What are the various components of epidermal tissue? Explain
Answers
Animal? Bacteria? Plant? Fungi? What do these figures represent?
None of the above! These organisms may be single-celled like bacteria, and they may look like a fungus. They also may hunt for food like an animal or photosynthesize like a plant. And, yet, they do not fit into any of these groups. These organisms are protists!
What are Protists?
Protists are eukaryotes, which means their cells have a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Most, but not all, protists are single-celled. Other than these features, they have very little in common. You can think about protists as all eukaryotic organisms that are neither animals, nor plants, nor fungi.
Although Ernst Haeckel set up the Kingdom Protista in 1866, this kingdom was not accepted by the scientific world until the 1960s. These unique organisms can be so different from each other that sometimes Protista is called the “junk drawer" kingdom. Just like a junk drawer, which contains items that don't fit into any other category, this kingdom contains the eukaryotes that cannot be put into any other kingdom. Therefore, protists can seem very different from one another.
Unicellular or Multicellular?
Most protists are so small that they can be seen only with a microscope. Protists are mostly unicellular (one-celled) eukaryotes. A few protists are multicellular (many-celled) and surprisingly large. For example, kelp is a multicellular protist that can grow to be over 100-meters long (Figure below). Multicellular protists, however, do not show cellular specialization or differentiation into tissues. That means their cells all look the same and, for the most part, function the same. On the other hand, your cells often are much different from each other and have special jobs.
Kelp is an example of a muticellular protist
Kelp is an example of a muticellular protist. [Figure1]
Characteristics of Protists
A few characteristics are common between protists.
They are eukaryotic, which means they have a nucleus.
Most have mitochondria.
They can be parasites.
They all prefer aquatic or moist environments.
Classification of Protists
For classification, the protists are divided into three groups:
Animal-like protists, which are heterotrophs and have the ability to move.
Plant-like protists, which are autotrophs that photosynthesize.
Fungi-like protists, which are heterotrophs, and they have cells with cell walls and reproduce by forming spores.
But remember, protists are not animals, nor plants, nor fungi (Figure below).
Protists come in many different shapes
Protists come in many different shapes. Some are very simple, similar to prokaryotes, and some are more complex. These simple, single-celled protists were probably the first eukaryotes to evolve. [Figure2]
Summary
Protists are a diverse kingdom, including all eukaryotic organisms that are neither animals, nor plants, nor fungi.
For classification, the protists are divided into three groups: animal-like protists, plant-like protists, and fungi-like protists.
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✔Epidermis is the outer covering of the plants.
✔These tissues plays various roles such as, protects the loss of water from the leaf surface, regulates the exchange of gases through the stomata.
✔It also protect the plants from the damage cause by the external environment.
✔For example, In case of human beings a layer of skin is present which protects us from various factors, similarly in case of plants a skin (known as epidermis) is present.