Discosea

Class of amoebae From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Discosea is a class of Amoebozoa, consisting of naked amoebae with a flattened, discoid body shape.[1] Members of the group do not produce tubular or subcylindrical pseudopodia, like amoebae of the class Tubulinea. When a discosean is in motion, a transparent layer called hyaloplasm forms at the leading edge of the cell (see lamellipodium). In some discoseans, short "subpseudopodia" may be extended from this hyaloplasm, but the granular contents of the cell do not flow into these, as in true pseudopodia. Discosean amoebae lack hard shells, but some, like Cochliopodium and Korotnevella secrete intricate organic scales which may cover the upper (dorsal) surface of the cell. No species have flagella or flagellated stages of life.[3][4]

Phylum:Amoebozoa
Subphylum:Lobosa
Class:Discosea
Cavalier-Smith et al. 2004[1]
Quick facts Scientific classification, Subclasses and orders ...
Discosea
Acanthamoeba sp.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Phylum: Amoebozoa
Subphylum: Lobosa
Class: Discosea
Cavalier-Smith et al. 2004[1]
Subclasses and orders[2]
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The composition of Discosea is similar to that of the class Flabellinea, proposed by Alexey Smirnov and his collaborators in 2005.[5] However, Discosea is a more comprehensive taxon, including several groups not included in Flabellinea.[6] In 2011, Smirnov et al. accepted Discosea as a class, and reduced Flabellinea to the rank of a subclass with the name Flabellinia.[3]

Taxonomy

Class Discosea Cavalier-Smith 2004 stat. nov. Adl et al. 2018[7]

References

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