288 ■ CHAPTER 16 Plants, Fungi, and Protists
BIODIVERSITY
protists are single-celled and microscopic, but
some protists have evolved from free-living
single cells into multicellular associations, such
as slime molds and kelp, large seaweed such as
kelp. Certain single-celled protists are bound by
nothing more than a flexible plasma membrane,
while others are covered in protective sheets,
heavy coats, or other types of armor.
Most protists are motile and can swim with
the help of one or more flagella, or by waving
a carpet of tiny hairs called cilia. Others can
crawl on a solid surface with the help of cellular
projections called pseudopodia (false feet).
Many protists are heterotrophs and eat other
organisms. Some of these heterotrophs function
as decomposers, breaking down waste material
and releasing nutrients into the environment to
be taken up by producers and cycled back into
the food chain. Other protists are nutritional
Peculiar Protists
Amoebas are single-celled eukaryotes. Most
single-celled eukaryotes are protists. Protista is
a strange kingdom that is defined by exclusion
instead of inclusion: although all protists are
eukaryotes, they are grouped together in this
kingdom simply because they are not plants,
animals, or fungi (Figure 16.3). Researchers
have proposed several classification schemes
to split the protists into multiple kingdoms;
however, no consensus exists on the best way to
do so. For now, protists remain divided into two
traditional, broad categories: the protozoans,
which are nonphotosynthetic and motile (capa-
ble of moving); and the algae, which are photo-
synthetic and may or may not be motile.
Protists are diverse in size, shape, cellu-
lar organization, and mode of nutrition. Most
Domain
Bacteria
Domain
Archaea
Kingdom
Protista
Kingdom
Fungi
Domain
Eukarya
Kingdom
Animalia
Common
ancestral
cell or
universal
ancestor
Kingdom
Plantae
Diplomonads,
others
Brown algae,
diatoms, others
Ciliates,
others
Forams,
others
Red algae
Green
algae
Amoebas,
others
Euglenoids,
others
Figure 16.3
Protista is a diverse kingdom
of eukaryotes
This Protista phylogeny is based on the best
evidence available about the evolutionary
relatedness of the different groups of protists.
It will change as scientists learn more about this
intriguing eukaryotic kingdom.
Q1: Are ciliates more closely related to
euglenoids or to diatoms? To euglenoids or
to forams?
Q2: Are all the algae groups (red, green, and
brown) equally related?
Q3: Which protist group do you think is most
closely related to plants? Justify your answer.