Sarcomastigophora Explained

The phylum Sarcomastigophora belongs to the Protista or protoctista kingdom and it includes many unicellular or colonial, autotrophic, or heterotrophic organisms. It is characterized by flagella, pseudopodia, or both.[1]

Taxonomy

It is divided into three subphyla: the Mastigophora, the Sarcodina and the Opalinata.[2]

It is polyphyletic, and it is not a universally recognized classification. It places great significance upon method of locomotion in generating the taxonomy.

It can be described either as:

kingdom Protista → phylum Sarcomastigophoraor in older classifications as

phylum Protozoasubphylum Sarcomastigophora.[3]

Characteristics

It gets its name from the combination of "Sarcodina" (which is an older term used for amoeboids)[4] and "Mastigophora" (which is an older term for flagellates).

The characteristics of phylum sarcomastigophora are :

(1) Nucleus is of one type except in the stages of certain foraminifera.

(2) Locomotory organ either pseudopodia or flagella or both.

(3) Reproduction asexual, but when sexually it is essentially by syngamy

Example : Amoeba, Euglena etc.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sarcomastigophora . Medical Dictionary . 2018-03-11.
  2. [:Species:Sarcomastigophora]
  3. Book: Dunster, Katherine . Dunster, Julian A. . Dictionary of natural resource management . registration . UBC Press . Vancouver . 1996 . 337 . 978-0-7748-0503-2 .
  4. Pawlowski J . Burki F . Untangling the phylogeny of amoeboid protists . J. Eukaryot. Microbiol. . 56 . 1 . 16–25 . 2009 . 19335771 . 10.1111/j.1550-7408.2008.00379.x. free .