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Goniomonas
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, ...
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Goniomonas Truncata
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate Unicellular organism, monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chlorop ...
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Goniomonas Pacifica
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, n ...
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Goniomonadida
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, n ...
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Goniomonadidae
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, n ...
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Goniomonas Elongata
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, n ...
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Goniomonas Avonlea
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, n ...
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Goniomonas Amphinema
''Goniomonas'' is a genus of Cryptomonads and contains five species. It is a genus of single-celled eukaryotes, including both freshwater and marine species. It lacks plastids, which is very unusual among all of the Cryptophyte genera. It may reflect one of only a small number of times that the Cryptophytes evolved into freshwater habitats. ''Goniomonas'' seems to have a number of freshwater relatives which have not yet been cultured and named. Etymology ''Goniomonas'' means angled small flagellates, combining ''goni'' and ''monas''. History of Discovery It was established by German biologist Samuel Friedrich Stein in 1878. Morphology This genus contains species that are free-swimming, flattened, biflagellate monads. They are oval in lateral view with an obliquely truncate anterior. A furrow extends along the middle of the anterior margin and for a short distance down the ventral margin and is surrounded by a single lateral row of ejectisomes. Chloroplasts, pyrenoids, n ...
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Cryptomonads
The cryptomonads (or cryptophytes) are a group of algae, most of which have plastids. They are common in freshwater, and also occur in marine and brackish habitats. Each cell is around 10–50 μm in size and flattened in shape, with an anterior groove or pocket. At the edge of the pocket there are typically two slightly unequal flagella. Some may exhibit mixotrophy. Characteristics Cryptomonads are distinguished by the presence of characteristic extrusomes called ejectosomes, which consist of two connected spiral ribbons held under tension. If the cells are irritated either by mechanical, chemical or light stress, they discharge, propelling the cell in a zig-zag course away from the disturbance. Large ejectosomes, visible under the light microscope, are associated with the pocket; smaller ones occur underneath the periplast, the cryptophyte-specific cell surrounding. Except for the class ''Goniomonadea'', which lacks plastids entirely, and ''Cryptomonas paramecium'' (previo ...
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Goniomonadea
Goniomonadea is a proposed class of cryptomonads which includes the orders Goniomonadida and Hemiarmida. Taxonomy * Order Goniomonadida Novarino & Lucas 1993 oniomonadales Novarino & Lucas 1993** Family Goniomonadidae Hill 1991 oniomonadaceae Hill 1991*** Genus ''Goniomonas'' von Stein 1878 * Order Hemiarmida Cavalier-Smith 2017 ** Family Hemiarmidae Cavalier-Smith 2017 *** Genus ''Hemiarma Hemiarma marina is a monotypic species of cryptomonad discovered off the coast of Palau Palau,, officially the Republic of Palau and historically ''Belau'', ''Palaos'' or ''Pelew'', is an island country and microstate in the western ...'' Shiratori & Ishida 2016 References Cryptomonads {{Hacrobia-stub ...
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Nucleomorph
Nucleomorphs are small, vestigial eukaryotic nuclei found between the inner and outer pairs of membranes in certain plastids. They are thought to be vestiges of primitive red and green algal nuclei that were engulfed by a larger eukaryote. Because the nucleomorph lies between two sets of membranes, nucleomorphs support the endosymbiotic theory and are evidence that the plastids containing them are complex plastids. Having two sets of membranes indicate that the plastid, a prokaryote, was engulfed by a eukaryote, an alga, which was then engulfed by another eukaryote, the host cell, making the plastid an example of secondary endosymbiosis. Organisms with known nucleomorphs So far, only two monophyletic groups of organisms are known to contain plastids with a vestigial nucleus or nucleomorph: the cryptomonads of the supergroup Chromista and the chlorarachniophytes of the supergroup Rhizaria, both of which have examples of sequenced nucleomorph genomes. Studies of the genomic organi ...
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Microbial Cyst
A microbial cyst is a resting or dormant stage of a microorganism, usually a bacterium or a protist or rarely an invertebrate animal, that helps the organism to survive in unfavorable environmental conditions. It can be thought of as a state of suspended animation in which the metabolic processes of the cell are slowed and the cell ceases all activities like feeding and locomotion. Encystment, the formation of the cyst, also helps the microbe to disperse easily, from one host to another or to a more favorable environment. When the encysted microbe reaches an environment favorable to its growth and survival, the cyst wall breaks down by a process known as excystation. In excystment, the exact stimulus is unknown for most protists. Unfavorable environmental conditions such as lack of nutrients or oxygen, extreme temperatures, lack of moisture and presence of toxic chemicals, which are not conducive for the growth of the microbeEugene W. Nester, Denise G. Anderson, C. Evans Roberts ...
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Periplast
The periplast is one of three types of cell-covering of three classes of algae. The ''Cryptomonads'' have the periplast covering. The ''Dinophyceae'' have a type called the amphiesma, and the ''Euglena'' covering is the pellicle. Structure The periplast is a proteinaceous covering. It can be subdivided into an inner periplast and an outer periplast. Both of these components are variable in their composition. The inner periplast may be formed as a single sheet as in the Chilomonas paramecium, or as multiple plates of varying shape. The outer periplast surrounds the plasma membrane. The inner periplast below the plasma membrane may sometimes as in ''Komma caudata'' have a hexagonal arrangement of superficial periplast plates, and these are made up of sub-units. The superficial plates are lined up exactly with the inner plate and are surrounded by crystalline borders with the occasional rosette scale on the surface of the plates. A number of different periplast arrangements have bee ...
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