AMEBA

or amoebaboth: əmēˈbə, common name for certain one-celled organisms belonging to the phylum Sarcodina of the kingdom Protista. Amebas were previously classified as members of the animal kingdom. Most amebas are very small (from 5 to 20 microns in diameter) and contain a single nucleus. A. proteus averages 0.25 mm in length. Members of the genus Pelomyxa, however, may be well over a millimeter (up to 8 mm) in diameter and may contain hundreds of nuclei.

Amebas constantly change the shape of their bodies as a result of the phenomenon known as ameboid movement, involving the formation of temporary extensions (pseudopodia, or false feet) of the body. Pseudopodia, used in locomotion and feeding, may be rounded at the tip (lobopodia), pointed (filopodia), branched and fused together (rhizopodia), or somewhat rigid and pointed (axopodia).

Although simple in form, amebas are very successful organisms and are found abundantly in a variety of habitats all over the world. Amebas live in freshwater, the oceans, and in the upper layers of the soil, and many have adapted to a parasitic life on the body surface of aquatic animals or in the internal organs of both aquatic and terrestrial animals. Few animals escape invasion by some type of ameba. Some are harmless, but others are pathogenic and cause serious diseases; e.g., Entamoeba histolytica causes amebic dysentery, which is fatal if untreated. The many genera of amebas were given their common name because of their resemblance to the genus Amoeba (order Amoebida), which includes several large, common species of which the freshwater Amoeba proteus is the most familiar.

The term ameba is sometimes also used to refer to other unicellular protists (e.g., slime molds) that have ameboid features such as pseudopodia. Other ameboid protozoans of the phylum Sarcodina include the marine radiolarians, which form silicate skeletons; their freshwater counterparts, the heliozoans; and the shell-bearing foraminiferans.

Digestion and Respiration

In a process known as phagocytosis, amebas engulf their prey, or particles of appropriate size, with their pseudopodia, forming food vacuoles. Digestive enzymes, manufactured and secreted by the organism, are then poured into these vacuoles, and the particles are digested. Useful compounds are subsequently absorbed into the ameba's body. Useless residues remain in the vacuoles and are ultimately expelled (egested) as the vacuole comes in contact with the membrane at the body surface. Amebas can distinguish food (e.g., algae, diatoms, bacteria, and other protozoans) from other material and use different tactics in approaching different food. Freshwater amebas take up water constantly through the process of osmosis, and water content is regulated with a pulsating contractile vacuole. Marine amebas lack a contractile vacuole. Respiration is by diffusion of gases through the cell membrane.

Reproduction

Under favorable conditions amebas divide by binary fission (splitting) to produce two daughter amebas, the nucleus dividing by mitosis. When an ameba is divided artificially, the portion containing the nucleus forms a new cell membrane and continues as a whole animal, while the other portion lives only as long as its present food supply lasts, ultimately dying, since it cannot ingest food or reproduce. If conditions are unfavorable, e.g., in the absence of food and water, amebas secrete a firm protective covering and encyst until conditions are again favorable to active division.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Ameba  - 98 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...language. I am going to consider what the ameba must know in the sense of knowledge in...so long, of course, as we observe the ameba as a whole organical system, and do not...passivity. What can be observed is that the ameba seems to be purposefully engaged in seeking...
sol. Moreover, as the ameba moves forward, it is believed to extend...primarily responsible for the movement of the ameba. As to the reasons for the gelation...greater acidity at the anterior end of an ameba. However, Mast 56 was unable to repeat...
...in still simpler forms of behavior, such as in the ameba, for this animal, also, modifies its own behavior...toward remote ends. Modifiability of Behavior in the Ameba: Schaeffer. The ameba is a one-celled animal having no permanent shape...
...such as neutral red. In an immobile ameba there is a peripheral stain that is similar all around. As soon as the ameba becomes mobile the staining decreases...in an inactive state, c, in a dead ameba. The shading indicates the intensity...
...the first place, let us consider some experiments with ameba. If ameba is subjected to ultraviolet radiation, there is an immediate...calcium oxalate crystals there. But to return to the ameba. I have pointed out that when the ameba cell is stimulated...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Ameba  - 3 results

 
 
...occurring language use via blogs (including Ameba and Mixi), e-mails (via both PC and...three-quarters (8/12 participants). Ameba blogs, while also viewed as a Japanese...other, less frequently used domains like Ameba (a blogging site) and WebKare (or Web...
...canal workers by 1840 (see zhttp://ameba.lpt.fi/~zaphod/lyrics/paddy...23.) Meaghers men (see http://ameba.lpt.fi/~zaphod/lyrics/splintered...York City in 1861-62. (see http://ameba.lpt.fi/~zaphod/lyrics/paddys...
...American English spelling is usually e (e.g., estrogen) and occasionally oe (e.g., sometimes amoeba but more commonly ameba), especially in nonexclusive variants; but the British English spelling is oe in variants that tend to be exclusive (e...


 

magazine articles on: Ameba  - 4 results

 
 
...in Boulder, Colorado. She is currently pursuing her MFA in dance at the University of Colorado, Boulder. WHERE T0 STUDY AMEBA, Chicago, IL, www.amebadance.org ARC SCHOOL OF BALLET, Seattle, WA, www.arcdance.org CYCROPIA AERIAL DANCE, Madison...
...long as you have a moderate level of physical fitness, youre ready to give it a try," says Chloe Jensen, co-director of Ameba Acrobatic and Aerial Dance in Chicago. "Aerial takes a significant amount of upper body and core strength, but a dancer can...
...recognized complications. Id been thrown off track by Mr. jamals lack of typical colonic symptoms and by the paucity of ameba in his stool sample. But serendipitously, perhaps because of my headstrong desire to help, Id given Mr. jamal the right...
...carried on for some years by the Chicago Tribune, bastion of Midwestern Anglophobia, which between 1934 and 1975 used such spellings as "autograf" "ameba" "burocrat," and "rime," until finally its editors decided that enuf was enough.


 

encyclopedia articles on: Ameba  - 4 results

 
 
AMEBA or amoeba both: me b , common name for certain...may contain hundreds of nuclei. The giant ameba Gromia sphaerica, found on the ocean floor...Few animals escape invasion by some type of ameba. Some are harmless, but others are pathogenic...
...see bacteria ) of the Shigella group, and infestation by an ameba , Entamoeba histolytica. Both bacillary and amebic dysentery...cyst. The cyst is the inactive, resistant stage in which the ameba is transmitted from one host to another; the active form is...
AMOEBA see ameba . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...plasmodium again when favorable conditions return. In the case of the cellular slime molds, each spore released becomes a single ameba, which feeds individually until starving cells release a chemical signal that causes them to aggregate into a new pseudoplasmodium...


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