Protists (/ˈproʊtɨst/) are a diverse group of eukaryoticmicroorganisms. Historically, protists were treated as the kingdomProtista, which includes mostly unicellularorganisms that do not fit into the other kingdoms, but this group is contested in modern taxonomy. Instead, it is "better regarded as a loose grouping of 30 or 40 disparate phyla with diverse combinations of trophic modes, mechanisms of motility, cell coverings and life cycles."
The protists do not have much in common besides a relatively simple organization—either they are unicellular, or they are multicellular without specialized tissues. This simple cellular organization distinguishes the protists from other eukaryotes, such as fungi, animals and plants.
The term protista was first used by Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Protists were traditionally subdivided into several groups based on similarities to the "higher" kingdoms: the unicellular "animal-like" protozoa, the "plant-like" protophyta (mostly unicellular algae), and the "fungus-like" slime molds and water molds. These traditional subdivisions, largely based on superficial commonalities, have been replaced by classifications based on phylogenetics (evolutionary relatedness among organisms). However, the older terms are still used as informal names to describe the morphology and ecology of various protists.
Life on Earth 007 - Protists Paul Andersen surveys organisms in the protists. He reviews the diversity found within the domain Eukarya and explains that the ...
Hank veers away from human anatomy to teach us about the (mostly) single-celled organisms that make up two of the three taxonomic domains of life, and one of...
20:02
Diversity of Protists
Diversity of Protists
Diversity of Protists
Biology 19.1 viewing assignment.
3:12
Introduction to the Protists
Introduction to the Protists
Introduction to the Protists
This HD dramatic video choreographed to powerful music introduces the viewer/student to the microscopic kingdom of the Protists. It is designed as a motivati...
4:12
Protists | Biology
Protists | Biology
Protists | Biology
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
5:24
Protist Song
Protist Song
Protist Song
A song about Protists! The music was made by iWouldwantSky, and the video by me. We did it for a grade 12 biology project. Thanks for watching, please drop a like if you enjoyed it. (the lyrics are below)
lyrics
Introduction:
Protista come in 3 different flavours
Plant, Fungi and Animal behaviors
they also have different modes of nutrition
that help taxonomist give them definition, (like)
Autotrophic, the energy composers.
Saprotrophic, fungi-like decomposers
Heterotrophic, the predator variety
and parasitic, the leeching notoriety
Chorus:
Protista, yah, the kingdom that's got it all
diversity that shames plant, fungi and animals
If it go
10:01
Protist I
Protist I
Protist I
Description of Protist and the Supergroup Archaeplastida.
2:31
Protist Rap (Fresh Prince Parody)
Protist Rap (Fresh Prince Parody)
Protist Rap (Fresh Prince Parody)
Copyright*** I do not own any of the photos or footage in this video Biology 11 Project.
3:22
Protist Rap (TiK ToK cover)
Protist Rap (TiK ToK cover)
Protist Rap (TiK ToK cover)
ap bio end of the year project (c) Protist FTW productions 2010.
4:20
Years Around The Sun - Heart Delay (Protist Remix)
Years Around The Sun - Heart Delay (Protist Remix)
Years Around The Sun - Heart Delay (Protist Remix)
No copyright intended.
1:25
Protist
Protist
Protist
Examples of Several different protists.
2:06
protist movement
protist movement
protist movement
see how amoeba, paramecium and euglena move and the structures they use to do so.
0:35
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists.
Life on Earth 007 - Protists Paul Andersen surveys organisms in the protists. He reviews the diversity found within the domain Eukarya and explains that the ...
Hank veers away from human anatomy to teach us about the (mostly) single-celled organisms that make up two of the three taxonomic domains of life, and one of...
20:02
Diversity of Protists
Diversity of Protists
Diversity of Protists
Biology 19.1 viewing assignment.
3:12
Introduction to the Protists
Introduction to the Protists
Introduction to the Protists
This HD dramatic video choreographed to powerful music introduces the viewer/student to the microscopic kingdom of the Protists. It is designed as a motivati...
4:12
Protists | Biology
Protists | Biology
Protists | Biology
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
5:24
Protist Song
Protist Song
Protist Song
A song about Protists! The music was made by iWouldwantSky, and the video by me. We did it for a grade 12 biology project. Thanks for watching, please drop a like if you enjoyed it. (the lyrics are below)
lyrics
Introduction:
Protista come in 3 different flavours
Plant, Fungi and Animal behaviors
they also have different modes of nutrition
that help taxonomist give them definition, (like)
Autotrophic, the energy composers.
Saprotrophic, fungi-like decomposers
Heterotrophic, the predator variety
and parasitic, the leeching notoriety
Chorus:
Protista, yah, the kingdom that's got it all
diversity that shames plant, fungi and animals
If it go
10:01
Protist I
Protist I
Protist I
Description of Protist and the Supergroup Archaeplastida.
2:31
Protist Rap (Fresh Prince Parody)
Protist Rap (Fresh Prince Parody)
Protist Rap (Fresh Prince Parody)
Copyright*** I do not own any of the photos or footage in this video Biology 11 Project.
3:22
Protist Rap (TiK ToK cover)
Protist Rap (TiK ToK cover)
Protist Rap (TiK ToK cover)
ap bio end of the year project (c) Protist FTW productions 2010.
4:20
Years Around The Sun - Heart Delay (Protist Remix)
Years Around The Sun - Heart Delay (Protist Remix)
Years Around The Sun - Heart Delay (Protist Remix)
No copyright intended.
1:25
Protist
Protist
Protist
Examples of Several different protists.
2:06
protist movement
protist movement
protist movement
see how amoeba, paramecium and euglena move and the structures they use to do so.
0:35
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists
The Protist , Protozoa, Algae and Fungus-like protists.
14:13
Protists review
Protists review
Protists review
Protists review.
3:51
Protist Love
Protist Love
Protist Love
A compilation (by me) of footage of Protists to Michael Nyman's 'The Other Side' All Videos from Jeremy and Julianne Pickett-Heaps 'The Kingdom Protista: The...
1:53
What is a Protist?
What is a Protist?
What is a Protist?
Hi, I'm Emerald Robinson, and in this "What Is" video, we're going to discuss a group of organisms called protists. Protists are organisms that have a nucleu...
1:42
Biology: The Five Kingdoms of Life: The Protists
Biology: The Five Kingdoms of Life: The Protists
Biology: The Five Kingdoms of Life: The Protists
http://www.zaneeducation.com - This educational biology video will assist biology students to study and examine the characteristics of protists and identify ...
4:03
Plant Protists | Biology
Plant Protists | Biology
Plant Protists | Biology
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
1:15
Protist battle royale
Protist battle royale
Protist battle royale
We combined 14 protist cultures from Carolina Biological and left the mixture on a windowsill. While covered with foil, it was certainly not kept sterile (or...
1:00
Protist under microscope 400X
Protist under microscope 400X
Protist under microscope 400X
This was taken 3/31/2011 at NFCC in my Botany class (yes, I know, I was supposed to be checking out the plant, but hey! When I seen this guy I couldn't help ...
45:50
Biology 1B - 2014-09-05: Protist diversity
Biology 1B - 2014-09-05: Protist diversity
Biology 1B - 2014-09-05: Protist diversity
Biology 1B, 001 - Fall 2014
General Biology - Alan Shabel, John P. Huelsenbeck, David D Ackerly
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
0:46
8 paramecium beating cilia
8 paramecium beating cilia
8 paramecium beating cilia
6:10
plant like protist
plant like protist
plant like protist
this video is a basic introduction for biology students on plant like protists.
Life on Earth 007 - Protists Paul Andersen surveys organisms in the protists. He reviews the diversity found within the domain Eukarya and explains that the ...
Life on Earth 007 - Protists Paul Andersen surveys organisms in the protists. He reviews the diversity found within the domain Eukarya and explains that the ...
Hank veers away from human anatomy to teach us about the (mostly) single-celled organisms that make up two of the three taxonomic domains of life, and one of...
Hank veers away from human anatomy to teach us about the (mostly) single-celled organisms that make up two of the three taxonomic domains of life, and one of...
