Examples of protist in the following topics:
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- The cells of protists are among the most elaborate and diverse of all cells.
- Many protist cells are multinucleated; in some species, the nuclei are different sizes and have distinct roles in protist cell function.
- Protists exhibit many forms of nutrition and may be aerobic or anaerobic.
- The majority of protists are motile, but different types of protists have evolved varied modes of movement .
- Protists use various methods for transportation.
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- Protists function as sources of food for organisms on land and sea.
- Protists function in various ecological niches.
- Protists are essential sources of nutrition for many other organisms.
- In some cases, as in plankton, protists are consumed directly.
- Protists do not only create food sources for sea-dwelling organisms.
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- Protist life cycles range from simple to extremely elaborate.
- There are over 100,000 described living species of protists.
- Paramecia are a common example of aquatic protists.
- In addition to aquatic protists, several protist species are parasites that infect animals or plants and, therefore, live in their hosts.
- Other protist species live on dead organisms or their wastes and contribute to their decay.
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- Rhizaria are a supergroup of protists, typically amoebas, that are characterized by the presence of needle-like pseudopodia.
- Pseudopodia function to trap and engulf food particles and to direct movement in rhizarian protists.
- The protist then transports its cytoplasm into the pseudopod, thereby moving the entire cell.
- This type of motion, called cytoplasmic streaming, is used by several diverse groups of protists as a means of locomotion or as a method to distribute nutrients and oxygen.
- Radiolarians display needle-like pseudopods that are supported by microtubules which radiate outward from the cell bodies of these protists and function to catch food particles.
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- Many protists act as parasites that prey on plants or as decomposers that feed on dead organisms.
- Protist parasites prey on terrestrial plants and include agents that cause massive destruction to food crops.
- The fungus-like protist saprobes are specialized to absorb nutrients from non-living organic matter, such as dead organisms or their wastes.
- Saprobic protists have the essential function of returning inorganic nutrients to the soil and water.
- Describe the ways in which protists act as decomposers and the actions of parasitic protists on plants
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- Archaeplastida are a supergroup of protists that comprise red and green algae, which include unicellular, multicellular, and colonial forms.
- It is well documented that land plants evolved from a common ancestor of these protists; their closest relatives are found within this group.
- Molecular evidence supports that all Archaeplastida are descendants of an endosymbiotic relationship between a heterotrophic protist and a cyanobacterium.
- Other protists classified as red algae lack phycoerythrins and are parasites.
- It is well supported that this group of protists share a relatively-recent common ancestors with land plants.
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- Many protists exist as parasites that infect and cause diseases in their hosts.
- A significant number of protists are pathogenic parasites that must infect other organisms to survive and propagate.
- Protist parasites include the causative agents of malaria, African sleeping sickness, and waterborne gastroenteritis in humans.
- However, T. brucei has thousands of possible antigens; with each subsequent generation, the protist switches to a glycoprotein coating of a different molecular structure.
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- Protists are eukaryotes that first appeared approximately 2 billion years ago with the rise of atmospheric oxygen levels.
- Others invade the cells of other protists, animals, and plants.
- Not all protists are microscopic.
- Some protists are multicellular, such as the red, green, and brown seaweeds.
- It is among the protists that one finds the wealth of ways that organisms can grow.
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- Early animal life (Ediacaran biota) evolved from protists during the pre-Cambrian period, which is also known as the Ediacaran period.
- It is believed that early animal life, termed Ediacaran biota, evolved from protists at this time.
- Some protist species called choanoflagellates closely resemble the choanocyte cells in the simplest animals, sponges.
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- Originally, protozoa had been defined as unicellular protists with animal-like behavior (e.g., movement).
- Protozoa were regarded as the partner-group of protists to protophyta, which have plant-like behavior (e.g., photosynthesis).
- In general, protozoa are referred to as animal-like protists because they are capable of movement, or motile.
- While there is no exact definition for the term protozoa, it often refers to a unicellular heterotrophic protist, such as the amoebas and ciliates.