pp. 60-64
Several major groups within amoeboid protozoans:
1. Amoebozoans: This group includes naked amoebae (Gymnamoebae), which lack external coverings and use various forms of pseudopodia for movement and feeding. They are predominantly free-living and inhabit moist environments.
2. Arcellinids and Related Test-Bearing Amoebae: These amoebae produce protective tests (shells) composed of organic materials or cemented particles. They are common in soils and freshwater habitats and have a rich fossil record.
3. Slime Molds (Eumycetozoa): Slime molds exhibit both amoeboid and fungus-like characteristics during their life cycle. They can exist as individual amoeboid cells or aggregate into multicellular structures (plasmodia or pseudoplasmodia) under certain conditions, leading to the formation of sporangia that release spores.
4. Mastigamoebae: These organisms possess both flagella and pseudopodia, illustrating a transitional form between flagellates and amoebae. They are commonly found in stagnant aquatic environments.
5. Rhizaria: This group encompasses organisms with slender, often branching pseudopodia called filopodia. Notably, it includes foraminiferans and radiolarians.
6. Foraminifera: Primarily marine organisms that produce multichambered calcium carbonate tests with openings through which reticulopodia extend. They play a significant role in marine ecosystems and have an extensive fossil record useful in geological studies.
Key Terms and Their Definitions
1. Amoeboid Protozoans: Single-celled organisms that move and feed using extensions called pseudopodia. They lack cilia, pellicles, and have a single type of nucleus.
2. Pseudopodia:
- Lobopodia: Broad, blunt extensions of the cell used for movement and engulfing food.
- Filopodia: Thin, slender projections that can branch but do not fuse to form networks.
- Reticulopodia: Fine, branching pseudopodia that fuse to form complex networks, typical in foraminiferans.
3. Sarcodina: An outdated classification that grouped amoeboid protozoans together; now known to be polyphyletic.
4. Pellicle: A supportive layer beneath the cell membrane in some protozoans; absent in amoeboid protozoans.
5. Contractile Vacuole: A cellular structure that expels excess water from the cell; present in many freshwater amoeboid species.
6. Test: A protective shell or covering produced by some amoebae, composed of organic materials, calcium carbonate, or cemented particles.
7. Gymnamoebae (Naked Amoebae): Amoeboid protozoans without external coverings, moving and feeding through various pseudopodia forms.
8. Arcellinida: A group of test-bearing amoebae within the Amoebozoa, characterized by lobopodia and distinct test structures.
9. Slime Molds (Eumycetozoa):
- Plasmodium: A large, multinucleate, single-celled mass formed by acellular slime molds.
- Pseudoplasmodium: An aggregate of individual amoeboid cells forming a multicellular structure in cellular slime molds.
- Sporangia: Spore-producing structures developed by slime molds under unfavorable conditions.
10. Mastigamoebae: Protozoans possessing both flagella and pseudopodia, indicative of a link between flagellate and amoeboid forms.
11. Rhizaria: A supergroup of protists characterized by slender, often complex pseudopodia. Includes groups like foraminiferans and radiolarians.
12. Foraminifera: Marine protozoans that produce multichambered calcium carbonate tests and use reticulopodia for feeding and movement.
13. Phagocytosis: The process by which a cell engulfs solid particles to form an internal food vacuole.
14. Pinocytosis: The process of ingesting liquid and dissolved substances through small vesicles formed by the cell membrane.
15. Syncytium: A large cell-like structure containing multiple nuclei, formed by the fusion of cells or repeated nuclear divisions without cytokinesis.
16. Microtubules: Components of the cytoskeleton that support and shape the cell and aid in intracellular transport; support filopodia in some rhizarians.
17. Calcium Carbonate: A chemical compound used by foraminiferans to construct their tests; contributes significantly to marine sediments and geological formations.
18. Benthic: Refers to organisms living on or in the seabed, the bottom of a water body.
19. Planktonic: Refers to organisms that drift or float in the water column, unable to swim against currents.
20. Ectocommensal: A relationship where one organism lives on the surface of another, deriving benefit without harming the host.