Sub-Phylum—Sarcomastigophora
- Locomation by flagella or pseudopodia or both.
- Nucleus one or more and monomorphic.
- Nutrition autotrophic or heterotrophic or both.
- Reproduction asexual and sexual by syngamy. Life cycle may show alternation of generation.
Super-Class—Mastigophora
- Flagellates with flagella for locomotion and covered with pellicle.
- Nutrition, autotrophic or heterotrophic or both.
- Longitudinal binary fission.
- May be free swimming or parasitic.
Caerulin: Caerulin is a decapeptide produced by the skin of the frog Hyla caerulea. Its structure and functions resemble both gastrin and cholecystokinin-pancreozymin. It has strong stimulatory effect on the contractions of gall bladder.
Gastrone: Gastric mucosa has a substance known as gastrone. It inhibits the secretion of gastric acid stimulated by histamine and gastrin.
Villikinin: This hormone is secreted by the upper ileum stimulated by the entry of acid chyme. This hormone stimulates the movement of intestinal villi.
A summary of the sources, site of action and effects produced is given below:
Question for Protozoans: Classification
Try yourself:
Which sub-phylum exhibits locomotion by both flagella and pseudopodia?Explanation
- Sarcomastigophora is the sub-phylum that exhibits locomotion by both flagella and pseudopodia.
- This sub-phylum includes organisms that can move using either flagella or pseudopodia, or sometimes both.
- Flagella are whip-like structures that enable the organisms to swim, while pseudopodia are temporary extensions of the cell membrane that help in crawling or engulfing food particles.
- Examples of organisms belonging to this sub-phylum include amoebas and some types of protozoa.
- The ability to use both flagella and pseudopodia for locomotion allows these organisms to adapt to different environments and find food sources.
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Class-I. Phytomastigophora
- Usually possess chromatophores and so nutrition mostly holophytic by phototrophy. Stored food is paramylum.
- These possess only one or two flagella.
- Life cycle, asexual and sexual too in some cases.
Order-1. Chloromonadida
- Small covered with delicate flattened pellicle.
- Numerous green and some colourless chromatophores, Gullet present. Nutrition is usually by phototrophy. Reserve food is oil.
- Usually two flagella, sometimes more or even one.
- No stigma, complex contractile vacuole.
- Mostly fresh water forms.
Examples: Vacularia, Coelomonas etc.
Order-2. Englenoidida
- Large with thick and firm pellicle.
- 1 or 2 flagella. Gullet and cytopharynx leading into reservoir.
- Chromatophores, green, and many, sometimes colourless. Nutrition is mostly by phototrophy. Reserve food is paramylum and oils.
- Stigma and contractile vacuole present.
- Mostly fresh water.
Examples: Euglena, Peranema, etc.
Order—3. Volvocida (Phytomonadina)
- Small with thick cellulose theca. No gullet.
- 2 or more flagella.
- Numerous green and colourless chromatophores. Nutrition is mostly by phototrophy. Reserve food is starch.
- Stigma present.
- Sexual reproduction by syngamy.
- Mostly fresh water, some colonial.
Examples: Volvox, Chlamydomones etc.
Order—4. Cryptomonadida
- Small with rigid pellicle. Gullet up to the middle of body.
- With two flagella, stigma present.
- Green, yellow, brown or colourless chromatophores.
- Nutrition usually by phototrophy. Reserve food is starch, sometimes oil.
- Marine or fresh water.
Examples: Chilomonas, Cryptomonas, etc.
Order—5. Chrysomonadina
- Small, having amoeboid movement, covered with a thin pellicle.
- One to three flagella.
- Yellow or brown chromatophores and nutrition, by phototrophy.
- Siliceous cysts are formed.
- Marine or fresh water.
Examples: Chromulina, Symura, Chrysamoeba, etc.
Order—6. Dinoflagellida
- Small, naked and amoeboid or have thick pellicle or cellulose theca.
- Two flagella in the grooves.
- Numerous yellow to brown chromatophores, Gullet present. Nutrition, mostly by phototrophy. Reserve food is starch and oil.
- Stigma present. Two contractile vacuoles.
- Some show bioluminescence.
- Mostly marine, some parasitic.
Examples: Noctiluca, Ceratium etc.
Class—II. Zoomastigopohrea
- Chlorophyll or chromatophores absent. Mostly parasitic.
- Nutrition holozoic or saprozoic.
- Reserve food glycogen.
- Flagella one to many.
Order—1. Choanoflagellida
- A collar round the base of a single flagellum.
- Free-living, solitary or colonial.
Example: Proterospongia.
