Pseudocollinia

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Pseudocollinia
Scientific classification
Domain:
(unranked):
SAR
(unranked):
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Pseudocollinia
Species

P. brintoni

Pseudocollinia is a genus of parasitoid ciliate of the Colliniidae family. [1]

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The alveolates are a group of protists, considered a major clade and superphylum within Eukarya. They are currently grouped with the stramenopiles and Rhizaria among the protists with tubulocristate mitochondria, the group being referred to as SAR.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heterotrich</span> Class of single-celled organisms

The heterotrichs are a class of ciliates. They typically have a prominent adoral zone of membranelles circling the mouth, used in locomotion and feeding, and shorter cilia on the rest of the body. Many species are highly contractile, and are typically compressed or conical in form. These include some of the largest protozoa, such as Stentor and Spirostomum, as well as many brightly pigmented forms, such as certain Blepharisma.

The plagiopylids are a small order of ciliates, including a few forms common in anaerobic habitats.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Parasitoid</span> Organism that lives with host and kills it

In evolutionary ecology, a parasitoid is an organism that lives in close association with its host at the host's expense, eventually resulting in the death of the host. Parasitoidism is one of six major evolutionary strategies within parasitism, distinguished by the fatal prognosis for the host, which makes the strategy close to predation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Phyllopharyngea</span> Class of single-celled organisms

The Phyllopharyngea are a class of ciliates, some of which are extremely specialized. Motile cells typically have cilia restricted to the ventral surface, or some part thereof, arising from monokinetids with a characteristic ultrastructure. In both chonotrichs and suctoria, however, only newly formed cells are motile and the sessile adults have undergone considerable modifications of form and appearance. Chonotrichs, found mainly on crustaceans, are vase-shaped, with cilia restricted to a funnel leading down into the mouth. Mature suctorians lack cilia altogether, and initially were not classified as ciliates.

The Syndiniales are an order of early branching dinoflagellates, found as parasites of crustaceans, fish, algae, cnidarians, and protists. The trophic form is often multinucleate, and ultimately divides to form motile spores, which have two flagella in typical dinoflagellate arrangement. They lack a theca and chloroplasts, and unlike all other orders, the nucleus is never a dinokaryon. A well-studied example is Amoebophrya, which is a parasite of other dinoflagellates and may play a part in ending red tides. Several MALV groups have been assigned to Syndiniales; recent studies, however, show paraphyly of MALVs suggesting that only those groups that branch as sister to dinokaryotes belong to Syndiniales.

Cecidosidae is a family of primitive monotrysian moths in the order Lepidoptera which have a piercing ovipositor used for laying eggs in plant tissue in which they induce galls, or they mine in bark. Nine species occur in southern Africa, five species in South America and Xanadoses nielseni was recently described from New Zealand. Some minute parasitoid wasps are known.

<i>Colpoda</i> Genus of single-celled organisms

Colpoda is a genus of ciliates in the class Colpodea, order Colpodida, and family Colpodidae.

Karyorelictea is a class of ciliates in the subphylum Postciliodesmatophora. Most species are members of the microbenthos community, that is, microscopic organisms found in the marine interstitial habitat, though one genus, Loxodes, is found in freshwater.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Myzozoa</span> Group of single-celled organisms

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Colliniidae</span> Family of single-celled organisms

Colliniidae is a family of ciliates of the order Apostomatida.

Pseudocollinia brintoni is a species of parasitoid ciliates of the Colliniidae family. P. brintoni infects a species of krill, Nyctiphanes simplex.

<i>Collinia</i> Genus of single-celled organisms

Collinia is a genus of parasitoid ciliates of the Colliniidae family.

Collinia beringensis is a species of parasitoid ciliates of the Colliniidae family. It is an endoparasite of Thysanoessa inermis, a species of krill.

<i>Collinia oregonensis</i> Species of single-celled organism

Collinia oregonensis is a species of parasitoid ciliates of the Colliniidae family. It is known to infect the krill Euphausia pacifica, Thysanoessa spinifera, and Thysanoessa gregaria off the coast of Oregon and Washington. It caused a mass mortality of E. pacifica in June 2001 at the base of Astoria Canyon.

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Chromidina is a genus of apostome ciliates of the family Opalinopsidae. Species of Chromidina are parasitic in the renal and pancreatic appendages of cephalopods.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Armophorea</span> Class of single-celled organisms

Armophorea is a class of ciliates in the subphylum Intramacronucleata. . It was first resolved in 2004 and comprises three orders: Metopida, Clevelandellida, and Armophorida. Previously members of this class were thought to be heterotrichs because of similarities in morphology, most notably a characteristic dense arrangement of cilia surrounding their oral structures. However, the development of genetic tools and subsequent incorporation of DNA sequence information has led to major revisions in the evolutionary relationships of many protists, including ciliates. Metopids, clevelandellids, and armophorids were grouped into this class based on similarities in their small subunit rRNA sequences, making them one of two so-called "riboclasses" of ciliates, however, recent analyses suggest that Armophorida may not be related to the other two orders.

Miamiensis avidus is a species of unicellular marine eukaryote that is a parasite of many different types of fish. It is one of several organisms known to cause the fish disease scuticociliatosis and is considered an economically significant pathogen of farmed fish. M. avidus is believed to be the cause of a 2017 die-off of fish and sharks in the San Francisco Bay.

References

  1. Gómez-Gutiérrez, J.; Strüder-Kypke, MC; Lynn, DH; Shaw, TC; Aguilar-Méndez, MJ; López-Cortés, A.; Martínez-Gómez, S.; Robinson, CJ (May 2012). "Pseudocollinia brintoni gen. nov., sp. nov.(Apostomatida: Colliniidae), a parasitoid ciliate infecting the euphausiid Nyctiphanes simplex". Diseases of Aquatic Organisms. 99 (1): 57–78. doi: 10.3354/dao02450 . PMID   22585303.