Colpodea

 The Colpodea are a class of ciliates, of about 200 species common in freshwater and soil habitats. The body cilia are typically uniform, and are supported by dikinetids of characteristic structure, with cilia on both kinetosomes. The mouth may be apical or ventral, with more or less prominent associated polykinetids. Many are asymmetrical, the cells twisting sideways and then untwisting again prior to division, which often takes place within cysts. Colpoda, a kidney-shaped ciliate common in organic rich conditions, is representative.

Colpodea
Colpoda inflata.jpg
Colpoda inflata
Scientific classificatione
Domain:Eukaryota
(unranked):Diaphoretickes
Clade:SAR
Infrakingdom:Alveolata
Phylum:Ciliophora
Subphylum:Intramacronucleata
Class:Colpodea
Small & Lynn 1981
Typical orders
  • Colpodida
  • Bursariomorphida
  • Cyrtolophosida
  • Bryophryida
  • Sorogenida
  • Bryometopida

Most ciliates placed here were originally considered advanced trichostomes, on the assumption that they lacked true oral cilia. However the Bursariomorphida, large carnivorous ciliates whose oral cavity forms a deep anterior pocket, were considered heterotrichs because of their prominent oral polykinetids. The modern class was first defined by Small & Lynn in 1981, based mainly on the structure of the body kinetids.

Note

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.