This HD dramatic video choreographed to powerful music introduces the viewer/student to the microscopic kingdom of the Protists. It is designed as a motivati...
This HD dramatic video choreographed to powerful music introduces the viewer/student to the microscopic kingdom of the Protists. It is designed as a motivati...
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
A song about Protists! The music was made by iWouldwantSky, and the video by me. We did it for a grade 12 biology project. Thanks for watching, please drop a like if you enjoyed it. (the lyrics are below)
lyrics
Introduction:
Protista come in 3 different flavours
Plant, Fungi and Animal behaviors
they also have different modes of nutrition
that help taxonomist give them definition, (like)
Autotrophic, the energy composers.
Saprotrophic, fungi-like decomposers
Heterotrophic, the predator variety
and parasitic, the leeching notoriety
Chorus:
Protista, yah, the kingdom that's got it all
diversity that shames plant, fungi and animals
If it got a nucleus and is aerobic too
Multi, unicellular, or colonial will do
Always are found in moist conditions
Many different ways of getting nutrition
Their locomotion methods are the strangest that exist
Flagellum, cilia, pseudopods, yah, Protists!
Verse 1:
Plant-like protists photosynthesize
Autotrophs that make their own food supplies
Take the groups of organisms called algae
Brown, red and green derived by taxology
Brown algae, phaeophyta more precisely
is long and in the ocean example: kelp and seaweed
They have holdfast roots for orientation
And airbladders that control floatation
Rhodophyta, also known as Red Algae
Has over six thousand species in its biology
They absorb blue light, letting them live deep
Coralline is one, which helps build coral reefs
Green Algea has chlorophyll and a cellulose wall
and as result is labeled as plant overall
However, is more aquatic and in its resemblance
Often looks and behaves more like a protist
Euglena is unique, it's an animal and plant
It's eyespot uses light to know where to supplant
One-celled and autotrophic when in light
But they also use ingestion for energy in the night
Dinoflagellates are small and unicellular
They have two flagellum which they use as propellers
Bioluminescence giving water cool aesthetic
large population, called red-tides, are toxic
Diatoms have distinctive silica shells
basically hard photosynthetic single cells
Diatoms are located at the base of the food chain
Absorbent diatomaceous earth contains their remains
Plant-like protists aren't only the food-chains basis
but balances global warming making it decrease
CO2 makes water warmer allowing more protists
which act as negative feedback causing less to exist
Fungi-like protists are saprotrophic rather
And get nutrition from decaying organic matter
Why are slime mold's protists and not fungi?
Because, they don't have chitin and can move nearby
A creeping collection of protoplasmic mass
Which as organisms or single cells can be classed
Multicolored: pink, orange, yellow, gray, white
Found in rotten logs, moist terrestrial sites
Animal-like protists are heterotrophs primarily
Organized by their movement particularities
Ciliate protists have cilia, hair-like structures
Which rhythmically beat propelling them forwards
Sixty beats per second is the speed of their tempo
Cilia can direct food to their mouths, also
Ciliates are faster other types of Protist
Paramecium, are categorized in this list
Protists with flagellum have a whip apparatus
they beat, like cilia, for locomotion purpose
Giardia lamblia is the example I'll portray
which also uses it's flagellum to capture its prey
Pseudopods are cool finger like projections
Extend and drag their protist to new locations
Like the others this device can capture food
Amoebas are an example of protists in this group
Heterotrophic protists without locomotive means
the last group of protozoans, parasitic fiends
These use your body as a host, and will scary-a
Like plasmodium, or it's alter ego malaria
Though protists are very small, they're also very neat
Education of their existence is a rewarding feat
and so in conclusion, we're happy you came along
We hope you were enlightened by our video and song
A song about Protists! The music was made by iWouldwantSky, and the video by me. We did it for a grade 12 biology project. Thanks for watching, please drop a like if you enjoyed it. (the lyrics are below)
lyrics
Introduction:
Protista come in 3 different flavours
Plant, Fungi and Animal behaviors
they also have different modes of nutrition
that help taxonomist give them definition, (like)
Autotrophic, the energy composers.
Saprotrophic, fungi-like decomposers
Heterotrophic, the predator variety
and parasitic, the leeching notoriety
Chorus:
Protista, yah, the kingdom that's got it all
diversity that shames plant, fungi and animals
If it got a nucleus and is aerobic too
Multi, unicellular, or colonial will do
Always are found in moist conditions
Many different ways of getting nutrition
Their locomotion methods are the strangest that exist
Flagellum, cilia, pseudopods, yah, Protists!
Verse 1:
Plant-like protists photosynthesize
Autotrophs that make their own food supplies
Take the groups of organisms called algae
Brown, red and green derived by taxology
Brown algae, phaeophyta more precisely
is long and in the ocean example: kelp and seaweed
They have holdfast roots for orientation
And airbladders that control floatation
Rhodophyta, also known as Red Algae
Has over six thousand species in its biology
They absorb blue light, letting them live deep
Coralline is one, which helps build coral reefs
Green Algea has chlorophyll and a cellulose wall
and as result is labeled as plant overall
However, is more aquatic and in its resemblance
Often looks and behaves more like a protist
Euglena is unique, it's an animal and plant
It's eyespot uses light to know where to supplant
One-celled and autotrophic when in light
But they also use ingestion for energy in the night
Dinoflagellates are small and unicellular
They have two flagellum which they use as propellers
Bioluminescence giving water cool aesthetic
large population, called red-tides, are toxic
Diatoms have distinctive silica shells
basically hard photosynthetic single cells
Diatoms are located at the base of the food chain
Absorbent diatomaceous earth contains their remains
Plant-like protists aren't only the food-chains basis
but balances global warming making it decrease
CO2 makes water warmer allowing more protists
which act as negative feedback causing less to exist
Fungi-like protists are saprotrophic rather
And get nutrition from decaying organic matter
Why are slime mold's protists and not fungi?
Because, they don't have chitin and can move nearby
A creeping collection of protoplasmic mass
Which as organisms or single cells can be classed
Multicolored: pink, orange, yellow, gray, white
Found in rotten logs, moist terrestrial sites
Animal-like protists are heterotrophs primarily
Organized by their movement particularities
Ciliate protists have cilia, hair-like structures
Which rhythmically beat propelling them forwards
Sixty beats per second is the speed of their tempo
Cilia can direct food to their mouths, also
Ciliates are faster other types of Protist
Paramecium, are categorized in this list
Protists with flagellum have a whip apparatus
they beat, like cilia, for locomotion purpose
Giardia lamblia is the example I'll portray
which also uses it's flagellum to capture its prey
Pseudopods are cool finger like projections
Extend and drag their protist to new locations
Like the others this device can capture food
Amoebas are an example of protists in this group
Heterotrophic protists without locomotive means
the last group of protozoans, parasitic fiends
These use your body as a host, and will scary-a
Like plasmodium, or it's alter ego malaria
Though protists are very small, they're also very neat
Education of their existence is a rewarding feat
and so in conclusion, we're happy you came along
We hope you were enlightened by our video and song
A compilation (by me) of footage of Protists to Michael Nyman's 'The Other Side' All Videos from Jeremy and Julianne Pickett-Heaps 'The Kingdom Protista: The...
A compilation (by me) of footage of Protists to Michael Nyman's 'The Other Side' All Videos from Jeremy and Julianne Pickett-Heaps 'The Kingdom Protista: The...
Hi, I'm Emerald Robinson, and in this "What Is" video, we're going to discuss a group of organisms called protists. Protists are organisms that have a nucleu...
Hi, I'm Emerald Robinson, and in this "What Is" video, we're going to discuss a group of organisms called protists. Protists are organisms that have a nucleu...
http://www.zaneeducation.com - This educational biology video will assist biology students to study and examine the characteristics of protists and identify ...
http://www.zaneeducation.com - This educational biology video will assist biology students to study and examine the characteristics of protists and identify ...
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
We combined 14 protist cultures from Carolina Biological and left the mixture on a windowsill. While covered with foil, it was certainly not kept sterile (or...
We combined 14 protist cultures from Carolina Biological and left the mixture on a windowsill. While covered with foil, it was certainly not kept sterile (or...