Order—2. Diplomonadida:
- Bilaterally symmetrical, binucleate, with delicate pellicle and often with a cytostome.
- Flagella 3 to 8. One often trailing or forming border of an undulating membrane.
- Mostly intestinal parasites.
Examples: Hexamita, Giardia.
Order—3. Hypermastigida:
- Highly specialized, numerous flagella.
- Kinetosomes arranged in a circle, plate or longitudinal or spiral rows.
- Mouth absent. Food ingested by pseudopodia.
- Gut parasites of termites and cockroaches.
Examples: Lophomonas, Trychonympha.
Order—4. Rhizomastigida:
- Small, amoeboid, chiefly freshwater.
- Locomotion by 1-4 flagella and pseudopodia.
Examples: Mastigamoeba, Dimorpha.
Order—5. Kinetoplastida:
- No gullet. Kinetoplast present.
- Flagella 1 to 4. No definite pellicle.
- Mostly parasitic forms living in blood.
Examples: Bodo, Leishmania, Trypanosoma.
Order—6. Trichomonadida:
- Flagella 4 to 6. One flagellum trailing.
- Parasites of vertebrates.
Example: Trichomonas.
Super-Class—Opalinata
- Body covered by cilia like organelles in oblique rows.
- Numerous monomorphic nuclei.
- Interkinetal binary fission. Sexual reproduction by snygamy with flagellated anisogametes.
- Parasitic in frogs and toads.
Example: Opalina.
Super-Class—Sarcodina (Rhizopoda)
- No definite pellicle, some have exoskeleton.
- Adult move by pseudopodia.
- Nutrition, holozoic or saprozoic.
- Asexual reproduction by binary fission, sexual by gametes and may form flagellated young. No spore formation.
- Fresh water, marine or in moist soil, a few parasitic.
Class—III. Rhizopodea
Pseudopodia as lobopodia, filopodia or reticulopodia, without axial filaments.
Sub-Class—1. Filosia
Pseudopodia as filopodia. Naked or with a shell with single aperture.
Examples: Allogromia, Penardia (naked).
Sub-Class—2. Granuloreticulosia
Pseudopodia delicate granular reticulopodia.
Order-1. Foraminiferida
Large sized with uni-or multi-chambered calcareous shell with one or more openings through which reticulopodia emerge.
Examples: Globigerina, Elphidium (= Polystomella)
Sub-Class—3. Lobosia
Pseudopodia as lobopodia.
Order—1. Amoebida
- Body amoeboid, naked, without skeleton.
- Nucleus with honeycomb lattice.
- Largely freshwater and free-living. Many parasitic.
Examples: Amoeba, Entamoeba, Pelomyxa.
Order—2. Arcellinida (= Testacida)
- Body enclosed in one-chambered shell of pseudochitin, with a single opening through which lobopodia protrude.
- Free-living, mostly freshwater.
Examples: Arcella, Difflugia, Euglypha.
Sub-Class—4. Mycetozoia:
- Large, amoeboid and multinucleate.
- Exoskeleton or central capsule present.
- Numerous, blunt pseudopodia.
- Nutrition is phagocytic.
- Sexual reproduction forming sporangia.
Example: Didynium.
Class—IV. Actinopodea
Pseudopodia as axopodia with axial filaments, radiating from spherical body.
Sub-Class—1. Helizoia:
- Rounded body called sun-animalcules covered with radiating axopodia. Usually with more than one nucleus.
- Mostly naked, some with siliceous scales or spines.
- Nutrition holozoic.
- Mostly fresh water.
Examples: Actinophrys, Actinosphaerium etc.
Sub-Class—2. Proteomyxidia
- Pseudopodia are filopodia.
- Reproduction by binary or multiple fissions usually within the cyst.
- Marine or fresh water, usually parasite on algae.
Example: Pseudospora.
Sub-Class—3. Radiolaria
- Preforated central capsule in between ectoplasm and endoplasm.
- Skeleton of siliceous spicules. Filopodia or axopodia is present.
- All marine.
Examples: Collozoum; Lithocircus.
Sub-Class—1. Acantharia
- Imperforate non-chitinoid central capsule without pores.
- Skeleton of strontium sulphate.
- Pseudopodia are axopodia.
Example: Acanthometra.
Class—V. Piroplasmea
Small round, rod-shaped or amoeboid parasites in the vertebrate red blood corpuscles.
Example: Babesia.
Sub-Phylum—Sporozoa:
- Body with thick pellicle.
- No locomotor organs in adult. Cilia or flagella may be present in gametes.
- Nutrition is saprozoic.
