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Protistology

  • 1st Edition - November 29, 2024
  • Latest edition
  • Author: Sina M. Adl
  • Language: English

Protistology provides a comprehensive overview on recent developments in understanding the diversity of cell biology, genomic processes, parasite-host interactions, and the evolut… Read more

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Description

Protistology provides a comprehensive overview on recent developments in understanding the diversity of cell biology, genomic processes, parasite-host interactions, and the evolution of eukaryotes. The book is the first modern treatise on these organisms, walking readers through protistology’s diversity and classification. This book is an ideal supplemental text for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students in microbial ecology, freshwater and marine biology, soil ecology, environmental sciences, or those looking to initiate a course in protistology.

Key features

  • Provides recent developments in understanding the diversity of cell biology, genomic processes, parasite-host interactions, and the evolution of eukaryotes
  • Covers the entire breadth of protists, including numerous illustrations, photographs, and figures
  • Provides accessible modern classification of protists
  • Presents comparative cell biology and evolutionary trends in the diversity of protists

Readership

Students and educators of microbial ecology, biodiversity and natural history, molecular phylogenies and bioinformatics, evolution, parasitology, and environmental sciences, Professionals in these sectors: pharmaceutical discovery, environmental remediation, pollution control, government environment and parks agencies, sustainable agriculture, plant pathology, animal and zoonotic diseases, algal biofuels, algal nutraceuticals and food supplements or additives, veterinary pathology, crop diseases, and medical microbiology and pathology clinicians

Table of contents

1 Introduction

1.1 What is a protist species?

1.2 How much lateral gene transfer in protist evolution?

1.3 Sex. Multiple origins or multiple losses?
References
Further reading
2 A very brief history

2.1 Diversity, classification, and nomenclature
References
Further reading
3 Protist systematics and classification

3.1 Assembling a classification from a phylogeny
References
Further reading
Section I
4 Archaeplastida

4.1 Diaphoretickes

4.2 Archaeplastida
References
Further reading
5 Cryptista
Further reading
6 Haptista

6.1 Haptophyta

6.2 Centroplasthelida
Further reading
7 Stramenopiles

7.1 Opalozoa

7.2 Sagenista

7.3 Gyrista

7.4 Chrysista

7.5 Diatomista
Further reading
8 Alveolata

8.1 Protoalveolates

8.2 Dinoflagellata

8.3 Apicomplexa

8.4 Ciliophora
References
Further reading
9 Rhizaria

9.1 Gymnosphaeridae

9.2 Cercozoa

9.3 Endomyxa

9.4 Radiolaria

9.5 Foraminifera
Further reading
10 Obazoa, CRuMs, Hemimastigophora, and miscellaneous eukaryotes
References
Further reading
11 Amoebozoa

11.1 Tubulinea

11.2 Evosea

11.3 Discosea
Further reading
12 Discoba

12.1 Discoba

12.2 Heterolobosea

12.3 Euglenozoa
Further reading
13 Metamonada

13.1 Fornicata

13.2 Parabasalia

13.3 Preaxostyla
Further reading
14 Opisthokonta

14.1 Holomycota

14.2 Zoopagomycota

14.3 Mucoromycete

14.4 Dikarya

14.5 Holozoa
References
Further reading Holomycota
Further reading Holozoa
Section II
15 Origin of eukaryotes

15.1 Atmosphere composition and temperature

15.2 Earliest fossil eukaryotes
References
16 Origin of protists

16.1 Serial endosymbiosis

16.2 A common cytoplasm for diverse genomes

16.3 Sex

16.4 Introns and the nucleus

16.5 Endomembranes

16.6 Anaerobic to aerobic respiration

16.7 Vesicle transport and cytoskeleton

16.8 Tubulin

16.9 Nuclear pores and cilium

16.10 Microtubular organizing center

16.11 Elements of the cytoskeleton
References
Further reading
17 Cell cycle regulation

17.1 Growth and division of organelles and endosymbionts

17.2 Morphogenesis and cytoskeleton

17.3 Cell cycle duration and growth phase

17.4 Cell size regulation
Glossary
References
Further reading
18 Cell shape

18.1 Kinetosome polarity and asymmetry

18.2 Kinetid orientation, rotation, and enantiomers

18.3 Singlets and doublets

18.4 Pattern memory

18.5 Mirror-imaged doublets

18.6 The anterioreposterior axis

18.7 Molecular basis for anterioreposterior axis determination

18.8 Mutants of the global cell patterning

18.9 Patterns in the evolution of protist cell morphology

18.10 Concluding remarks
References
Further reading
19 Photosynthesis and primary plastid endosymbiosis

19.1 Primary plastid in Archaeplastida

19.2 Paulinella

19.3 Adjusting to toxicity of oxygenic photosynthesis

19.4 Light-harvesting complex
References
Further reading
20 Secondary and tertiary plastid serial endosymbiosis

20.1 Ochrophyta (Stramenopiles)

20.2 Euglenida

20.3 From endosymbiont to organelle

20.4 Cryptomonad and chlorarachnion nucleomorphs

20.5 Dinoflagellates with nucleomorphs

20.6 Transitional plastid stages

20.7 “You are what you eat”

20.8 Envoi
References
21 Organellar loss and gain of functions

21.1 Gaining and losing

21.2 Extrusomes

21.3 Loss of photosynthesis and plastid loss of function

21.4 Mitochondrion loss of function in anaerobic environments

21.5 Endosymbiosis and metabolic gains
References
Further reading
22 Touching, feeling, sensing

22.1 Porifera species discrimination

22.2 Foundations of behavior in Paramecium

22.3 Chemotaxis

22.4 Excystment and spore germination

22.5 Host specificity and membrane recognition

22.6 Predatoreprey interactions
References
Further reading
23 Sex

23.1 The sexual cycle

23.2 From isogamy to anisogamy

23.3 The many forms of meiosis

23.4 Mating types and sexual complementarity

23.5 Remarks on sex in protists

23.6 Sex
References
24 Evolution of the genetic code
References
Further reading
25 Glossary
Legend to symbols in figures
Abbreviations
26 Protistology societies and journals

26.1 Societies

26.2 Journals
Further reading
27 Appendix. Summary of the PhyloCode

27.1 Codes of nomenclature

27.2 Summary of the PhyloCode

27.3 Glossary
References
Further reading

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: December 5, 2024
  • Language: English

About the author

SA

Sina M. Adl

Dr. Sina Adl, has been a university Professor since 2002. He graduated with a PhD from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, in 1998. His research has been in 1) protist diversity and classification; 2) soil ecology and sustainable agriculture; 3) soil food webs and community structure; 4) global soil biodiversity and biogeography. He is a past-President of the International Society of Protistologists (an umbrella society for various national and related disciplinary societies). He has taught Microbial Diversity, Microbial Ecology, Comparative Protistology, Soil Ecology, and Global Food Security (from a sustainable agriculture perspective). He is the founding editor, and Editor-in-Chief of Rhizosphere (Elsevier), a soil ecology journal.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor, Department of Soil Sciences, College of Agriculture and Bioresources, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, Canada

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