This was taken 3/31/2011 at NFCC in my Botany class (yes, I know, I was supposed to be checking out the plant, but hey! When I seen this guy I couldn't help ...
This was taken 3/31/2011 at NFCC in my Botany class (yes, I know, I was supposed to be checking out the plant, but hey! When I seen this guy I couldn't help ...
Biology 1B, 001 - Fall 2014
General Biology - Alan Shabel, John P. Huelsenbeck, David D Ackerly
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
Biology 1B, 001 - Fall 2014
General Biology - Alan Shabel, John P. Huelsenbeck, David D Ackerly
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
Protist movement of fecal of goldfish 400 20150816
Protist movement of fecal of goldfish 400 20150816
Protist movement of fecal of goldfish 400 20150816
Protist move very fast like a cart.
1:43
Protist Movie 1
Protist Movie 1
Protist Movie 1
Tryouts at pictures and videos. The organisms originate from Costa Rican bromeliads and are maintained in Petri dishes. You may recognise copepods, rotifers and two protist species.
2:59
Protist movie 2
Protist movie 2
Protist movie 2
Some more shots of my petri dish bromeliads. Still very much work in progress. I welcome any help on the identification of ciliates. (no copyright violation intended re the music)
18:37
Protist
Protist
Protist
In some biological taxonomy schemes, protists (/ˈproʊtɨst/) were a large group of diverse eukaryotic microorganisms, mainly unicellular animals and plants, that do not form tissues. Formerly, these were assigned to the now-obsolete kingdom Protista. However in modern taxonomy the Protista are understood to be paraphyletic (not a clade), so the term remains in use only for convenience, similar to "invertebrate". An equivalent term Protoctista is used for these organisms by various organisations and institutions. Molecular analyses in modern taxonomy have been used to redistribute former members of this group into diverse and sometimes distantl
4:44
Protist
Protist
Protist
Provided to YouTube by DistroKid
Protist · Abigail's Ghost
℗ Aesperus Music
Released on: 2015-08-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
8:22
Protist 2
Protist 2
Protist 2
Description
39:56
protist 2
protist 2
protist 2
6:13
Protist 3
Protist 3
Protist 3
Description
0:40
How to Pronounce Protist
How to Pronounce Protist
How to Pronounce Protist
Expand your vocabulary and learn how to say new words:
http://www.dictionaryvoice.com/How_To_Pronounce_Protist.html
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DictionaryVoice
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dictionary-Voice/750369141710497
0:17
How to Pronounce Protist
How to Pronounce Protist
How to Pronounce Protist
This video shows you how to pronounce Protist
1:20
Buffalo Bayou
Buffalo Bayou
Buffalo Bayou
This video shows many protists that can be found in the water of Buffalo Bayou . I will upload more individual videos of the amazing creatures I find from around the Houston area. I will also try to classify the protists and animals as well. Let me know what you think.
0:41
What does protist mean?
What does protist mean?
What does protist mean?
What does protist mean?
A spoken definition of protist.
Intro Sound:
Typewriter - Tamskp
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Outro Music:
Groove Groove - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Intro/Outro Photo:
The best days are not planned - Marcus Hansson
Licensed under CC-BY-2.0
Book Image:
Open Book template PSD - DougitDesign
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/protist
Text to Speech powered by TTS-API.COM
9:14
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
Visit: http://academyofone.org
Forum: http://www.academyofone.org/forums/
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Academyofone1
Article: http://www.academyofone.org/protists-kingdoms-of-eukaryota-introduction-to-biology-11-6/
Royalty free music licensed by http://www.stockmusic.net
Royalty free photos licensed by http://www.bigstockphoto.com
Script:
Now that we got the comedians of the eukaryota world let’s talk about the dwarfs of the land. Of course I am talking about protists. What’s going on everybody! My name is Jack Jenkins and this is Academy of One. Today we are talking about protists, the second kingdom of eukaryota.
Protists a
0:14
ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8877
ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8877
ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8877
From temporary pool of water in beech tree roots
0:12
Ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8863
Ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8863
Ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8863
from temporary pool of water in beech tree roots
0:38
Protist Meaning
Protist Meaning
Protist Meaning
Video shows what protist means. Any of the eukaryotic unicellular organisms including protozoans, slime molds and some algae; historically grouped into the kingdom Protoctista.
single celled eukaryotes + prokaryotes + sponges single-celled eukaryotes + prokaryotes single celled eukaryotes. Protist Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say protist. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
0:20
Biology teacher "protist chicken dance"
Biology teacher "protist chicken dance"
Biology teacher "protist chicken dance"
My teacher wanted to help us remember how Protists move and this is what happened
Tryouts at pictures and videos. The organisms originate from Costa Rican bromeliads and are maintained in Petri dishes. You may recognise copepods, rotifers and two protist species.
Tryouts at pictures and videos. The organisms originate from Costa Rican bromeliads and are maintained in Petri dishes. You may recognise copepods, rotifers and two protist species.
Some more shots of my petri dish bromeliads. Still very much work in progress. I welcome any help on the identification of ciliates. (no copyright violation intended re the music)
Some more shots of my petri dish bromeliads. Still very much work in progress. I welcome any help on the identification of ciliates. (no copyright violation intended re the music)
In some biological taxonomy schemes, protists (/ˈproʊtɨst/) were a large group of diverse eukaryotic microorganisms, mainly unicellular animals and plants, that do not form tissues. Formerly, these were assigned to the now-obsolete kingdom Protista. However in modern taxonomy the Protista are understood to be paraphyletic (not a clade), so the term remains in use only for convenience, similar to "invertebrate". An equivalent term Protoctista is used for these organisms by various organisations and institutions. Molecular analyses in modern taxonomy have been used to redistribute former members of this group into diverse and sometimes distantly related phyla. When used, the term “protists” is now considered to mean similar-appearing but diverse phyla that are not related through an exclusive common ancestor, and which have different life cycles, trophic levels, modes of locomotion, and cellular structures. Besides their relatively simple levels of organization, the protists do not have much in common. The term protista was first used by Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Protists were traditionally subdivided into several groups based on similarities to the "higher" kingdoms: the unicellular "animal-like" protozoa, the "plant-like" protophyta (mostly unicellular algae), and the "fungus-like" slime molds and water molds. These traditional subdivisions, largely based on superficial commonalities, have been replaced by classifications based on phylogenetics (evolutionary relatedness among organisms). However, the older terms are still used as informal names to describe the morphology and ecology of various protists. Protists live in almost any environment that contains liquid water. Many protists, such as algae, are photosynthetic and are vital primary producers in ecosystems, particularly in the ocean as part of the plankton. Other protists include pathogenic species such as the kinetoplastid Trypanosoma brucei, which causes sleeping sickness and species of the apicomplexan Plasmodium which cause malaria.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info========
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC-BY-SA-3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Author-Info: 柑橘類
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Protist_collage.jpg
=======Image-Info========
In some biological taxonomy schemes, protists (/ˈproʊtɨst/) were a large group of diverse eukaryotic microorganisms, mainly unicellular animals and plants, that do not form tissues. Formerly, these were assigned to the now-obsolete kingdom Protista. However in modern taxonomy the Protista are understood to be paraphyletic (not a clade), so the term remains in use only for convenience, similar to "invertebrate". An equivalent term Protoctista is used for these organisms by various organisations and institutions. Molecular analyses in modern taxonomy have been used to redistribute former members of this group into diverse and sometimes distantly related phyla. When used, the term “protists” is now considered to mean similar-appearing but diverse phyla that are not related through an exclusive common ancestor, and which have different life cycles, trophic levels, modes of locomotion, and cellular structures. Besides their relatively simple levels of organization, the protists do not have much in common. The term protista was first used by Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Protists were traditionally subdivided into several groups based on similarities to the "higher" kingdoms: the unicellular "animal-like" protozoa, the "plant-like" protophyta (mostly unicellular algae), and the "fungus-like" slime molds and water molds. These traditional subdivisions, largely based on superficial commonalities, have been replaced by classifications based on phylogenetics (evolutionary relatedness among organisms). However, the older terms are still used as informal names to describe the morphology and ecology of various protists. Protists live in almost any environment that contains liquid water. Many protists, such as algae, are photosynthetic and are vital primary producers in ecosystems, particularly in the ocean as part of the plankton. Other protists include pathogenic species such as the kinetoplastid Trypanosoma brucei, which causes sleeping sickness and species of the apicomplexan Plasmodium which cause malaria.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
=======Image-Info========
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC-BY-SA-3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Author-Info: 柑橘類
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Protist_collage.jpg
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This video shows many protists that can be found in the water of Buffalo Bayou . I will upload more individual videos of the amazing creatures I find from around the Houston area. I will also try to classify the protists and animals as well. Let me know what you think.
