No. The certificate is public; the server will present it during every SSL handshake, and some CAs even maintain a public repository of all of the certificates they issue. There’s no need to try to keep a certificate secret.
The private key, on the other hand, must be kept secret. And, if you were trying to authenticate someone (“two-way SSL” or client authentication), you would need to integrity protection for your root certificates. If you were to store this material in your revision control system, it should be protected with strong password.