the unity and diversity of life chapter 21
green alga
Common term for one of the single-celled, colonial, or multicelled photosynthetic protists that has chloroplasts containing chlorophylls a and b; a chlorophyte or charophyte alga.
What domain and Kingdom do Stramenophiles belong to?
Domain: Eukarya Kingdom: Protista
What formed the white cliffs of Dover and forms chalk?
Foraminiferans and radiolarians
Amoebic Dysentery is caused by:
a protozoan
plankton
Community of tiny drifting or swimming organisms.
Are Stramenophiles Prokaryotes or Eukaryotes
Eukaryotes
secondary endosymbiosis
Evolution of a chloroplast from a protist that itself contains chloroplasts that arose by primary endosybmiosis.
primary endosymbiosis
Evolution of an organelle from bacteria that entered a host cell and lived inside it
euglenoid
Flagellated protozoan with multiple mitochondria; may be heterotropic or have chloroplasts descended from a green alga.
Protist
General term for member of one of the eykayotic lineages that is not a fungus, animal, or plant.
What did the marine iguanas eat in Galapagos?
Green Algae: sea lettuce, ulva
water mold
Heterotrophic protist that grows as nutrient-absorbing filaments.
choanoflagellates
Heterotrophic protists thought to be the sister group of animals; collared cells strain food from water.
foraminifera
Heterotrophic single-celled protists with a porous calcium carbonate shell and long cytoplasmic extentions.
radiolaria
Heterotrophic single-celled protists with a porous silica shell and a long cytoplasmic extensions.
contractile vacuole
In freshwater protists, an organelle that collects and expels excess water.
Who discovered protozoa
Leewenhoek
amoebozoans
Lineage of heterotrophic, unwalled protists that live in soils and water; includes amoebas and slime molds.
alveolate
Member of a protist lineage having small sacs beneath the plasma membrane; dinoflagellate, ciliate, or apicomplexan.
brown algae
Multicelled marine protist with a brown accessory pigment (fucoxanthin) in its chloroplasts.
alternation of generations
Of land plants and some algae, a life cycle in which both haploid and diploid multicelled bodies form.
hydrogenosome
Organelle that produces ATP and hydrogen gas by an anaerobic pathway; evolved from mitochondria.
multicellular organism
Organism composed of interdependent cells that vary in their structure and function.
colonial organism
Organism composed of many integrated cells, each capable of living and reproducing on its own.
pellicle
Outer layer of plasma membrane and elastic proteins that protects and gives shape to many unwalled, single-celled protists.
trypanosome
Parasitic flagellate with a single mitochondrion and a membrane-encased flagellum.
red alga
Photosynthetic protist; typically multicelled, with chloroplasts containing red accessory pigments (phycobilins).
What class of protozoans resembles both amoeboids and fungi and are often found in east texas woodlands on dead rotting logs?
Plasmodial slime molds
algal bloom
Population explosion of photosynthetic cells in an aquatic habitat.
bioluminescence
Production of light by an organism.
flagellated protozoan
Protist belonging to an entirely or mostly heterotrophic lineage with no cell wall and one or more flagella.
stramenopiles
Protist lineage that includes the photosynthetic diatoms and brown algae, as well as the hetrotrophic water molds. some members of the group have a hairy flagellum.
apicomplexian
Single-celled alveolate protist that lives as a parasite inside animal cells; some cause malaria or toxoplasmosis.
diatom
Single-celled photosynthetic protist with a brown accesory pigment (fucoxanthin) and a two-part silica shell.
dinoflagellate
Single-celled, aquatic protist with cellulose plates and two flagella; may be heterotrophic or photosynthetic.
protist ciliate
Single-celled, heterotropic protist with many cilia.
amoeba
Single-celled, unwalled protist that extends pseudopods to move and to capture prey.
plasmodial slime mold
Soil-dwelling protist that feeds as a multi nucleated mass. develops into a fruiting body under adverse conditions.
cellular slime mold
Soil-dwelling protist that feeds as solitary cells but congregates under adverse conditions to form a cohesive unit that develops into a fruiting body.
Kelp, the largest algae
brown algae
source of algin to prevent ice crystals form forming in ice cream
brown algae
How do paramecia and stentors move?
cilia
What is the most primitive type of sexual reproduction that is exhibited by ciliated protozoans?
conjuction
Freshwater protists live in hypotonic solutions which means that the water concentration is higher outside their cell. As a result, water constantly enters and would explode the cell except for which of the following organelles?
contractile vacuole
Added to paint for headlight reflection, toothpaste for polishing teeth and swimming pool filters
diatoms
What algae have silica in their cell walls?
diatoms
What type of algae contains silica in their cells walls, is found in both fresh and salt water, and was studied in lab?
diatoms
causes "red tide" that kills fish
dinoflagellates
What organism causes amoebic dysentrery and contaminates most drinking water supplies in the world?
entamoeba hystolycia
Protozoans: are they prokaryotes or eukaryotes
eukaryote
What protozoan contaminates fresh water streams in the US and causes severe diarrhea?
giardia lamblia
sea lettuce in galapagos islands
green algae
What is the function of the eye spot?
helps detect light
What disease does plasmodium vivax cause
malaria
When we use terms like amoeboids, flagellates, and ciliates we are referring to the protists means of:
movement
How does Amoeba move
pseudopodia
source of agar for culturing bacteria and gel caps for vitamins and drugs
red algae
Which protozoans are non-motile
sporazoans
What are the most complex protozoans
the ciliates
Why are algae important to the aquatic food chain
they are the producers of the aquatic food chain
What is a vector
transmit disease from one organism to another
What causes African sleeping sickness and how is it transmitted?
trypansmoa brucei, carried by the tse tse fly
How is Chaga's disease transmitted? What famous scientist probably suffered from it?
trypansoma cruzi from the kissing bug, darwin may have contracted while on the voyage of the beagle
The female Anopheles mosquito, the Kissing bug, the tse-tse fly, and some ticks and fleas transmit disease form one organism to another. They are referred to as:
vectors
Describe the flagellum and how it works
whip like tail that helps it move/ rotates and propels the protozoan forward.