This video shows many protists that can be found in the water of Buffalo Bayou . I will upload more individual videos of the amazing creatures I find from around the Houston area. I will also try to classify the protists and animals as well. Let me know what you think.
What does protist mean?
A spoken definition of protist.
Intro Sound:
Typewriter - Tamskp
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Outro Music:
Groove Groove - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Intro/Outro Photo:
The best days are not planned - Marcus Hansson
Licensed under CC-BY-2.0
Book Image:
Open Book template PSD - DougitDesign
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/protist
Text to Speech powered by TTS-API.COM
What does protist mean?
A spoken definition of protist.
Intro Sound:
Typewriter - Tamskp
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Outro Music:
Groove Groove - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Intro/Outro Photo:
The best days are not planned - Marcus Hansson
Licensed under CC-BY-2.0
Book Image:
Open Book template PSD - DougitDesign
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/protist
Text to Speech powered by TTS-API.COM
published:28 Jul 2015
views:0
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
Visit: http://academyofone.org
Forum: http://www.academyofone.org/forums/
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Academyofone1
Article: http://www.academyofone.org/protists-kingdoms-of-eukaryota-introduction-to-biology-11-6/
Royalty free music licensed by http://www.stockmusic.net
Royalty free photos licensed by http://www.bigstockphoto.com
Script:
Now that we got the comedians of the eukaryota world let’s talk about the dwarfs of the land. Of course I am talking about protists. What’s going on everybody! My name is Jack Jenkins and this is Academy of One. Today we are talking about protists, the second kingdom of eukaryota.
Protists are the smallest eukaryotes. They are usually the single celled organism that we ignore in our everyday lives. But if when I flash pictures of protists like so we are able to see the beauty of them. By the way, just cause they are single celled does not mean that they’re invisible to the human eye. Xenophyophore is a class of protists found in the water. These guys can get up to twenty centimeters in diameter... that’s a single celled organism by the way. These protists, while single celled, can get rather massive.
Another awesome thing about protists is how they are able to eat. Most predator protists are able to project there cell membrane at food and wrap them in it. The protists then engulfs it and gets all that nutrition. Any cell that is able to do this is called an ameobolds. Another way protists get good is by creating currents in the area. The currents then sweep up the food particles into the food vacuole where the food will be digested. Lastly, some protists are able to do photosynthesis and receive energy that way. Algae is such protists that does this.
And now it’s time to look at the diversity of these wonderful protists. We have six different types of protists: Excavates, euglenozoans, heterokont, alveolates, rhizaria, and amoebozoans. Let’s explore the different groups in more detail.
The first group of protists are the excavates. These excavates are special because they don’t have a mitochondria. In fact you may hear excavates be referred to as amitochondriates. What they lack in a mitochondria they make up in other features. For instance most excavates have two to four to six flagella. They also have a ventral feeding groove to devour food fast.
The second group of protists is the euglenozoans. These protists have a very distinctly shape mitochondria. Theirs are disked shaped while most are this pool shaped. Most euglenozoans have flagella which are parallel to one another. Most of them are photosynthetic and cause diseases... Trypanosoma for example will cause African sleeping sickness which causes fever, swollenness and death if not cured.
The third group of protists is the heterokont. This is the biggest group of eukaryotes containing more than a hundred thousand species. Most of them are different types of algae such as kelp. Stonewort, and the single celled chlorella. Algae lack a lot of the plant like structures that we come to know such as leaves and roots. A lot of people think that algae’s are plants but actually they are closer to cyanobacteria then they are to traditional land plants. While most are algae the rest are usually phytophthora or water molds. Some examples are infestans which is infamous for the cause of the great Irish famine. Another is capsici which infects cucurbitaceae fruits such as squash. Water molds have long filaments that form cottony balls. This got water molds confused as a fungi until pretty recent. Just shows you that you can’t judge an organism by its appearance.
Next are the alveolates. Alveolates are all single-celled organisms that have flattened vesicles that support the membrane. Alveolates can be split into four distinct phylum. Apicomplexa are the parasite one that produces spores that have flagella. Chromerida are photosynthetic and have an internal flagellum. The third phylum of alveolates is the ciliates. These have little hair like organelles called a cilium that act as a sensory mean. We have cilia in our trachea that get all the dirt out of our lungs. Don’t know what trachea is then go watch the anatomy and physiology series. Plug. The fourth and last phylum of alveolates are the dinoflagellates. These guys have two flagella’s that move them around. A prime example of these guys are plankton... no not the SpongeBob version. Yeah... there we go.
The fifth group of protists is the rhizaria. These are the group of protists that use the pseudopods. The rhizaria also have shells or skeletons around them to help against dangers. These shells turn into the fossils that help prove or evolutionary timeline... watch that unit for more information.
Visit: http://academyofone.org
Forum: http://www.academyofone.org/forums/
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Academyofone1
Article: http://www.academyofone.org/protists-kingdoms-of-eukaryota-introduction-to-biology-11-6/
Royalty free music licensed by http://www.stockmusic.net
Royalty free photos licensed by http://www.bigstockphoto.com
Script:
Now that we got the comedians of the eukaryota world let’s talk about the dwarfs of the land. Of course I am talking about protists. What’s going on everybody! My name is Jack Jenkins and this is Academy of One. Today we are talking about protists, the second kingdom of eukaryota.
Protists are the smallest eukaryotes. They are usually the single celled organism that we ignore in our everyday lives. But if when I flash pictures of protists like so we are able to see the beauty of them. By the way, just cause they are single celled does not mean that they’re invisible to the human eye. Xenophyophore is a class of protists found in the water. These guys can get up to twenty centimeters in diameter... that’s a single celled organism by the way. These protists, while single celled, can get rather massive.
Another awesome thing about protists is how they are able to eat. Most predator protists are able to project there cell membrane at food and wrap them in it. The protists then engulfs it and gets all that nutrition. Any cell that is able to do this is called an ameobolds. Another way protists get good is by creating currents in the area. The currents then sweep up the food particles into the food vacuole where the food will be digested. Lastly, some protists are able to do photosynthesis and receive energy that way. Algae is such protists that does this.
And now it’s time to look at the diversity of these wonderful protists. We have six different types of protists: Excavates, euglenozoans, heterokont, alveolates, rhizaria, and amoebozoans. Let’s explore the different groups in more detail.
The first group of protists are the excavates. These excavates are special because they don’t have a mitochondria. In fact you may hear excavates be referred to as amitochondriates. What they lack in a mitochondria they make up in other features. For instance most excavates have two to four to six flagella. They also have a ventral feeding groove to devour food fast.
The second group of protists is the euglenozoans. These protists have a very distinctly shape mitochondria. Theirs are disked shaped while most are this pool shaped. Most euglenozoans have flagella which are parallel to one another. Most of them are photosynthetic and cause diseases... Trypanosoma for example will cause African sleeping sickness which causes fever, swollenness and death if not cured.
The third group of protists is the heterokont. This is the biggest group of eukaryotes containing more than a hundred thousand species. Most of them are different types of algae such as kelp. Stonewort, and the single celled chlorella. Algae lack a lot of the plant like structures that we come to know such as leaves and roots. A lot of people think that algae’s are plants but actually they are closer to cyanobacteria then they are to traditional land plants. While most are algae the rest are usually phytophthora or water molds. Some examples are infestans which is infamous for the cause of the great Irish famine. Another is capsici which infects cucurbitaceae fruits such as squash. Water molds have long filaments that form cottony balls. This got water molds confused as a fungi until pretty recent. Just shows you that you can’t judge an organism by its appearance.
