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Kingdoms
Dr. Childs
Science Computer Lab
Winter, 2004
Concepts
• Types of cells
• Nutrition
• Number of cells
• Reproduction
• Motility
prokaryotes & eukaryotes
autotrophs & heterotrophs
unicellular, colonial, &
multicellular
sexual & asexual
non-motile & motile
Types of Cells
• Prokaryotes
– Cells lack nuclear membranes
– No membrane bound organelles as mitochondria or
chloroplasts
– Reproduce by binary fission
– Includes:
• bacteria
• cyanobacteria (= blue-green algae)
bacteria
Types of Cells
• Eukaryotes
– Cells have nuclear membranes
– Membrane bound organelles such as mitochondria
or
chloroplasts
– Reproduce by mitosis
– Includes:
• Protista
• Fungi, plants, and animals
Types of Nutrition
• Autotrophs
–
–
–
Organisms produce their own carbon compounds (sugars)
Energy from sunlight – photoautotrophs (includes plants and
some bacteria)
Energy from chemicals – chemoautotrophs (bacteria from deep
sea vents)
• Heterotrophs
–
–
–
Carbon compounds from other organisms
Fungi (include decomposers)
Protists and animals
Numbers of Cells
• Single celled organisms
–
Includes bacteria and some protists
• Colonial organisms
–
–
–
Some bacteria and algae
Single cells attached together
Earliest “tissues”
• Multicellular organisms
–
–
–
Specialized cells with different functions
Tissues and organs
Fungi, plants, animals
Colonial organism
Reproduction
• Sexual reproduction
– Exchange of genetic material (DNA)
– Male (motile sperm) and female (stationery egg)
– Pollen and seeds in plants
• Asexual reproduction
– No exchange of DNA
– Common in plants
– Includes:
• grafting or
• rooting a branch in water
• cloning in animals
Motility
• Motile
-
Able to move
Includes animals hunting – move actively
• Non-motile
– Not able to actively move
– Most plants are rooted
Maple seed
– Consider that plant may have seeds that move
passively with animals (insects or birds) or with the
wind
– Some animals as sponges motile stages as larvae
but are non-motile as adults
Kingdoms
Kingdoms are major groups of organisms with distinct
characteristics and are the most inclusive of the taxonomic
classifications.
There are six generally accepted kingdoms:
•
Archaebacteria
•
Eubacteria
•
Protista
•
Fungi
•
Plantae
•
Animalia
Note: In many texts Archaebacteria and Eubacteria have been
grouped as Monera.
Relationships Among
Kingdoms
Plantae
Fungi
Animalia
Protista
Eubacteria
Archaebacteria
Earliest Life
Archaebacteria
•
“Archae-” derived from “ancient” (as “archeology”)
•
•
•
prokaryote, single cell
photo- and chemosynthetic
Reproduction by binary fission
•
Exist in extreme environments:
–
Hot springs
Yellowstone
deep sea vents (chemosynthesis)
–
High salt
Great Salt Lake
Dead Sea
Archaebacteria
Archaebacteria
Deep sea thermal vents
Hot springs
Eubacteria
•
•
•
•
“Eu-” derived from “true”
Prokaryote, single cell; some colonial
Heterotrophic, some photosynthetic
Reproduction by binary fission
•
Common in almost all environments
–
–
–
•
Soils & water
Foods
Intestine & skin
Extremely diverse
–
–
Many beneficial (produce cheese)
Few cause disease (= “pathogens” )
Eubacteria
Bacteria
Isolation & diagnosis
Penicillin
Motile bacteria
Protista
•
•
•
•
•
•
Eukaryotes
Many unicellular; some colonial; few multicellular
Asexual and sexual reproduction
Cellular Reproduction by mitosis
Some autotrophic, some heterotrophic, and
some both
Includes two major groups - protozoa and algae
Protista - Protozoa
•
•
•
•
Mostly single cell
Mostly heterotrophic, some autotrophic
Many motile (cilia & flagella)
Many free-living
–
–
•
Includes medically important parasites
–
–
•
Amoeba
Paramecium
Malaria
African sleeping sickness
Some symbiotic in termites
Paramecium
Protista - Protozoa
Amoeba
Paramecium
African Sleeping
Sickness
Termite symbiont
Malaria
Protista - Algae
•
•
•
•
•
Some unicellular, some colonial, some multicellular
Mostly autotrophic (photosynthetic) - Important source
of atmospheric oxygen
Many attached to substrate; some motile
Marine (salt water) and aquatic (fresh water)
May be ancestors of plants
Green algae
Protista - Algae
Kelp
Volox
Colonial green algae
Green algae
“pond scum”
Brown seaweed
Green seaweed
Fungi
•
•
•
•
•
•
Eukaryotes
All heterotrophic
Important decomposers
Mostly multicellular with filamentous bodies
Some unicellular ( yeasts)
Asexual and sexual reproduction
Fungi
Mushrooms
Penicillum antibiotic
Ringworm – parasitic fungi
Molds
Toxic interior mold
Yeast – Breads
Plantae
•
•
•
•
•
•
Eukaryotes
Almost all autotrophic (photosynthetic)
Multicellular; tissues (roots, stems, leaves)
Asexual reproduction
Sexual reproduction (seeds & fruits)
Mostly terrestrial; aquatic secondarily
Plantae
Maple
Bluebell
Cactus
Pine
Cypress tree
Moss
Radish
Fern
And, finally …
Animalia
•
•
•
•
Eukaryotes
Principally sexual reproduction
Heterotrophic – mainly food hunters
Multicellular - tissues and organs
– Development of a head and nervous system
•
Usually an digestive tract
Planaria
Animalia
Jellyfish
Mammal
Starfish
Fish
Insect
Earthworm
Hermit crab
Sponge
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