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Vintage-Views Antique Prints and Maps :: Antique Prints :: Scientific :: Other Scientific :: MICROSCOPIC VIEWS OF PROTOZOA,1894 Original Antique Wood Engraving

MICROSCOPIC VIEWS OF PROTOZOA,1894 Original Antique Wood Engraving
MICROSCOPIC VIEWS OF PROTOZOA,1894 Original Antique Wood Engraving
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Protozoa (in Greek proto = first and zoa = animal) are single-celled eukaryotes (organisms whose cells have nuclei) that commonly show characteristics usually associated with animals, most notably mobility and heterotrophy. They are often grouped in the kingdom Protista together with the plant-like algae and fungus-like water molds and slime molds. In some newer schemes, however, most algae are classified in the kingdoms Plantae and Chromista, and in such cases the remaining forms may be classified as a kingdom Protozoa. The name is misleading, since they are not animals. Protozoa have traditionally been divided on the basis of their means of locomotion, although this is no longer believed to represent genuine relationships: * Flagellates * Amoeboids * Sporozoans: Apicomplexa, Myxozoa, Microsporidia * Ciliates Most protozoans are too small to be seen with the naked eye - most are around 0.01-0.05 mm, although forms up to 0.5 mm are still fairly common - but can easily be found under a microscope. Protozoa are ubiquitous throughout aqueous environments and the soil, and play an important role in their ecology. Protozoa occupy a range of trophic levels. As predators upon unicellular or filamentous algae, bacteria, and microfungi, protozoa play a role both as herbivores and as consumers in the decomposer link of the food chain. Protozoa also play a vital role in controlling bacteria population and biomass. As components of the micro- and meiofauna, protozoa are an important food source for microinvertebrates. Thus, the ecological role of protozoa in the transfer of bacterial and algal production to successive trophic levels is important. Protozoa such as the malaria parasites, trypanosomes and leishmania are also important as parasites and symbionts of multicellular animals.

Published for Joseph Meyer Meyers Konversations

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