Next are the alveolates. Alveolates are all single-celled organisms that have flattened vesicles that support the membrane. Alveolates can be split into four distinct phylum. Apicomplexa are the parasite one that produces spores that have flagella. Chromerida are photosynthetic and have an internal flagellum. The third phylum of alveolates is the ciliates. These have little hair like organelles called a cilium that act as a sensory mean. We have cilia in our trachea that get all the dirt out of our lungs. Don’t know what trachea is then go watch the anatomy and physiology series. Plug. The fourth and last phylum of alveolates are the dinoflagellates. These guys have two flagella’s that move them around. A prime example of these guys are plankton... no not the SpongeBob version. Yeah... there we go.
The fifth group of protists is the rhizaria. These are the group of protists that use the pseudopods. The rhizaria also have shells or skeletons around them to help against dangers. These shells turn into the fossils that help prove or evolutionary timeline... watch that unit for more information.
Video shows what protist means. Any of the eukaryotic unicellular organisms including protozoans, slime molds and some algae; historically grouped into the kingdom Protoctista.
single celled eukaryotes + prokaryotes + sponges single-celled eukaryotes + prokaryotes single celled eukaryotes. Protist Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say protist. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
Video shows what protist means. Any of the eukaryotic unicellular organisms including protozoans, slime molds and some algae; historically grouped into the kingdom Protoctista.
single celled eukaryotes + prokaryotes + sponges single-celled eukaryotes + prokaryotes single celled eukaryotes. Protist Meaning. How to pronounce, definition audio dictionary. How to say protist. Powered by MaryTTS, Wiktionary
Hundreds, even thousands, of fascinating organisms can be found in a single drop of pond water. Most are microscopic in size, and they include bacteria, protozoa, metazoa, diatoms, algae, and many others. Incredible close-up photography features dozens of these amazing life forms, including amoeba, paramecia, euglena, rotifers, water bears, and many more. While these organisms may appear strange, they actually have a lot in common with you and me. Students will learn not only how to identify some of the more common species, but they will also find out how to collect and maintain their own cultures. This program provides an excellent introduct
25:12
Protist Apicomplexa
Protist Apicomplexa
Protist Apicomplexa
Lab discussion 3/6/12.
22:27
Protista notes
Protista notes
Protista notes
I use this PowerPoint in my biology class at Beverly Hills High School. Check out these awesome video clips to better help in your Protista understanding: 1)...
45:46
Show 12: Protist - Whole Show (English)
Show 12: Protist - Whole Show (English)
Show 12: Protist - Whole Show (English)
11_LSci_Learn Xtra Live_012_Protist_Learner video Learn Xtra Live Show Learn Xtra Live Show 012 Protist - Whole Show. Mindset Network Copyright Notice. ( E00...
29:09
The Protist
The Protist
The Protist
Week 9 - Lecture 1 = Describes the eukaryotic organisms found in the Kingdom Protista. Discusses the algae, protozoans and slime molds
48:48
Virus and Protist Lecture
Virus and Protist Lecture
Virus and Protist Lecture
29:48
Protist Lecture - Sat, Mar 01, 03 35 PM
Protist Lecture - Sat, Mar 01, 03 35 PM
Protist Lecture - Sat, Mar 01, 03 35 PM
114:09
Chapter 28 - Protists
Chapter 28 - Protists
Chapter 28 - Protists
43:48
Protist Notes
Protist Notes
Protist Notes
See my website for the note sheet. http://www.ccsweb.cabarrus.k12.nc.us/education/components/calendar/default.php?sectiondetailid=80356&my;_family=&d;=8&m;=4&y;=...
51:17
KINGDOM PROTISTA by Professor Fink
KINGDOM PROTISTA by Professor Fink
KINGDOM PROTISTA by Professor Fink
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com Down-loadable e-books of th...
50:57
Yana Eglit Seminar
Yana Eglit Seminar
Yana Eglit Seminar
Protist fishing in microhabitats and the meaning of life
49:08
BioSci 94: Organisms to Ecosystems. Lec. 9. Protists
BioSci 94: Organisms to Ecosystems. Lec. 9. Protists
BioSci 94: Organisms to Ecosystems. Lec. 9. Protists
UCI BioSci 94: Organisms to Ecosystems (Winter 2013) Lec 09. Organisms to Ecosystems -- Protists -- View the complete course: http://ocw.uci.edu/courses/bios...
86:03
Fungi and Protists
Fungi and Protists
Fungi and Protists
Download the Show Notes: http://www.mindset.co.za/learn/sites/files/EasterSchool/LXES_Gr11LifeSciences_02_Fungi&Protists;_30Mar.pdf Xtra Life Science: In this...
35:05
Microscopy In Your Lesson Plans: Slowing Protists and More
Microscopy In Your Lesson Plans: Slowing Protists and More
Microscopy In Your Lesson Plans: Slowing Protists and More
https://www.mccrone.com/hookecollege • This free webinar will show you how to:
• Use your microscope to observe simple chemical reactions
• Create a micro-aquaria
• Make a wedge chamber slide for observing microscopic
specimens like protists and daphnia
• Connect the Leeuwenhoek scope from the late 1600s
and the new Foldscope for your students
View the footage of the wedge chamber protists:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-mKDXwp36s
Recorded on April 29, 2015.
In this video we cover protists
Table of Contents:
00:00 - Protist Kingdom Protozoans: Animal-like Protists
02:21 - Protists
06:41 - Slide 3
10:55 - Slide 4
13:37 - Slide 5
16:14 - Slide 6
18:30 - Identifying Protists
20:19 - Slide 8
23:53 - Slide 9
24:33
Elementary Science - Life Science, Grades 4-6, Classification and Protists
Elementary Science - Life Science, Grades 4-6, Classification and Protists
Elementary Science - Life Science, Grades 4-6, Classification and Protists
Elementary science instruction in the See What Science Is All About series, Life Science, for teachers. In this program, we cover topics in classifying living things - Plants, Animals and Protists - learn about yeast and mold!
86:20
Fungi and Protists (English)
Fungi and Protists (English)
Fungi and Protists (English)
11_LSci_Learn Xtra_009_Fungi and Protists_Learner Video Learn Xtra Video 11_Life Sci_Learn Xtra_009_Fungi and Protists_Learner Video11_Life Sci_Learn Xtra_00...
Hundreds, even thousands, of fascinating organisms can be found in a single drop of pond water. Most are microscopic in size, and they include bacteria, protozoa, metazoa, diatoms, algae, and many others. Incredible close-up photography features dozens of these amazing life forms, including amoeba, paramecia, euglena, rotifers, water bears, and many more. While these organisms may appear strange, they actually have a lot in common with you and me. Students will learn not only how to identify some of the more common species, but they will also find out how to collect and maintain their own cultures. This program provides an excellent introduction to the study of simple, single-celled and multi-cellular organisms.
Hundreds, even thousands, of fascinating organisms can be found in a single drop of pond water. Most are microscopic in size, and they include bacteria, protozoa, metazoa, diatoms, algae, and many others. Incredible close-up photography features dozens of these amazing life forms, including amoeba, paramecia, euglena, rotifers, water bears, and many more. While these organisms may appear strange, they actually have a lot in common with you and me. Students will learn not only how to identify some of the more common species, but they will also find out how to collect and maintain their own cultures. This program provides an excellent introduction to the study of simple, single-celled and multi-cellular organisms.
I use this PowerPoint in my biology class at Beverly Hills High School. Check out these awesome video clips to better help in your Protista understanding: 1)...
I use this PowerPoint in my biology class at Beverly Hills High School. Check out these awesome video clips to better help in your Protista understanding: 1)...
11_LSci_Learn Xtra Live_012_Protist_Learner video Learn Xtra Live Show Learn Xtra Live Show 012 Protist - Whole Show. Mindset Network Copyright Notice. ( E00...
11_LSci_Learn Xtra Live_012_Protist_Learner video Learn Xtra Live Show Learn Xtra Live Show 012 Protist - Whole Show. Mindset Network Copyright Notice. ( E00...
See my website for the note sheet. http://www.ccsweb.cabarrus.k12.nc.us/education/components/calendar/default.php?sectiondetailid=80356&my;_family=&d;=8&m;=4&y;=...
