Citizendia
Your Ad Here

Axodines
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Chromalveolata
Phylum: Heterokontophyta
Class: Actinochrysophyceae
Order: Dictyochales
Genus: Rhizochromulina

Rhizochromulina is an unusual genus of marine heterokont algae, with one species, R. Animals Plants fungi, and Protists are eukaryotes (juːˈkærɪɒt or -oʊt Organisms whose cells are organized into complex Chromalveolata is a Eukaryote supergroup first proposed by Thomas Cavalier-Smith as a refinement of his kingdom Chromista, which was first The heterokonts or stramenopiles are a major line of Eukaryotes presently containing about 10500 known species The axodines are a group of unicellular Heterokont algae They characteristically have a single emergent flagellum which lacks the root structure found in related groups and Silicoflagellates are a small group of unicellular Heterokont Algae, found in marine environments The heterokonts or stramenopiles are a major line of Eukaryotes presently containing about 10500 known species marina. They are colored amoeboids with a single flagellum, and produce distinctive spindle-shaped zoospores. These have a cell structure typical of the axodines. The axodines are a group of unicellular Heterokont algae They characteristically have a single emergent flagellum which lacks the root structure found in related groups and Before it was studied in detail, Rhizochromulina was included among the superficially similar golden algae in the order Chrysamoebales, but these produce zoospores which are similar to flagellate golden algae in form. The golden algae or chrysophytes are a large group of Heterokont Algae found mostly in freshwater


© 2009 citizendia.org; parts available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License, from http://en.wikipedia.org
Dapyx Software network: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic