PROTISTA

prōtĭsˈtə or Protoctistaprōˌtŏktĭsˈtə, in the five-kingdom system of classification, a kingdom comprising a variety of unicellular and some simple multinuclear and multicellular eukaryotic organisms. Protists, which are eukaryotes, have cells that have a membrane-bound nucleus, DNA that is associated with histone proteins, and organelles (e.g., mitochondria and chloroplasts). A recently proposed system of classification designates the eukaryotes as one of three great groups of life (beside bacteria and archaea) and places the protists within it.

It has been hypothesized that the organelles in protists descend evolutionarily from specialized symbiotic bacteria living within the cells of other bacteria, contributing at least in part to the transition from prokaryotic (bacterial) cells (the earliest form of life on the planet, dating back at least 3.5 billion years) to early eukaryotic cells (the cells that define protists, dating back 1.5 billion years) and the more complex life forms of later plants and animals.

The protists comprise a very diverse group of organisms. They include some algae, the protozoans, and multicellular or multinucleate autotrophs, such as the water molds. Many have flagella that enable them to move about. Before the advent of modern biochemistry and the electron microscope, these organisms were fit into the plant and animal kingdoms. It is now thought that, although green plants probably evolved from the green algae and animals from some other early forms, most modern protists have followed independent evolutionary lines. There are approximately 60,000 living species of protists.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Protista
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books on: Protista  - 104 results

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...XXVIII. INHERITANCE EXPERIMENTS ON PLANTS 164 XXIX. INHERITANCE EXPERIMENTS ON PROTISTA 167 XXX. EVOLUTION OF HIGHER BEINGS THROUGH ACQUIRED CHARACTERISTICS 171...
...Eleven The Monera and Protista 361...eukaryotes are placed in the kingdom Protista. Fig. 1-21: The five-kingdom...sometimes designated as protophyta. The Protista also contains unicellular consumers...
...his microscopic work during the 1860s on the Radiolaria (jellyfishes), Porifera (sponges), Annelids (seg mented worms), and Protista. He is also remembered by evolutionists today for the first to attempt to construct a universal genealogical tree, stemming...
...its fore-runner, the conjugation of two protista? 1 We cannot say; and we should consequently...follows Freud appears to use the terms protista and protozoa indifferently to signify...periods for internal reasons, while the protista have remained immortal. It is not the...
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journal articles on: Protista  - 3 results

 
 
...towards viruses, bacteria, fungi, and protista. Fifth-grade students (N = 88) from two...learning about viruses, bacteria, fungi, and protista. Background There are many ways to design...sciences. Viruses, Bacteria, Fungi, and Protista is a common unit in life science for...
...annelids, molluses, anthropods), plants, fungi, monera, and protista are excluded as a rule. It appears that we exclude this latter...a poor psychology subject, as do plants, fungi, monera, and protista. Computers, therefore, like plants, should be excluded as subjects...
...that are members of a single eukaryotic kingdom. So at the end of this exercise, the groups are named for the four kingdoms: Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. Within the first 15 minutes of a course, I build the appropriate number of heterogeneous cooperative...


 

magazine articles on: Protista  - 2 results

 
 
...a composite of two or three different types of organisms from separate kingdoms: a fungus (Kingdom Fungi), an alga (Kingdom Protista), and sometimes a bacterium (Kingdom Monera). As such, the lichens are a unique example of symbiosis--that is, the constituent...
...or lack thereof. In 1866 Ernst Haeckel advanced the classification game by grouping microorganisms into their own kingdom, Protista. By the middle of the twentieth century, however, all forms of life had been branded as either prokaryotes (the cells of which...


 

newspaper articles on: Protista  - 1 result

 
 
...known as the Kingdom Fungi. The other partners include representatives from the Kingdom Monera, the algae, and the Kingdom Protista, the cyanobacteria. Its as if ambassadors from the three kingdoms had a summit and decided to strike a deal. Together, maybe...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Protista  - 27 results

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PROTISTA protis t or Protoctista pro toktis t , in the five-kingdom system of classification, a kingdom comprising a variety of unicellular...
CHRYSOPHYTA kr sof t , phylum (division) of unicellular marine or freshwater organisms of the kingdom Protista consisting of the diatoms (class Bacillariophyceae), the golden, or golden-brown, algae (class Chrysophyceae), and the yellow-green...
SLIME MOLD or slime fungus, a heterotrophic organism once regarded as a fungus but later classified with the Protista . In a recent system of classification based on analysis of nucleic acid (genetic material) sequences, slime molds have...
...plant kingdom (kingdom Plantae) and the kingdoms Fungi , Protista , and Monera in the five-kingdom system of classification...placed into separate kingdoms (i.e., Monera for the bacteria, Protista for the algae and protozoans, and so forth). In zoological...
...superficially resemble fungi but are now recognized as having an independent evolutionary lineage and are placed in the kingdom Protista . There are two important phyla (divisions) of water molds, the chytrids (Chytridiomycota) and the oomycetes (Oomycota). The...
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