See my website for the note sheet. http://www.ccsweb.cabarrus.k12.nc.us/education/components/calendar/default.php?sectiondetailid=80356&my;_family=&d;=8&m;=4&y;=...
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com Down-loadable e-books of th...
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com Down-loadable e-books of th...
Download the Show Notes: http://www.mindset.co.za/learn/sites/files/EasterSchool/LXES_Gr11LifeSciences_02_Fungi&Protists;_30Mar.pdf Xtra Life Science: In this...
Download the Show Notes: http://www.mindset.co.za/learn/sites/files/EasterSchool/LXES_Gr11LifeSciences_02_Fungi&Protists;_30Mar.pdf Xtra Life Science: In this...
https://www.mccrone.com/hookecollege • This free webinar will show you how to:
• Use your microscope to observe simple chemical reactions
• Create a micro-aquaria
• Make a wedge chamber slide for observing microscopic
specimens like protists and daphnia
• Connect the Leeuwenhoek scope from the late 1600s
and the new Foldscope for your students
View the footage of the wedge chamber protists:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-mKDXwp36s
Recorded on April 29, 2015.
https://www.mccrone.com/hookecollege • This free webinar will show you how to:
• Use your microscope to observe simple chemical reactions
• Create a micro-aquaria
• Make a wedge chamber slide for observing microscopic
specimens like protists and daphnia
• Connect the Leeuwenhoek scope from the late 1600s
and the new Foldscope for your students
View the footage of the wedge chamber protists:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-mKDXwp36s
Recorded on April 29, 2015.
Elementary science instruction in the See What Science Is All About series, Life Science, for teachers. In this program, we cover topics in classifying living things - Plants, Animals and Protists - learn about yeast and mold!
Elementary science instruction in the See What Science Is All About series, Life Science, for teachers. In this program, we cover topics in classifying living things - Plants, Animals and Protists - learn about yeast and mold!
11_LSci_Learn Xtra_009_Fungi and Protists_Learner Video Learn Xtra Video 11_Life Sci_Learn Xtra_009_Fungi and Protists_Learner Video11_Life Sci_Learn Xtra_00...
11_LSci_Learn Xtra_009_Fungi and Protists_Learner Video Learn Xtra Video 11_Life Sci_Learn Xtra_009_Fungi and Protists_Learner Video11_Life Sci_Learn Xtra_00...
Life on Earth 007 - Protists Paul Andersen surveys organisms in the protists. He reviews the diversity found within the domain Eukarya and explains that the ...
Hank veers away from human anatomy to teach us about the (mostly) single-celled organisms that make up two of the three taxonomic domains of life, and one of...
This HD dramatic video choreographed to powerful music introduces the viewer/student to the microscopic kingdom of the Protists. It is designed as a motivati...
4:12
Protists | Biology
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the p...
To purchase this program please visit http://www.greatpacificmedia.com/ Segment from the program Protists: The Origins of Eukaryotic Diversity. DVD Descripti...
5:24
Protist Song
A song about Protists! The music was made by iWouldwantSky, and the video by me. We did it...
published:14 Jan 2013
Protist Song
Protist Song
published:14 Jan 2013
views:24735
A song about Protists! The music was made by iWouldwantSky, and the video by me. We did it for a grade 12 biology project. Thanks for watching, please drop a like if you enjoyed it. (the lyrics are below)
lyrics
Introduction:
Protista come in 3 different flavours
Plant, Fungi and Animal behaviors
they also have different modes of nutrition
that help taxonomist give them definition, (like)
Autotrophic, the energy composers.
Saprotrophic, fungi-like decomposers
Heterotrophic, the predator variety
and parasitic, the leeching notoriety
Chorus:
Protista, yah, the kingdom that's got it all
diversity that shames plant, fungi and animals
If it got a nucleus and is aerobic too
Multi, unicellular, or colonial will do
Always are found in moist conditions
Many different ways of getting nutrition
Their locomotion methods are the strangest that exist
Flagellum, cilia, pseudopods, yah, Protists!
Verse 1:
Plant-like protists photosynthesize
Autotrophs that make their own food supplies
Take the groups of organisms called algae
Brown, red and green derived by taxology
Brown algae, phaeophyta more precisely
is long and in the ocean example: kelp and seaweed
They have holdfast roots for orientation
And airbladders that control floatation
Rhodophyta, also known as Red Algae
Has over six thousand species in its biology
They absorb blue light, letting them live deep
Coralline is one, which helps build coral reefs
Green Algea has chlorophyll and a cellulose wall
and as result is labeled as plant overall
However, is more aquatic and in its resemblance
Often looks and behaves more like a protist
Euglena is unique, it's an animal and plant
It's eyespot uses light to know where to supplant
One-celled and autotrophic when in light
But they also use ingestion for energy in the night
Dinoflagellates are small and unicellular
They have two flagellum which they use as propellers
Bioluminescence giving water cool aesthetic
large population, called red-tides, are toxic
Diatoms have distinctive silica shells
basically hard photosynthetic single cells
Diatoms are located at the base of the food chain
Absorbent diatomaceous earth contains their remains
Plant-like protists aren't only the food-chains basis
but balances global warming making it decrease
CO2 makes water warmer allowing more protists
which act as negative feedback causing less to exist
Fungi-like protists are saprotrophic rather
And get nutrition from decaying organic matter
Why are slime mold's protists and not fungi?
Because, they don't have chitin and can move nearby
A creeping collection of protoplasmic mass
Which as organisms or single cells can be classed
Multicolored: pink, orange, yellow, gray, white
Found in rotten logs, moist terrestrial sites
Animal-like protists are heterotrophs primarily
Organized by their movement particularities
Ciliate protists have cilia, hair-like structures
Which rhythmically beat propelling them forwards
Sixty beats per second is the speed of their tempo
Cilia can direct food to their mouths, also
Ciliates are faster other types of Protist
Paramecium, are categorized in this list
Protists with flagellum have a whip apparatus
they beat, like cilia, for locomotion purpose
Giardia lamblia is the example I'll portray
which also uses it's flagellum to capture its prey
Pseudopods are cool finger like projections
Extend and drag their protist to new locations
Like the others this device can capture food
Amoebas are an example of protists in this group
Heterotrophic protists without locomotive means
the last group of protozoans, parasitic fiends
These use your body as a host, and will scary-a
Like plasmodium, or it's alter ego malaria
Though protists are very small, they're also very neat
Education of their existence is a rewarding feat
and so in conclusion, we're happy you came along
We hope you were enlightened by our video and song
10:01
Protist I
Description of Protist and the Supergroup Archaeplastida....
Protist movement of fecal of goldfish 400 20150816
Protist move very fast like a cart....
published:23 Aug 2015
Protist movement of fecal of goldfish 400 20150816
Protist movement of fecal of goldfish 400 20150816
published:23 Aug 2015
views:2
Protist move very fast like a cart.
1:43
Protist Movie 1
Tryouts at pictures and videos. The organisms originate from Costa Rican bromeliads and ar...
published:28 May 2015
Protist Movie 1
Protist Movie 1
published:28 May 2015
views:36
Tryouts at pictures and videos. The organisms originate from Costa Rican bromeliads and are maintained in Petri dishes. You may recognise copepods, rotifers and two protist species.
