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  2. Marine protists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_protists

    Marine algae can be divided into six groups: green, red and brown algae, euglenophytes, dinoflagellates and diatoms. Dinoflagellates and diatoms are important components of marine algae and have their own sections below. Euglenophytes are a phylum of unicellular flagellates with only a few marine members. Not all algae are microscopic.

  3. Protozoan infection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protozoan_infection

    The green algae are subdivided into the chlorophytes and charophytes. It is very rare for green algae to become parasitic. [citation needed] Prototheca moriformis belongs to the subdivision Chloroplastida. P. moriformis is a green algae that lacks chlorophyll and has turned to parasitism. It is found in sewage and the soil.

  4. Protistology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protistology

    Its field of study therefore overlaps with the more traditional disciplines of phycology, mycology, and protozoology, just as protists embrace mostly unicellular organisms described as algae, some organisms regarded previously as primitive fungi, and protozoa ("animal" motile protists lacking chloroplasts).

  5. Protozoa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protozoa

    By 1954, Protozoa were classified as "unicellular animals", as distinct from the "Protophyta", single-celled photosynthetic algae, which were considered primitive plants. [25] In the system of classification published in 1964 by B.M. Honigsberg and colleagues, the phylum Protozoa was divided according to the means of locomotion, such as by ...

  6. Alveolate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alveolate

    In other words, the term Myzozoa, meaning "to siphon the contents from prey", may be applied informally to the common ancestor of the subset of alveolates that are neither ciliates nor colponemids. Predation upon algae is an important driver in alveolate evolution, as it can provide sources for endosymbiosis of novel plastids.

  7. Marine microorganisms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_microorganisms

    Marine algae can be divided into six groups: green, red and brown algae, euglenophytes, dinoflagellates and diatoms. Dinoflagellates and diatoms are important components of marine algae and have their own sections below. Euglenophytes are a phylum of unicellular flagellates with only a few marine members. Not all algae are microscopic.

  8. Chromista - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromista

    The four phyla that contain chromophyte algae (those with chlorophyll c--i.e., Cryptista, Heterokonta, Haptophyta, Dinozoa) are distantly related to each other and to Chlorarachniophyta on our trees. However, all of the photosynthetic taxa within each of these four phyla radiate from each other very substantially after the radiation of the four ...

  9. Microsporidia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsporidia

    Later, especially because of the lack of mitochondria, they were placed along with the other Protozoa such as diplomonads, parabasalids and archamoebae in the protozoan-group Archezoa. [33] More recent research has falsified this theory of early origin (for all of these).