Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Evolution and Speciation in Protozoa [Kõva köide]

(Madurai Kamaraj University, Tamilnadu, India)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 180 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 453 g, 39 Tables, black and white; 19 Line drawings, black and white; 38 Halftones, black and white; 57 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Feb-2023
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 1032347511
  • ISBN-13: 9781032347516
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 180 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 453 g, 39 Tables, black and white; 19 Line drawings, black and white; 38 Halftones, black and white; 57 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Feb-2023
  • Kirjastus: CRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 1032347511
  • ISBN-13: 9781032347516
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Presently, there are more concerns for species diversity than for evolution. The year 2010 marked the International Year of 'Species Diversity'. This book identifies some life history features of plants 'from algae to angiosperms' and environmental factors that accelerate species diversity and others that decelerate it"--

The polyphyletic Protozoa have explored the possibility of performing almost all metazoan functions with a few subcellular organelles.



The polyphyletic Protozoa have explored the possibility of performing almost all metazoan functions with a few subcellular organelles. Their unicellularity and structural simplicity have (i) limited diversity to 32,950 species, (ii) restricted spatial distribution to aquatic habitats (94%, against 15% in Metazoa), (iii) demonstrated the ubiquitous dominance of clonality, (iv) reduced sexualization in 50% species, (v) facilitated the use of vegetative gametes in 40% species and (vi) secondary loss of sex in 10% species. With the fastest multiplication rates, i.e. once every 6-60 hours, they occur in high densities of 105-106 cell/ml. Their diverse and complicated life cycles are described in 30 types. Being risky, the cycle involves two hosts in < 2,000 parasitic species and injective transmission mode by sanguivorous insects and ticks in < 300 species. Their radial symmetry has accelerated diversity more than in radially symmetric less speciose Porifera (8,553 species), Cnidaria (10,856) and Echinodermata (7,000). In them, diversity is decelerated in the following descending order: symmetry > clonality > hermaphroditism > motility. Motility ranges from 2-3 µm for Rhizopoda to 400-2,000 µm for Ciliophora. Not surprisingly, 6,800 species of arcellinids, filosians and formainifers are testated or shelled. Within 1,229 sessile species, the peritrichid and suctorian ciliates are better adapted to coloniality. Unlike those of many Metazoa, the protozoan cyst is a dynamic stage, in which clonal or sexual reproduction occurs. Over 81% protozoans encyst, as it ensures (i) 90% survival during unfavorable conditions (against 15 in 12% non-encysted protozoans), (ii) genome transfer through generations, (iii) dispersal into new habitats and (iv) transmission to new hosts. Their mean body size ranges from 2 µm to 2 mm – a range over 1,000-times – only 8% aquatic metazoans cover a similar size range. In comparison to 77% macrophagy in Metazoa, only 46% protozoans are macrophagous predators. Within motile microphagy, protozoans filter 3-2 times smaller food particle at 50% cheaper clearance cost. This efficiency has expanded microphagy to 15% in protozoans, against 3% in Metazoa. Hence, their turnover rate in trophic dynamics is twice faster than that of metazoans. Foraminifers serve as ecological sensitive indicators in petroleum exploration and rise in sea level. For the first time, incidences of clonality and meiosis as well as symbiosis and parasitism have been shown to hint at the origin and evolution of different protozoan taxonomic groups during the geological past.

Preface iii
Acknowledgements v
Preamble xi
1 General Introduction
1(61)
Introduction
1(2)
1.1 Form and Function
3(4)
1.2 Classification and Taxonomic Distribution
7(11)
1.3 Life Cycles
18(32)
1.3.1 Mastigophora
19(6)
1.3.2 Rhizopoda
25(7)
1.3.3 Sporozoa
32(14)
1.3.4 Ciliophora
46(4)
1.4 Motiles - Sessiles - Colonials
50(4)
1.5 Encystation - Excystation
54(4)
1.6 Shells and Skeletons
58(2)
1.7 Species - Number - Diversity
60(2)
2 Spatial Distribution
62(5)
Introduction
62(1)
2.1 Horizontal Distribution
63(2)
2.2 Colonization of Land
65(2)
3 Acquisition of Nutrients and Food
67(12)
Introduction
67(3)
3.1 Feeding Types and Quantification
70(4)
3.2 The Filter-Feeding Ciliates
74(5)
4 Commensals--Symbionts-Parasites
79(15)
Introduction
79(1)
4.1 Commensalism
79(1)
4.2 Symbiosis
80(5)
4.3 Parasitism
85(9)
5 Sexual Reproduction
94(7)
Introduction
94(1)
5.1 Sex and Sexuality
95(3)
5.2 Nuclear Fusion and Fertilization
98(1)
5.3 Chlamydomonas - Volvocids
99(2)
6 Clonal Multiplication--Regeneration
101(7)
Introduction
101(1)
6.1 Binary Fission
101(2)
6.2 Multiple Fission
103(1)
6.3 Solitary Fragmenters vs Colonial Budders
104(4)
7 Gametogenesis
108(9)
Introduction
108(1)
7.1 Mitosis - Meiosis
108(2)
7.2 Vegetative Gametes and Reproduction
110(3)
7.3 Germinal Micronucleus and Reproduction
113(1)
7.4 Mitotic Gametes and Reproduction
114(3)
8 Induction and Morphogenesis
117(8)
Introduction
117(1)
8.1 Induction of Clonal Multiplication
117(3)
8.2 Induction of Gametogenesis
120(1)
8.3 Gametocyte Ratio
120(1)
8.4 Sex Chromosomes and Genes
121(1)
8.5 Morphogenesis
122(3)
9 Diversity: Symmetry-Sexuality-Motility
125(6)
Introduction
125(1)
9.1 Symmetry
125(3)
9.2 Clonality
128(1)
9.3 Sexuality
129(1)
9.4 Motility
129(2)
10 Past: Emergence of Protozoa
131(12)
Introduction
131(1)
10.1 Geological Time Table
131(2)
10.2 Geological Past
133(2)
10.3 Meiosis and Gametogenesis
135(1)
10.4 Symbiosis and Parasitism
136(2)
10.5 Origin of Diversification
138(5)
11 Present: Conservation and Dormancy
143(4)
Introduction
143(1)
11.1 Dormancy - Excystation
144(3)
12 Future: Climate Change
147(7)
Introduction
147(1)
12.1 Air - Water Interaction
147(2)
12.2 Green Shoots and New Hopes
149(5)
13 References
154(11)
Author Index 165(4)
Species Index 169(7)
Subject Index 176(3)
Author's Biography 179
Recipient of the S.S. Bhatnagar Prize, the highest Indian award for scientists, one of the ten National Professorships, T.J. Pandian has served as editor/member of editorial boards of many international journals. His books on Animal Energetics (Academic Press) identify him as a prolific but precise writer. His five volumes on Sexuality, Sex Determination and Differentiation in Fishes, published by CRC Press, are ranked with five stars. He has authored a multi-volume series on Reproduction and Development of Aquatic Invertebrates, of which the volumes on Crustacea, Mollusca, Echinodermata and Prochordata, Annelida, Platyhelminthes and Minor Phyla have been published. The CRC Press has recently published his new book series on Evolution and Speciation in Animals and Evolution and Speciation in Plants. The third volume on Evolution and Speciation in Protozoa is in your hands.