2:59
Protist movie 2
Some more shots of my petri dish bromeliads. Still very much work in progress. I welcome a...
published:10 Aug 2015
Protist movie 2
Protist movie 2
published:10 Aug 2015
views:11
Some more shots of my petri dish bromeliads. Still very much work in progress. I welcome any help on the identification of ciliates. (no copyright violation intended re the music)
18:37
Protist
In some biological taxonomy schemes, protists (/ˈproʊtɨst/) were a large group of diverse ...
published:09 Aug 2015
Protist
Protist
published:09 Aug 2015
views:0
In some biological taxonomy schemes, protists (/ˈproʊtɨst/) were a large group of diverse eukaryotic microorganisms, mainly unicellular animals and plants, that do not form tissues. Formerly, these were assigned to the now-obsolete kingdom Protista. However in modern taxonomy the Protista are understood to be paraphyletic (not a clade), so the term remains in use only for convenience, similar to "invertebrate". An equivalent term Protoctista is used for these organisms by various organisations and institutions. Molecular analyses in modern taxonomy have been used to redistribute former members of this group into diverse and sometimes distantly related phyla. When used, the term “protists” is now considered to mean similar-appearing but diverse phyla that are not related through an exclusive common ancestor, and which have different life cycles, trophic levels, modes of locomotion, and cellular structures. Besides their relatively simple levels of organization, the protists do not have much in common. The term protista was first used by Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Protists were traditionally subdivided into several groups based on similarities to the "higher" kingdoms: the unicellular "animal-like" protozoa, the "plant-like" protophyta (mostly unicellular algae), and the "fungus-like" slime molds and water molds. These traditional subdivisions, largely based on superficial commonalities, have been replaced by classifications based on phylogenetics (evolutionary relatedness among organisms). However, the older terms are still used as informal names to describe the morphology and ecology of various protists. Protists live in almost any environment that contains liquid water. Many protists, such as algae, are photosynthetic and are vital primary producers in ecosystems, particularly in the ocean as part of the plankton. Other protists include pathogenic species such as the kinetoplastid Trypanosoma brucei, which causes sleeping sickness and species of the apicomplexan Plasmodium which cause malaria.
Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
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License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (CC-BY-SA-3.0)
LicenseLink: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Author-Info: 柑橘類
Image Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Protist_collage.jpg
=======Image-Info========
4:44
Protist
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Protist · Abigail's Ghost
℗ Aesperus Music
Released on...
published:08 Aug 2015
Protist
Protist
published:08 Aug 2015
views:1
Provided to YouTube by DistroKid
Protist · Abigail's Ghost
℗ Aesperus Music
Released on: 2015-08-01
Auto-generated by YouTube.
8:22
Protist 2
Description...
published:12 May 2015
Protist 2
Protist 2
published:12 May 2015
views:34
Description
39:56
protist 2
...
published:02 Apr 2015
protist 2
protist 2
published:02 Apr 2015
views:233
6:13
Protist 3
Description...
published:12 May 2015
Protist 3
Protist 3
published:12 May 2015
views:14
Description
0:40
How to Pronounce Protist
Expand your vocabulary and learn how to say new words:
http://www.dictionaryvoice.com/How_...
published:31 Jul 2015
How to Pronounce Protist
How to Pronounce Protist
published:31 Jul 2015
views:1
Expand your vocabulary and learn how to say new words:
http://www.dictionaryvoice.com/How_To_Pronounce_Protist.html
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/DictionaryVoice
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dictionary-Voice/750369141710497
0:17
How to Pronounce Protist
This video shows you how to pronounce Protist...
published:31 May 2015
How to Pronounce Protist
How to Pronounce Protist
published:31 May 2015
views:0
This video shows you how to pronounce Protist
1:20
Buffalo Bayou
This video shows many protists that can be found in the water of Buffalo Bayou . I will up...
published:30 Jul 2015
Buffalo Bayou
Buffalo Bayou
published:30 Jul 2015
views:2
This video shows many protists that can be found in the water of Buffalo Bayou . I will upload more individual videos of the amazing creatures I find from around the Houston area. I will also try to classify the protists and animals as well. Let me know what you think.
0:41
What does protist mean?
What does protist mean?
A spoken definition of protist.
Intro Sound:
Typewriter - Tam...
published:28 Jul 2015
What does protist mean?
What does protist mean?
published:28 Jul 2015
views:0
What does protist mean?
A spoken definition of protist.
Intro Sound:
Typewriter - Tamskp
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Outro Music:
Groove Groove - Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Intro/Outro Photo:
The best days are not planned - Marcus Hansson
Licensed under CC-BY-2.0
Book Image:
Open Book template PSD - DougitDesign
Licensed under CC:BA 3.0
Text derived from:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/protist
Text to Speech powered by TTS-API.COM
9:14
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
Protists Kingdoms of Eukaryota - Introduction to Biology - 11.6
published:16 Jul 2015
views:2
Visit: http://academyofone.org
Forum: http://www.academyofone.org/forums/
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/Academyofone1
Article: http://www.academyofone.org/protists-kingdoms-of-eukaryota-introduction-to-biology-11-6/
Royalty free music licensed by http://www.stockmusic.net
Royalty free photos licensed by http://www.bigstockphoto.com
Script:
Now that we got the comedians of the eukaryota world let’s talk about the dwarfs of the land. Of course I am talking about protists. What’s going on everybody! My name is Jack Jenkins and this is Academy of One. Today we are talking about protists, the second kingdom of eukaryota.
Protists are the smallest eukaryotes. They are usually the single celled organism that we ignore in our everyday lives. But if when I flash pictures of protists like so we are able to see the beauty of them. By the way, just cause they are single celled does not mean that they’re invisible to the human eye. Xenophyophore is a class of protists found in the water. These guys can get up to twenty centimeters in diameter... that’s a single celled organism by the way. These protists, while single celled, can get rather massive.
Another awesome thing about protists is how they are able to eat. Most predator protists are able to project there cell membrane at food and wrap them in it. The protists then engulfs it and gets all that nutrition. Any cell that is able to do this is called an ameobolds. Another way protists get good is by creating currents in the area. The currents then sweep up the food particles into the food vacuole where the food will be digested. Lastly, some protists are able to do photosynthesis and receive energy that way. Algae is such protists that does this.
And now it’s time to look at the diversity of these wonderful protists. We have six different types of protists: Excavates, euglenozoans, heterokont, alveolates, rhizaria, and amoebozoans. Let’s explore the different groups in more detail.
The first group of protists are the excavates. These excavates are special because they don’t have a mitochondria. In fact you may hear excavates be referred to as amitochondriates. What they lack in a mitochondria they make up in other features. For instance most excavates have two to four to six flagella. They also have a ventral feeding groove to devour food fast.
The second group of protists is the euglenozoans. These protists have a very distinctly shape mitochondria. Theirs are disked shaped while most are this pool shaped. Most euglenozoans have flagella which are parallel to one another. Most of them are photosynthetic and cause diseases... Trypanosoma for example will cause African sleeping sickness which causes fever, swollenness and death if not cured.
The third group of protists is the heterokont. This is the biggest group of eukaryotes containing more than a hundred thousand species. Most of them are different types of algae such as kelp. Stonewort, and the single celled chlorella. Algae lack a lot of the plant like structures that we come to know such as leaves and roots. A lot of people think that algae’s are plants but actually they are closer to cyanobacteria then they are to traditional land plants. While most are algae the rest are usually phytophthora or water molds. Some examples are infestans which is infamous for the cause of the great Irish famine. Another is capsici which infects cucurbitaceae fruits such as squash. Water molds have long filaments that form cottony balls. This got water molds confused as a fungi until pretty recent. Just shows you that you can’t judge an organism by its appearance.
Next are the alveolates. Alveolates are all single-celled organisms that have flattened vesicles that support the membrane. Alveolates can be split into four distinct phylum. Apicomplexa are the parasite one that produces spores that have flagella. Chromerida are photosynthetic and have an internal flagellum. The third phylum of alveolates is the ciliates. These have little hair like organelles called a cilium that act as a sensory mean. We have cilia in our trachea that get all the dirt out of our lungs. Don’t know what trachea is then go watch the anatomy and physiology series. Plug. The fourth and last phylum of alveolates are the dinoflagellates. These guys have two flagella’s that move them around. A prime example of these guys are plankton... no not the SpongeBob version. Yeah... there we go.
The fifth group of protists is the rhizaria. These are the group of protists that use the pseudopods. The rhizaria also have shells or skeletons around them to help against dangers. These shells turn into the fossils that help prove or evolutionary timeline... watch that unit for more information.
0:14
ciliate protist Colpidium colpoda IMGP8877
From temporary pool of water in beech tree roots...
