Biology, asked by mahnoornooori, 10 months ago

discuss the diversity of kingdom protoctista?

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Answered by geethika20
15

Answer:

The Kingdom Protista consists of eukaryotic protists. Members of this very diverse kingdom are typically unicelluar and less complex in structure than other eukaryotes. In a superficial sense, these organisms are often described based on their similarities to the other groups of eukaryotes: animals, plants, and fungi.

Explanation:

Answered by sangeeta7paulsl
0

Answer:

The Kingdom Protista includes a large variety of substantially submarine eukaryotic organisms whose different body forms, forms of reduplication, modes of nutrition, and cultures make them delicate to identify. principally, this area is defined by impunity i.e., all members have characteristics that forget them from the other four fiefdoms. All protists are eukaryotic and have actually developed from prokaryotes.

The area Protista consists of four major groups of eukaryotic organisms which are single-celled protozoans, unicellular algae, multicellular algae, slime moulds, and oomycotes.

During the course of evolutionary history, organisms in the area. Protista has progressed diversity in their

(a) size and structure,

(b) means of locomotion,

(c) ways of getting nutrients,

(d) relations with other organisms,

(e) niche and

(f) modes of reduplication.

Grounded upon the diversity, the maturity of biologists concerns the protists area as a polyphyletic group of organisms; that is, the protists presumably don't partake of a single typical ancestor. Margulis and Schwartz have actually noted 27 phyla to accommodate this different assemblage of organisms.

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