Information about Flagellate

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"Flagellata" from Ernst Haeckel's Artforms of Nature, 1904
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Parasitic excavate (Giardia lamblia)
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Green alga (Chlamydomonas)
Flagellates are cells with one or more whip-like organelles called flagella. Some cells in animals may be flagellate, for instance the spermatozoa of most phyla. Higher plants and fungi do not produce flagellate cells, but the closely related green algae and chytrids do. Many protists take the form of single-celled flagellates. They are found in most lines of eukaryotes, and it is likely that all surviving eukaryotes evolved from them.

Form and behavior

Eukaryotic flagella are supported by microtubules in a characteristic arrangement, with nine fused pairs surrounding two central singlets. These arise from a basal body or kinetosome, with microtubule roots that are an important part of the cell's brain. In some, for instance, they support a cytostome or mouth, where food is ingested. The flagella often support hairs, called mastigonemes, or contain rods. Their ultrastructure plays an important role in classifying eukaryotes.

In protists and microscopic animals, flagella are generally used for propulsion. They may also be used to create a current that brings in food. In most things, one or more flagella are located at or near the anterior of the cell eg Euglena. Often there is one directed forwards and one trailing behind. Among animals, fungi, and Choanozoa, which make up a group called the opisthokonts, there is a single posterior flagellum. They are from the phylum Mastigophora.

Groups of flagellates

Originally the flagellate protozoa were treated as a single class of phylum, the Mastigophora. This was divided into the Phytomastigina or phytoflagellates, which have chloroplasts or are closely related to such forms, and the Zoomastigina or zooflagellates, which do not. Most phytoflagellates were given a separate classification by botanists, treating them in several divisions of algae.

This scheme has generally been abandoned or is retained only for convenience. However, the relationships among the flagellates are still mostly unknown, and their higher classification is confused. Some argue that the Linnaean ranks are not appropriate for such a diverse set of organisms.

Phytoflagellates are found in most groups of algae. Both the green algae and heterokonts include a variety of flagellates in addition to non-motile and multicellular forms. The dinoflagellates, cryptomonads, haptophytes, and euglenids are almost entirely single-celled flagellates.

Many of the other flagellates make up what are called the excavate taxa. These include the euglenids and a number of important parasites, such as trypanosomes and Giardia. The excavates generally show similarities in the structure of their flagella and typically have a cytostome. However, they may be a paraphyletic group, and in particular may have been ancestral to most or all other eukaryotes.

Other notable groups including flagellates are the Cercozoa, alveolates (including dinoflagellates), ebriids, and Apusozoa.

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A flagellum (plural: flagella) is a long, slender projection from the cell body, composed of microtubules and surrounded by the plasma membrane.
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A spermatozoon or spermatozoan (pl. spermatozoa), from the ancient Greek σπέρμα (seed) and ζῷον (living being) and more commonly known as a sperm cell
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Plantae
Haeckel, 1866[1]

Divisions

Green algae
  • Chlorophyta
  • Charophyta
Land plants (embryophytes)
  • Non-vascular land plants (bryophytes)

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Eukarya
Whittaker & Margulis, 1978
(unranked) Opisthokonta

Kingdom: Fungi
(L., 1753) R.T. Moore, 1980[1]

Subkingdom/Phyla

Chytridiomycota
Blastocladiomycota

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Green algae are microscopic protists; found in all aquatic environments, including marine, freshwater and brackish water.

