular and most are marine

• Common along temperate coasts with cold-water currents

• Brown (or olive) color due to carotenoids in plastids

Have holdfasts (roots), Stipe (stem), Blades (Leaves)


What is Brown Algae (Stramenopiles)?

400

Possess cilia for movement and feeding behaviors

• Most are predators (of bacteria or other protists)

• Ciliary beating – gradual, slow, and controlled movement of cilia

• “The wave” in the stadium



What is Ciliates (Alveolates)?

400

Archaeplastida has the defining characteristics of____ and is made of what two things?

Plastids- acquired from cyanobacterial endosymbiont

Include Red  and Green Algae 

Archaeplastida: Red Algae
• Also known as rhodophytes
• Photosynthetic pigment phycoerythrin masks the green of chlorophyll
• Some shallow water species have less phycoerythrin
• Some completely lack them and live as parasites on other red algae
• You can see the color difference depending on the depth of water

Depends on water currents for reproduction and alteration of generations. 

Archaeplastida: Green Algae

Green algae and plants are closely related

• Have a structure and pigment composition much like the chloroplast of plants

• Some scientists want to include them in a new ”plant” kingdom

• Viridiplantae (viridis = green)


400

It uses decomposer to break down food, can be mutualistic, parasitic, single-celled (yeasts) or Multicellular

What is Fungi?

500

The two group of Euglenozoans.

What is Kinetoplastids & euglenids?


Kinetoplastids
• Have a single, large mitochondrion that contains an organized mass of DNA called kinetoplast
• Include species that feed on prokaryotes in freshwater, marine, and moist terrestrial ecosystems
• Some parasitize animals, plants, and other protists
• Ex.Trypanosoma


• Photosynthesis

• Heterotrophic

• Phagocytosis



Euglenids

• Has a pocket at one end where flagella emerge

• Some are mixotrophs (Photosynthesis & Heterotrophic)

• Phagocytosis

500


Egg-fungus”
• Water molds, the white rusts, and the downy mildews
• Because of their morphology, they were previously classified as fungi
• Cell walls made of cellulose
• Have branching filaments (hyphae)

What is Oomycetes (Stramenopiles)?

500

Most of them are amoebas

• Pseudopodia

• Alter its shape

• Move by extending them out



What is Rhizarians?

500

Green Algae is divided into two groups.

Chlorophytes and Charophytes.

**Only showed examples of chlorophyte in class

7000 species
• Most live in fresh water (some marine and terrestrial)
Examples
Chlamydomonas
• Resemble gametes of more complex chlorophytes
• Live independently as phytoplankton or
• Symbiotically within other
eukaryotes (perform photosynthesis
for their food supply)

AND
Pediastrum
• A “Pond alga”
• Form colonies of individual cells
• Contribute to the pond scum

AND

Ulva
• “Sea lettuce”
• Edible chlorophyte
• Have blades and holdfast
• Form true multicellular bodies by cell division and differentiation



500

Fungal Structures

• Multicellular fungi

• Hyphae- Network of tiny, connected filaments that collectively make up the mycelium of a fungus

Mycelium- Mass network of hyphae in a fungus

Arbuscules- branching hyphae that allow

fungi to exchange nutrients

with living plants

• Mycorrhizae (“fungus roots”)

• Mutually beneficial relationships between fungi and plant roots



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