- Asexual reproduction by multiple fission and sexual reproduction by syngamy followed by spore formation.
- All endoparasites.
Class—1. Telosporea
- Locomotion by gliding or body flexion.
- Spore formation.
- Both a sexual and sexual reproduction with flagellated microgametes in some.
Sub-Class—1. Gregarinia:
- Mature trophozoites large, extracellular in host’s gut and body activities.
- Each spore produces 8 sporozoites.
- Parasites in invertebrates.
Examples: Monocystis, Gregarina.
Sub-Class—2. Coccidia:
- Mature trophozoites small and intracellular.
- Gametocytes are dimorphic.
- Parasite in the blood or gut of vertebrates.
Examples: Eimeria, Plasmodium, etc.
Class—2. Haplosporea:
- Spore cases present. Only asexual reproduction.
Example: Ichthyosporidium.
Class—3. Toxoplasmea:
- Spores are absent.
- Reproduction by binary fission, cysts is formed.
Sub-Phylum—Cnidospora
- Adult trophozoite with many nuclei.
- Spore formation.
- Zygote forms one or more trophozoite without sporogony.
Class—1. Myxosporidea:
- Spores large, developed from several nuclei.
- Spores with two or three valves.
- Parasites mostly in fishes.
Examples: Myxidium, Myxobolus, Ceratomyxa.
Class—2. Microsporidea:
- Spores small, developed from one nucleus.
- Spores with a univalved membrane.
- Intracellular parasites in arthropods and fishes.
Example: Nosema.
Question for Protozoans: Classification
Try yourself:
Which class of organisms possesses chromatophores and obtains nutrition mostly through phototrophy?Explanation
- Phytomastigophora is the class of organisms that possess chromatophores and obtain nutrition mostly through phototrophy.
- Chromatophores are responsible for photosynthesis, allowing these organisms to produce food using sunlight.
- Phytomastigophora also store paramylum as their reserve food.
- Other classes mentioned, such as Zoomastigopohrea, Sporozoa, and Cnidospora, do not possess chromatophores and do not obtain nutrition through phototrophy.
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Sub-Phylum—Ciliophora
Class—1. Ciliata:
- Cilia or compound ciliary organelles for locomotion.
- Usually two types of nuclei, macro and micro.
- Asexual reproduction by binary fission and sexually by conjugation.
Sub-Class—1. Peritrichia
- No cilia on the body of the adult. Mostly sessile.
- Apical end with buccal cilia.
Order—1. Pertrichida:
- Adults without cilia but buccal ciliature present.
- Mostly attached stalked animals.
e.g. Vorticella, Carchesium.
Sub-Class—2. Suctoria:
- Sessile and stalked body.
- Young with cilia, adult with suctorial tentacles.
Order—2. Suctorida
- Sessile, stalked with distal end bearing tentacles.
- No cilia in adult.
Example: Ephenota.
Sub-Class—3. Heterotrichida
Body with uniform cilia or encased in a lorica.
Examples: Nyctotherus, Bursaria, etc.
Order—1. Oligotrichida:
- Small ciliates with reduced cilia or cilia absent.
- Buccal membranelles extend around apical end of body.
Example: Halteria.
Order—2. Hypotrichida:
- Dorso-ventrally flattened. Fused cilia forming ventral cirri.
Examples: Euplotes, Stylonchia.
Sub-Class—4. Holotricha
- Simple and uniform cilia on body.
- Buccal cilia either absent or rudimentary.
Order—1. Gymnostomatida
- Large ciliates without oral ciliature. Cytostome opens directly. No vestibule.
Examples: Coleps, Didinium, Prorodon, Dileptus.
Order—2. Hymenostomadia:
- Small ciliates with uniform body ciliation.
- Buccal cavity with undulating membrane.
Example: Colpidium, Paramecium.
Order—3. Trichostomatida
- Spiral row of cilia in vestibule.
- Cytostome opens at the bottom of vestibule. Example: Colpidium, Paramecium.
Order—4. Astomatida:
- Cytostome absent with uniform body ciliation.
- Commensals or endoparasites in the gut and coelom of oligochaete worms.
Example: Anoplophyra.
Order—5. Apostomatide:
- Body has spirally arranged cilia.
- Cytostome is mid-ventral.
- Life cycle complex with two hosts, one of them is crustacean.
- Marine and parasitic or commensals.
Example: Hyalophsya.
Order—6. Chonatrichida:
- Vase-shaped body without body cilia.
- A funnel at the free end bears vestibular cilia.
- Mostly marine and ectocommensal on crustaceans.
Example: Spirochona.