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Protista

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Protista

The kingdom comprising all single-celled forms of living organisms in both the five-kingdom and six-kingdom systems of classification. Kingdom Protista encompasses both Protozoa and Protophyta, allowing considerable integration in the classification of both these animallike and plantlike organisms, all of whose living functions as individuals are carried out within a single cell membrane. Among the kingdoms of cellular organisms, this definition can be used to distinguish the Protista from the Metazoa (sometimes named Animalia) for many-celled animals, or from the Fungi and from the Metaphyta (or Plantae) for many-celled green plants. See Metazoa

The most significant biological distinction is that which separates the bacteria and certain other simply organized organisms, including blue-green algae (collectively, often designated Kingdom Monera), from both Protista and all many-celled organisms. The bacteria are described as prokaryotic; both the Protista and the cells of higher plants and animals are eukaryotic. Structurally, a distinguishing feature is the presence of a membrane, closely similar to the bounding cell membrane, surrounding the nuclear material in eukaryotic cells, but not in prokaryotic ones. See Eukaryotae, Protozoa

The definition that can separate the Protista from many-celled animals is that the protistan body never has any specialized parts of the cytoplasm under the sole control of a nucleus. In some protozoa, there can be two, a few, or even many nuclei, rather than one, but no single nucleus ever has separate control over any part of the protistan cytoplasm which is specialized for a particular function. In contrast, in metazoans there are always many cases of nuclei, each in control of cells of specialized function.

Most authorities would agree that the higher plants, the Metazoa, and the Parazoa (or sponges) almost certainly evolved (each independently) from certain flagellate stocks of protistans.

McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Bioscience. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Protista

[prə′tis·tə]
(biology)
A proposed kingdom to include all unicellular organisms lacking a definite cellular arrangement, such as bacteria, algae, diatoms, and fungi.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Protista

 

the totality of unicellular animals and plants. The term “Protista” was introduced by the German biologist E. Haeckel in 1866. He grouped unicellular organisms into a special, third kingdom on a par with the two kingdoms of multicellular organisms—Plantae and Animalia.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Effect of protistan grazing on the frequency of dividing cells in bacterioplankton assembages.
This initial increase is most likely due to the indirect facilitation of algal growth provided by protistan bacterivory (e.g., Porter et al.
A total of 22 scale-bearing protistans was observed from 27 freshwater sites in the Gulf Coast States of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and eastern Texas.
Drake (1991) and Lawler (1993) have provided examples of this approach in experimental aquatic microcosms comprised of (among others) a number of protistan species plus bacteria.
In 1994, Whyte et al., reported a hard clam disease caused by a protistan parasite, which they named Quahog (Quahaug) Parasite Unknown (QPX), causing major mortality in a hatchery/nursery setting in small (15-30 mm shell height) clams on Prince Edward Island, Canada.
seeberi is not a classic fungus, but rather the first known human pathogen from the DRIPs clade, a novel clade of aquatic protistan parasites (Ichthyosporea).
Cockle Cerastoderma edule fishery collapse in the Ria de Arousa (Galicia, NW Spain) associated with the protistan parasite Marteilia cochillia.
A method for studying protistan diversity using massively parallel sequencing of V9 hypervariable regions of small-subunit ribosomal RNA genes.
Every 4 mo (February, June, and October), 15 oysters were haphazardly removed from each bag to evaluate condition index and infection intensity by the protistan parasite Perkinsus marinus, as described in Condition Index and Parasitic Infection.
The protistan parasite Perkinsus marinus is found on the east coast of the United States from Maine to Florida and in the Gulf of Mexico (Andrews 1988, Ford & Tripp 1996).
Effects of infection by the protistan parasite Marteilia refringens on the reproduction of cultured mussels Mytilus galloprovincialis in Galicia (NW Spain).
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