30 Examples of the Protista Kingdom
Miscellanea / / November 13, 2021
protist kingdom
The protist kingdom comprises one of the five kingdoms of nature and contains all those eukaryotes (organisms formed by cells in whose cytoplasms a well-defined cell nucleus can be found) that cannot be classified as animals, plants or fungi.
Protists are very diverse organisms from each other. They make up much of the biomass, both in moist terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, and also live as parasites of other living beings. Although there are some large protist organisms and multicellular, like algae, most are small and unicellular, like amoebas.
The term "protist" was coined by the German scientist Ernst Haeckel to include all primitive forms of organisms. As it is not a monophyletic kingdom, that is, the organisms that make it up do not have a common ancestor, understanding protists and their evolutionary history is a matter of discussion scientific
Characteristics of the Protista Kingdom
The organisms that make up the protist kingdom do not share significant morphological and physiological characteristics that group them. They have different life cycles and cellular structures, varied mechanisms of locomotion and occupy different places in the
food chain.The following list accounts for the enormous diversity among protist organisms:
Protista Kingdom Classification
There are various classifications of protist organisms. The most widespread, although not entirely accurate, is the one that differentiates protozoa from algae.
Examples of the protist kingdom
Protozoa | Brown seaweed | Diatoms |
Radiolaria | Amoeba | Dinoflagellates |
Paramecium | Laurencia | Plasmodium |
Gregarious | Percolomonas | Volvox |
Trachelomonas | Pandorina | Didinium |
Vortexes | Tepid ammonia | Oceanic gephyrocapsa |
Giardia lamblia | Nuclearia | Entodinium |
Rhodomonas salina | Grateloupia | Macrocystis pyrifera |
Glaucocystis | Trypanosoma | Coanozoa |
Cercomonas | Dinophysis | Stentor |