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- Protist abstract "Protists /ˈproʊtɨst/ are a large and diverse group of eukaryotic microorganisms, which belong to the kingdom Protista. There have been attempts to remove the kingdom from the taxonomy but it is still very much in use. The use of Protoctista is also preferred by various organisations and institutions. Molecular information has been used to redefine this group in modern taxonomy as diverse and often distantly related phyla. The group of protists is now considered to mean diverse phyla that are not closely related through evolution and have different life cycles, trophic levels, modes of locomotion and cellular structures. Besides their relatively simple levels of organization, the protists do not have much in common. They are unicellular, or they are multicellular without specialized tissues, and this simple cellular organization distinguishes the protists from other eukaryotes, such as fungi, animals and plants.The term protista was first used by Ernst Haeckel in 1866. Protists were traditionally subdivided into several groups based on similarities to the "higher" kingdoms: the unicellular "animal-like" protozoa, the "plant-like" protophyta (mostly unicellular algae), and the "fungus-like" slime molds and water molds. These traditional subdivisions, largely based on superficial commonalities, have been replaced by classifications based on phylogenetics (evolutionary relatedness among organisms). However, the older terms are still used as informal names to describe the morphology and ecology of various protists.Protists live in almost any environment that contains liquid water. Many protists, such as the algae, are photosynthetic and are vital primary producers in ecosystems, particularly in the ocean as part of the plankton. Other protists include pathogenic species such as the kinetoplastid Trypanosoma brucei, which causes sleeping sickness and species of the apicomplexan Plasmodium which cause malaria.".
- Protist colourName "pink".
- Protist domain Eukaryote.
- Protist thumbnail Protist_collage.jpg?width=300.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink FMPro?-db=treatise&-format=treatise%2fdetails1.html&-lay=table&-sortfield=sort%20number&part=Part%20A&-max=2147483647&-recid=32775&-findall=.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink FMPro?-db=treatise&-format=treatise%2fdetails1.html&-lay=table&-sortfield=sort%20number&part=Part%20A&-max=2147483647&-recid=32803&-findall=.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink FMPro?-db=treatise&-format=treatise%2fdetails1.html&-lay=table&-sortfield=sort%20number&part=Part%20A&-max=2147483647&-recid=82&-findall=.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink FMPro?-db=treatise&-format=treatise%2fdetails1.html&-lay=table&-sortfield=sort%20number&part=Part%20A&-max=2147483647&-recid=83&-findall=.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink Taxa.htm..
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink etv.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink indexE.html.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink 3.
- Protist wikiPageExternalLink 9.
- Protist wikiPageID "19178886".
- Protist wikiPageRevisionID "606729761".
- Protist color "pink".
- Protist domain "Eukarya".
- Protist fossilRange "Neoproterozoic – Recent".
- Protist hasPhotoCollection Protist.
- Protist imageWidth "250".
- Protist regnumAuthority "Haeckel, 1866".
- Protist subdivision "* Excavata ** Euglenozoa ** Percolozoa ** Metamonada * Rhizaria ** Cercozoa * Archaeplastida ** Rhodophyta ** Glaucophyta ** Green algae * Unikonta ** Amoebozoa ** Choanozoa".
- Protist subdivisionRanks "Excluded groups * Fungi * Plantae * Animalia".
- Protist subdivisionRanks "Many others;".
- Protist subdivisionRanks "Typical phyla".
- Protist subdivisionRanks "classification varies".
- Protist subject Category:Eukaryotes.
- Protist subject Category:Obsolete_taxonomic_groups.
- Protist subject Category:Protista.
- Protist type Eukaryote.
- Protist type Species.
- Protist type BiologicalLivingObject.
- Protist type EukaryoticCell.
- Protist type Organism.
- Protist comment "Protists /ˈproʊtɨst/ are a large and diverse group of eukaryotic microorganisms, which belong to the kingdom Protista. There have been attempts to remove the kingdom from the taxonomy but it is still very much in use. The use of Protoctista is also preferred by various organisations and institutions. Molecular information has been used to redefine this group in modern taxonomy as diverse and often distantly related phyla.".
- Protist label "Protist".
- Protist label "Protista".
- Protist label "Protista".
- Protist label "Protista".
- Protist label "Protista".
- Protist label "Protisten".
- Protist label "Protisten".
- Protist label "Protisty".
- Protist label "Протисты".
- Protist label "طلائعيات".
- Protist label "原生生物".
- Protist label "原生生物".
- Protist sameAs Protisté.
- Protist sameAs Protisten.
- Protist sameAs Πρώτιστα.
- Protist sameAs Protista.
- Protist sameAs Protista.
- Protist sameAs Protista.
- Protist sameAs Protista.
- Protist sameAs Protista.
- Protist sameAs 原生生物.
- Protist sameAs 원생생물.
- Protist sameAs Protisten.
- Protist sameAs Protisty.
- Protist sameAs Protista.
- Protist sameAs m.05qgw.
- Protist sameAs Q10892.
- Protist sameAs Q10892.
- Protist wasDerivedFrom Protist?oldid=606729761.
- Protist depiction Protist_collage.jpg.
- Protist isPrimaryTopicOf Protist.