The green algae (singular: green alga) are the large group of algae from which the embryophytes (higher plants) emerged.
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Chytridiomycota
M.J. Powell 2007[1]

Type species
Chytridium spp.
A. Braun, 1851

Classes

Chytridiomycetes
Monoblepharidomycetes
Chytridiomycota is a phylum of the Fungi kingdom.
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Eukarya
Whittaker & Margulis, 1978

Kingdom: Protista*
Haeckel, 1866

Typical phyla
  • Chromalveolata
  • Chromista

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Microtubules are one of the components of the cytoskeleton. They have diameter of ~ 24 nm and length varying from several micrometers to possibly millimeters in axons of nerve cells.
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A cytostome or cell mouth is a part of a cell specialized for phagocytosis, usually in the form of a microtubule-supported funnel or groove. Food is directed into the cytostome, and sealed into vacuoles.
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Opisthokonta

Subgroups

Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom Fungi
Choanozoa
:Choanoflagellates
:Corallochytrids
:Mesomycetozoea

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Chloroplasts are organelles found in plant cells and eukaryotic algae that conduct photosynthesis. Chloroplasts absorb sunlight and use it in conjunction with water and carbon dioxide to produce sugars, the raw material for energy and biomass production in all green plants
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phytoplankton — provide the food base for most marine food chains. In very high densities (so-called algal blooms) these algae may discolor the water and outcompete or poison other life forms.
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Green algae are microscopic protists; found in all aquatic environments, including marine, freshwater and brackish water.

The green algae (singular: green alga) are the large group of algae from which the embryophytes (higher plants) emerged.
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Heterokontophyta

Typical classes

Colored groups
Chrysophyceae (golden algae)
Synurophyceae
Actinochrysophyceae (axodines)
Pelagophyceae
Phaeothamniophyceae
Bacillariophyceae (diatoms)
Bolidophyceae
Raphidophyceae
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Dinoflagellata
Bütschli 1885

Classes

Dinophyceae
Noctiluciphyceae
Syndiniophyceae

The dinoflagella are a large group of flagellate protists. Most are marine plankton, but they are common in fresh water habitats as well.
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Haptophyta

Orders

Class Pavlovophyceae
   Pavlovales
Class Prymnesiophyceae
   Prymnesiales
   Phaeocystales
   Isochrysidales
   Coccolithales

The
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Euglenoidea
Bütschli 1884

Major groups

Phototrophs
   Euglenales
   Eutreptiales
Osmotrophs
   Rhabdomonadales
Phagotrophs
   ?Heteronematales
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Excavata

Phyla
Metamonada
Loukozoa
Euglenozoa
Percolozoa
The excavates are a major assemblage of protists, often known as Excavata. The phylogenetic category Excavata contains a variety of free-living and symbiotic forms, and includes some
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Trypanosomatida

Genera

Blastocrithidia
Crithidia
Endotrypanum
Herpetomonas
Leishmania
Leptomonas
Phytomonas
Trypanosoma
Wallaceina
Trypanosomes
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G. lamblia

Binomial name
Giardia lamblia
(Kunstler, 1882)

Giardia lamblia (synonymous with Lamblia intestinalis and Giardia duodenalis
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In phylogenetics, a group of organisms is said to be paraphyletic (Greek para = near and phyle = race) if the group contains its most recent common ancestor, but does not contain all the descendants of that ancestor.
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Cercozoa
Cavalier-Smith 1998

The Cercozoa are a group of protists, including most amoeboids and flagellates that feed by means of filose pseudopods.
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Alveolata

Phyla
Ciliophora
Apicomplexa
Dinoflagellata
The alveolates are a major line of protists. There are three phyla, which are very divergent in form, but are now known to be close relatives based on various ultrastructural and genetic
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Ebridea

The Ebridea is a group of phagotrophic flagellate protist present in marine coastal plankton communities worldwide. Ebria tripartita is one of two (possibly four) described extant species in the Ebridea.
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Apusozoa
Cavalier-Smith 1997 em.

Orders

Apusomonadida
Ancyromonadida
Hemimastigida
The Apusozoa comprise several genera of flagellate protozoa.
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Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) is a huge controlled vocabulary (or metadata system) for the purpose of indexing journal articles and books in the life sciences. Created and updated by the United States National Library of Medicine (NLM), it is used by the MEDLINE/PubMed
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