- Euglyphid
Taxobox
name = Euglyphids
image_width = 250px
image_caption = "Euglypha" sp.
domain = Eukaryota
unranked_phylum =Rhizaria
phylum =Cercozoa
classis = Imbricatea
ordo = Euglyphida
ordo_authority = Copeland, 1956
subdivision_ranks = Families
subdivision =Cyphoderiidae Euglyphidae Paulinellidae Trinematidae The euglyphids are a prominent group of filose amoebae that produce shells or tests from siliceous scales, plates, and sometimes spines. These elements are created within the cell and then assembled on its surface in a more or less regular arrangement, giving the test a textured appearance. There is a single opening for the long slender pseudopods, which capture food and pull the cell across the substrate.Euglyphids are common in soils, marshes, and other organic-rich environments, feeding on tiny organisms such as bacteria. The test is generally 30-100 μm in length, although the cell only occupies part of this space. During reproduction a second shell is formed opposite the opening, so both daughter cells remain protected. Different genera and species are distinguished primarily by the form of the test. "Euglypha" and "Trinema" are the most common.
The euglyphids are traditionally grouped with other amoebae. However, genetic studies instead place them with various amoeboid and
flagellate groups, forming an assemblage called theCercozoa . Their closest relatives are thethaumatomonad s, flagellates that form similar siliceous tests.
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