Pelagomonas

Pelagomonas is a genus of heterokont algae. It is a monotypic genus and includes a single species, Pelagomonas calceolata[1][2] which is a unicellular flagellate organism, an ubiquitous constituent of marine picoplankton.[3][4] It is an ultra-planktonic marine alga.

Pelagomonas
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Diaphoretickes
Clade: SAR
Clade: Stramenopiles
Phylum: Gyrista
Subphylum: Ochrophytina
Class: Dictyochophyceae
Order: Pelagomonadales
Family: Pelagomonadaceae
Genus: Pelagomonas
R.A.Andersen & G.W.Saunders
Species:
P. calceolata
Binomial name
Pelagomonas calceolata
R.A.Andersen & G.W.Saunders

Description

Pelagomonas calceolata is uniflagellate, about 1.5 × 3 μm in size. Microtubular roots, striated roots and a second basal body are absent. A thin organic theca surrounds most of the cell. There is a single chloroplast with a girdle lamella and a single, dense mitochondrion with tubular cristae. A single Golgi body with swelled cisternae lies beneath the flagellum, and each cell has an ejectile organelle that putatively releases a cylindrical structure. A vacuole, or cluster of vacuoles, contains the putative carbohydrate storage product.[4]

References

  1. "Pelagomonas". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2017-06-13.
  2. Céline Dimier; Saviello Giovanni; Tramontano Ferdinando; Christophe Brunet (2009). "Comparative ecophysiology of the xanthophyll cycle in six marine phytoplanktonic species". Protist. 160 (3): 397–411. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2009.03.001. PMID 19375387.
  3. Wetherbee R.; Gornik S. G.; Grant B.; Waller R. F. (2015). "Andersenia, a genus of filamentous, sand-dwelling Pelagophyceae from southeastern Australia". Phycologia. 54 (1): 35–48. doi:10.2216/14-107.1. S2CID 84982713.
  4. Andersen, Robert A.; Sounders, Gary W.; Paskind, Michael P.; Sexton, Julianne P. (1993). "Ultrastructure and 18Srrna Gene Sequence Forpelagomonas Calceolatagen. Et Sp. Nov. And the Description of a New Algal Class, the Pelagophyceae Classis Nov.1". Journal of Phycology. 29 (5): 701–715. doi:10.1111/j.0022-3646.1993.00701.x. ISSN 0022-3646. S2CID 86440314.

Further reading


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