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Pediglissa

Subclass of protists From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Pediglissa (from Ancient Greek πέδον 'soil' and French glisser 'to glide') is a subclass of phagotrophic protists that inhabit soil or freshwater habitats. They were defined in 2018 according to phylogenetic analyses that showed a clade containing the orders Cercomonadida and Glissomonadida. They're the sister group of Paracercomonadida.[1]

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Morphology and behavior

Pediglissa are biciliate protists that glide on their posterior cilium and have a strong tendency to become amoeboid during feeding, unlike the metromonads. Their pseudopodia are more often shaped like rounded lamellae than finger-like or filose pseudopodia, unlike the paracercomonads. Their anterior cilium is often well developed, unlike in helkesids, but can be short in glissomonads; it moves with an undulating oar-like beat. The trophic cells (i.e. feeding forms) are naked, without a theca, scales, or perles, unlike in Thecofilosea and many freshwater Imbricatea.[1]

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Diversity

Pediglissa includes the majority of known cercozoan soil flagellates, all gliding on a single posterior cilium only:[1] the largely bacterivorous Cercomonadida, and the Glissomonadida[2] which include pansomonads and the algivorous Viridiraptoridae of recent description.[3]

References

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