- The
oligotrichs are a
group of ciliates,
included among the spirotrichs. They have
prominent oral cilia,
which are
arranged as a
collar and lapel, in...
- generalists,
which can use
chloroplasts stolen from a
variety of prey (e.g.
oligotrich ciliates), or specialists,
which have
developed the need to only acquire...
- Again, they are
generally divided into
oligotrichs and c****otrichs, but were
originally all
considered oligotrichs. The
latter group includes the tintinnids...
-
retain chloroplasts and
rarely other organelles from many
algal taxa Most
oligotrich ciliates that
retain plastidsa Specialists 1.
Protists that
retain chloroplasts...
- Halteria,
sometimes referred to as the
jumping oligotrich, is a
genus of
common planktonic ciliates that are
found in many
freshwater environments. Halteria...
- and T. lata. Additionally, and
quite common in
English coastal waters,
oligotrich ciliates of the
family Strombidiidae (order Oligotrichida) and c****otrich...
- Many live
short and
productive lives and
reach maturity quickly. The
oligotrichs are a
group of
ciliates which have
prominent oral
cilia arranged like...
-
morphologically dissimilar spirotrich ciliates, such as the
tintinnids and the
oligotrichs. In the
classification system developed by
Denis Lynn in collaboration...
-
retain chloroplasts and
rarely other organelles from many
algal taxa Most
oligotrich ciliates that
retain plastidsa Specialists 1.
Protists that
retain chloroplasts...
- animals, and not tintinnids.
Often they have been
included among the
oligotrichs.
Tintinnids seem to be an
excessively specious group as over 400 living...