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Research Results For 'Rhizopoda'

AMOEBINA

The Amoebina is an order of Rhizopoda. The order is comprised of the amoeba and its relatives. Reproduction is usually by binary fission.
Research Amoebina

FORAMINIFERA

Foraminifera is an order of animals of low type belonging to the class Rhizopoda, of the Phylum Protozoa, furnished with a shell or test, simple or complex, usually perforated by pores called foramina from which the animals get their name.

The shell may be composed of horny matter, or of carbonate of lime, secreted from the water in which they live. Owing to the resemblance of their convoluted chambered shells to those of the nautilus, they were at first reckoned among the most highly organized molluscs. In reality they are among the simplest of the protozoa. The body of the animal is composed of granular, gelatinous, highly elastic sarcode, which not only fills the shell, but passes through the perforations to the exterior, there giving off long thread - like processes called pseudopodia interlacing each other so as to form a net like a spider's web. Internally the sarcode-body exhibits no structure or definite organs of any kind.

Foraminifera appear very early in the geological formations. The great formation known as white chalk is largely composed of foraminiferous shells, while another remarkable formation known as Nummulitic Limestone receives its name from the presence of coin-shaped foraminifera, generally about 25 mm diameter.
Research Foraminifera

HELIOZOA

The Heliozoa are an order of Rhizopoda. The body is radially symmetrical and the pseudopodia are thin and stiff. Reproduction is by fission and sexually by the fusion of gametes.
Research Heliozoa

MYCETOZOA

The mycetozoa (Myxomycophyta) are a family of Rhizopoda. They are slime fungi which form encrusting masses on rotten wood. Reproduction occurs by fission and the formation of spores out of which hatch amoebae.
Research Mycetozoa

RADIOLARIA

The Radiolaria are an order of Rhizopoda. They are radially symmetrical and live in the surface layers of seas. They have stiff, radiating pseudopodia and a skeleton.
Research Radiolaria

RHIZOMASTIGINA

The rhizomastigina are an order of Rhizopoda. They are small amoeboid forms with a flagellum. They live in fresh water.
Research Rhizomastigina

RHIZOPODA

Rhizopoda is a class of Phylum Protozoa which are usually free-living and move and ingest food by means of pseudopodia.
Research Rhizopoda

THALAMOPHORA

The Thalamophora are an order of Rhizopoda. They are amoeboid forms protected by a shell. There are apertures in the shell through which the pseudopodia extend.
Research Thalamophora

 

 
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