DINOFLAGELLATA

dīˌnōflăjˌəlätˈə, –lāˈtə, phylum (division) of unicellular, mostly marine algae, called dinoflagellates. In some classification systems this division is called Pyrrhophyta. There are approximately 2,000 species of dinoflagellates. Most have two flagella that lie perpendicular to one another and cause them to spin as they move through the water. Most have walls, or thecae, that are rigid and armorlike and sometimes take on fantastic shapes. The plates that make up these walls are actually located inside the plasma membrane rather than outside, as cell walls are. Some species are heterotrophic, but many are photosynthetic organisms containing chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c. The green of these chlorophylls may be masked by various other pigments. Still other species are symbionts, living inside such organisms as jellyfish and corals. Food reserves are largely starch.

Reproduction for most dinoflagellates is asexual, through simple division of cells following mitosis. They are unusual in that in each cell, the chromosomes remain compact between divisions, instead of stretching out into slender threads, as in most other organisms. The chromosomes are constricted at regular intervals and do not have centromeres, or fiber-attachment centers. There is no spindle, yet the very numerous chromosomes are divided equally at the time of mitosis.

The dinoflagellates are important constituents of plankton, and as such are primary food sources in warmer oceans. Many forms are phosphorescent; they are largely responsible for the phosphorescence visible at night in tropical seas. The phenomenon known as red tide occurs when the rapid reproduction of certain dinoflagellate species results in large brownish red algal blooms. Some of these organisms are highly toxic and can kill fish and shellfish and kill or weaken the animals (including humans) that eat them in their turn or, in some cases, are merely exposed to water containing the organisms.

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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: Dinoflagellata  - 11 results

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...Foraminifera, of skeletal and flotation devices in the Dinoflagellata, and of fibrillar neuromotor systems in the Ciliata. Truly...Colony formation is rather widely prevalent among the Dinoflagellata. In its simplest and more widely prevalent form this is...
...distribution of zooplankton as follows: " 1 a greater occurrence of the Sareodina in the lower waters; 2 preference of the Dinoflagellata for upper waters; 3 general scattering of the Ciliata; 4 selection of different levels by the young and adult stages of...
...color, 106 reproduction, 218 Dice, L. R., 291 Dielectric constant, of water, 89 Difflugia , 229 Dimictic lakes, 116 Dinoflagellata, 213 Diplodontus despiciens , 250 Diptera, 254 - 255 Discharge, of streams, 51 effect of, on lake turbidity, 104 Dissolved...
...Univ. Cal. Pub. Zool., 19 , 317 -334. KOFOID C. A. and O. SWEZY. 1921. "The Free-swimming Unarmoured Dinoflagellata". Mem. Univ. of Calif., 5 , 1 -562. 388 fig. in text. 12 plates. OKADA Y. K. 1925. "Luminescence in Sponges...
...briefly mentioned, the zooxantellae, most of them belonging to the flagellate group Cryptomonadinae, some probably to the Dinoflagellata. Similar small algae have been found to occur also in company with coelenterates other than corals, e.g. hydrozoans...
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encyclopedia articles on: Dinoflagellata  - 5 results

 
 
DINOFLAGELLATA di noflaj lat , la t , phylum (division) of unicellular, mostly marine algae , called dinoflagellates. In some classification...
RED TIDE see Dinoflagellata . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...which is distributed near the surface oceanwide. Very abundant phytoplankton include the diatoms and dinoflagellates (see Dinoflagellata ). Heterotrophic plankton (zooplankton) include such protozoans as the foraminiferans ; they are found at all depths...
...prokaryotes in the kingdom Monera and renamed cyanobacteria . See the separate phyla (divisions) Chlorophyta , Euglenophyta , Dinoflagellata , Chrysophyta , Phaeophyta , Rhodophyta . Uses of Algae Algae, the major food of fish (and thus indirectly of many other...
PYRRHOPHYTA see Dinoflagellata . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.


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