<tr><td align="center">Paramecium aurelia
Paramecium aurelia, a ciliate <tr><th bgcolor=khaki>Scientific classification <tr><td>
open encyclopedia * Article Search: * *
*
*

Protist

From open-encyclopedia.com - the free encyclopedia.

Protists
<tr><td>Domain:<td>Eukaryota <tr><td>Kingdom:<td>Protista </table> <tr><th bgcolor=khaki>Typical phyla <tr><td> Rhodophyta (red algae)
Chromista
   Heterokontophyta (heterokonts)
   Haptophyta
   Cryptophyta (cryptomonads)
Alveolates
   Pyrrhophyta (dinoflagellates)
   Apicomplexa
   Ciliophora (ciliates)
Excavates
   Euglenozoa
   Percolozoa
   Metamonada
Rhizaria
   Radiolaria
   Foraminifera
   Cercozoa
Amoebozoa
Choanozoa
Many others; classification varies </table> The Kingdom Protista or Protoctista is one of the commonly recognized biological kingdoms, including all the eukaryotes except for the plants, fungi, animals, and sometimes other groups which are treated in separate kingdoms. A few forms are multicellular, for instance the brown and red algae. The vast majority, though, comprise the single-celled organisms, and are typically only 0.01-0.5 mm in size, usually too small to be seen without a microscope. Protists are ubiquitous throughout aqueous environments and the soil, commonly surviving dry periods in the form of cysts; a few are important parasites. Traditionally protists have been divided into: In early classifications the protozoa were considered a phylum of animals, and the algae and slime moulds were placed among several divisions of plants. Many forms were classified under both kingdoms and researched by zoologists and botanists alike. Eventually the kingdom Protista was created to house these forms, with the classes of protozoa (corresponding roughly to the above) being promoted to phyla. Except for the ciliates and water moulds, however, all the above groups are polyphyletic and frequently overlapping. Further, the protists themselves are understood to be paraphyletic to the other eukaryotic kingdoms. More recently attempts have been made to divide protists into more genuine groups on the basis of ultrastructural, chemical, and genetic features. In newer classification systems these are often treated as separate kingdoms. However, there are still many different lines of protists whose relationships are not understood. Many scientists now consider the various protist clades as direct subgroups of the eukaryotes, with the admission that we do not yet know enough about them to properly arrange them into a hierarchy. A few major groups are listed at right; others are described under the pages linked to above. bg:Протиста da:Protist de:Protisten es:Protista eo:Protistoj fr:Protiste ja:原生生物 pl:Protisty pt:Protista sv:Protista
Contribute Found an omission? You can freely contribute to this Wikipedia article. Edit Article
User Josh_Grosse (Last Contributor)     Talk Discussion     Image Image Attributions     Source GNU FDL Verbatim
Copyright © 2003-2004 Zeeshan Muhammad. All rights reserved. Legal notices. Part of the New Frontier Information Network.