They move with flagella, cilia, or pseudopods.
You would place a protist with a cell wall in the plantlike group, as most plantlike protists, such as algae, have cell walls made of cellulose. Funguslike protists, such as slime molds, do not typically have cell walls composed of cellulose.
Fungus-like protists, such as water molds and slime molds, resemble fungi in terms of their absorptive nutrition and similar body structures. Both groups use structures like hyphae to absorb nutrients from their surroundings and often play similar ecological roles in ecosystems. However, fungus-like protists are classified in different taxonomic groups than true fungi.
Yes, many protists have structures like flagella, cilia, or pseudopods that allow them to move from place to place. This movement helps protists find food, avoid predators, and locate optimal environmental conditions.
plants contain cellulose in their cell wall while fungi contains chitin as a major component of its cell wall.Besides fungi are absorptive heterotrophs while plants are photosynthetic autotrophs.fungi lacks centrioles and contains chitin in its cell wall(as described earlier) but certain protists have centrioles and produce cellulose in their cell wall.some protists also contain some pigments like Chl.a Chl.b caroteins etc while fungi does not.Due to these reasons Fungi has separate kingdom.
Mobile protists are sometimes called "swimming protists" because they have the ability to move through water using structures like flagella or cilia. These organisms are typically single-celled and exhibit diverse modes of locomotion.
Yes
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They all are heterotrophs, have cell walls, and use spores to reproduce.
Slime molds,water molds,and downy mildews
Fungi are separated from the protists based on their plate-like cristae in the mitochondria, the possession of a single, posterior, whiplash flagellum (in some forms), synthesis of lysine by the AAA pathway, the use of glycogen as a storage compound, and the presence of the Spitzenkorper in actively growing hyphae.
Group name Myxomycota , eg. Physarum .
Water molds (oomycetes) are the funguslike protists that thrive on dead or decaying organic matter in water. They obtain nutrients through absorption and play an important role in the decomposition of organic material in aquatic environments.
You would place a protist with a cell wall in the plantlike group, as most plantlike protists, such as algae, have cell walls made of cellulose. Funguslike protists, such as slime molds, do not typically have cell walls composed of cellulose.
Yes, Protists can move from place to place.
Fungus-like protists, such as water molds and slime molds, resemble fungi in terms of their absorptive nutrition and similar body structures. Both groups use structures like hyphae to absorb nutrients from their surroundings and often play similar ecological roles in ecosystems. However, fungus-like protists are classified in different taxonomic groups than true fungi.