Chapter 04 — protozoa Flashcards
How can protozoa be classified based on locomotion?
- linnaeus (4 classes)
- flagellates (2 groups)
- ciliates
- amoebas (pseudopods)
- apicomplexa — no locomotion (plasmodium)
What are the 2 groups of flagellates?
- giardia
- trypanosoma
Who was the first to describe protozoa & bacteria — and to see flagellar movement?
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek
What are the 4 types of locomotion for protozoans?
- Pseudopods
- Flagella
- Cilia
- None - host driven
What are characteristsic of protozoa/protista?
- eukaryotic
- unicellular (most of the time)
- vegetative form is trophozoite
- asexual reproduction is by fission, budding, or schizogony
- sexual repro by conjunction
- some produce cyst
What are the “old eukaryotes” and their characteristics?
Archaezoa — mostly flagellates
- multiple flagella
EX: giardia lamblia and trichomonas vaginalis
What are some characteristics of Giardia Lamblia?
- trophozoite
- 2 nuclei
- 8 flagella
- kinesosomes
- adhesive disc
- ventral grove
- median bodies
- axonemes
What are characteristics & EX of amoebozoa?
- move by pseudopods
- Entamoeba
- acanthamoeba
What are some characteristics of Ciliates (ciliophora)?
- move by cilia
- complex cells
- balantidium coli is the only human parasite
what are some characteristics of Euglenozoa?
- newer more common flagellates
- photoautotrophs
- Chemoheterotrophs: naegleria, trypanosoma, leishmania
slide 13-15
What are apicomplexa?
- group that includes protista & algae
- nonmotile
- intracellular parasites
- complex life cycles
- Plasmodium
- Babesia
- Cryptosporidium
- Toxoplasma
What good could malaria be for?
- could have been algae
- looks like an aincent algae — protist
- has chloroplast remnant structures
- Apical complex (top of cell) may be a degenerate complex
- instead of photosynthesis now attaches to RBC
- possibly
Slide 19-20