Hundreds, even thousands, of fascinating organisms can be found in a single drop of pond w...
published:04 Sep 2013
Life in a Drop of Water
Life in a Drop of Water
published:04 Sep 2013
views:118328
Hundreds, even thousands, of fascinating organisms can be found in a single drop of pond water. Most are microscopic in size, and they include bacteria, protozoa, metazoa, diatoms, algae, and many others. Incredible close-up photography features dozens of these amazing life forms, including amoeba, paramecia, euglena, rotifers, water bears, and many more. While these organisms may appear strange, they actually have a lot in common with you and me. Students will learn not only how to identify some of the more common species, but they will also find out how to collect and maintain their own cultures. This program provides an excellent introduction to the study of simple, single-celled and multi-cellular organisms.
I use this PowerPoint in my biology class at Beverly Hills High School. Check out these awesome video clips to better help in your Protista understanding: 1)...
45:46
Show 12: Protist - Whole Show (English)
11_LSci_Learn Xtra Live_012_Protist_Learner video Learn Xtra Live Show Learn Xtra Live Sho...
11_LSci_Learn Xtra Live_012_Protist_Learner video Learn Xtra Live Show Learn Xtra Live Show 012 Protist - Whole Show. Mindset Network Copyright Notice. ( E00...
29:09
The Protist
Week 9 - Lecture 1 = Describes the eukaryotic organisms found in the Kingdom Protista. Di...
published:15 Oct 2014
The Protist
The Protist
published:15 Oct 2014
views:5
Week 9 - Lecture 1 = Describes the eukaryotic organisms found in the Kingdom Protista. Discusses the algae, protozoans and slime molds
See my website for the note sheet. http://www.ccsweb.cabarrus.k12.nc.us/education/components/calendar/default.php?sectiondetailid=80356&my;_family=&d;=8&m;=4&y;=...
51:17
KINGDOM PROTISTA by Professor Fink
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiolog...
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com Down-loadable e-books of th...
50:57
Yana Eglit Seminar
Protist fishing in microhabitats and the meaning of life...
published:24 Jul 2015
Yana Eglit Seminar
Yana Eglit Seminar
published:24 Jul 2015
views:38
Protist fishing in microhabitats and the meaning of life
49:08
BioSci 94: Organisms to Ecosystems. Lec. 9. Protists
UCI BioSci 94: Organisms to Ecosystems (Winter 2013) Lec 09. Organisms to Ecosystems -- Pr...
Download the Show Notes: http://www.mindset.co.za/learn/sites/files/EasterSchool/LXES_Gr11LifeSciences_02_Fungi&Protists;_30Mar.pdf Xtra Life Science: In this...
35:05
Microscopy In Your Lesson Plans: Slowing Protists and More
https://www.mccrone.com/hookecollege • This free webinar will show you how to:
• Use your...
published:29 May 2015
Microscopy In Your Lesson Plans: Slowing Protists and More
Microscopy In Your Lesson Plans: Slowing Protists and More
published:29 May 2015
views:9
https://www.mccrone.com/hookecollege • This free webinar will show you how to:
• Use your microscope to observe simple chemical reactions
• Create a micro-aquaria
• Make a wedge chamber slide for observing microscopic
specimens like protists and daphnia
• Connect the Leeuwenhoek scope from the late 1600s
and the new Foldscope for your students
View the footage of the wedge chamber protists:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-mKDXwp36s
Recorded on April 29, 2015.
A story about the Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak spending the night in prison after building a fake bomb in high school has re-emerged after a teenager was arrested for bringing a homemade clock into school. Wozniak was placed in cuffs and marched off to a juvenile detention centre after the electronic metronome device he built in twelfth grade was discovered by his school principal ...Instead, police were waiting for him ... --> ... ....
All summer long — including in last month's first presidential debate — Donald Trump has floated above the rest of the Republican presidential field, like a malevolent puppeteer pulling everyone else's strings. On Wednesday night, in an often bludgeoning debate at the Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, the New Yorker was forced earthward by a blast of criticism from most of the rest of the field ... Terrill / AP ... 0 ... --....
Jihadi fighters in Iraq and Syria reveal the apocalyptic motivations of the militant movement that has hijacked the Syrian uprising – and transformed the Middle East. For more than a century, Dabiq was one of northern Syria’s forsaken villages, a speck on a vast agricultural plain between the Turkish border and the deserts of Iraq, which hardly seemed likely to shape the fate of nations ...Little else moved ... Related. Isis ... Martin Chulov ... ....
UN Secretary GeneralBan Ki-moon has said he is "shocked" after Hungarian police fired tear gas and water cannon to force migrants back from its border. Mr Ban said such treatment of asylum seekers was "unacceptable". Hundreds of migrants were involved in the clashes at the border between Hungary and Serbia on Wednesday, trying to break through a razor-wire fence ...The country's courts have started fast-track trials of arrested migrants....
(Source. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences) ... Such designations were developed under the Budapest Treaty in 1977, which established requirements for how microorganisms must be maintained during the patent process for natural-based products/inventions around the globe ... It was approved to accept holdings of any algae, eukaryotic protists, bacteria, archaea, or viruses from any aquatic environment ... distributed by ... (noodl. 29825910) ....
Abstract. Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) comprise the major group of Ca2+-regulated kinases in plants and protists... However, we found that removal of the autoinhibitory domain from Toxoplasma gondii CDPK1 is not sufficient for kinase activation ... ....
Reuters. LONDON— ... A parasitic disease caused by single-celled microbes known as "protists" was found in the livers of tadpole samples taken from six countries across three continents, the scientists said in a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy ... ....
Infected tadpoles of the southern leopard frog (Lithobates sphenocephalus) have an abnormally enlarged, yellowish liver filled with thousands of spherical cells, likely from the parasitic Perkinsea family of microorganisms called protists... Perkinsea-like protists are infecting a wide diversity of tadpoles occupying a variety of geographic ranges....
A parasitic disease caused by single-celled microbes known as "protists" was found in the livers of tadpole samples taken from six countries across three continents, the scientists said in a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesJournal on Monday ... ....
A parasitic disease caused by single-celled microbes known as “protists” was found in the livers of tadpole samples taken from six countries across three continents, the scientists said in a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesJournal on Monday ... ....
Recent work has linked a previously undescribed protist with mass-mortality events in the United States, in which infected frog tadpoles have an abnormally enlarged yellowish liver filled with protist cells of a presumed parasite ... a parasitic group within the alveolates exemplified by Perkinsus sp., a “marine” protist responsible for mass-mortality events in commercial shellfish populations....
Abstract. Sexual reproduction and clonality in eukaryotes are mostly seen as exclusive, the latter being rather exceptional. This view might be biased by focusing almost exclusively on metazoans. We analyze and discuss reproduction in the context of extant eukaryotic diversity, paying special attention to protists...Long-lived clonal species seem strikingly rare ... ....
Safe?. Trains are full of more than just people. Bacteria stick to seats more effectively than they do to metal poles. Embedded in the filth and chaos of the world’s great metropolises, amid the people, pigeons, cockroaches and rats, there is a teeming world of bacteria, viruses, fungi and protists that scientists are only now surveying. Microbes are everywhere ... But the vast majority are unknown ... “Right now, we know very ... ....
(Source. USC - University of Southern California) ...Without them, there would be no sharks, no dolphins, no seals, no seafood buffets. The sea organisms studied at USC include viruses and one-cell bacteria, archaea and protists - and there are a whole lot of them out there ... Jed Fuhrman ... The protistsCaron studies, called mixotrophs, combine photosynthesis with ingestion of other organisms - like miniscule Venus flytraps of the sea ... (noodl....
A team of international scientists has provided an unprecedented look at microscopic life in the ocean. by May 25, 2015 7.57 PM PDT. facebook. twitter. linkedin. googleplus. email. A selection of the many creatures found in the survey. J.Bastion/ CNRS/ Oceanomics/ Tara Expéditions ... A mixture of zooplanktonic animals, larvae and single-celled protists, captured in the Mediterranean Ocean in winter with a 0.2mm mesh net ... From left to right ... 1 ... 2 ... ....
Seen here is a mix of multicellular organisms — small zooplanktonic animals, larvae and single protists (diatoms, dinoflagellates, radiolarians) — the nearly invisible universe at the bottom of the marine food chain ... Seen here is a mix of multicellular organisms — small zooplanktonic animals, larvae and single protists (diatoms, dinoflagellates, radiolarians) — the nearly invisible universe at the bottom of the marine food chain....