euglena - définition. Qu'est-ce que euglena
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est euglena - définition

GENUS OF UNICELLULAR FLAGELLATE PROTISTS
Euglenas; Khawkinea; Crumenula; Euglena acus; Metaboly; Cercaria O.F.Müller, 1773
  • ''Euglena'' from [[Félix Dujardin]]'s ''Histoire Naturelle des Zoophytes'', 1841
  • Diagram of ''Euglena''
  • Euglena, moving by metaboly and swimming
  • Euglena mutabilis, showing metaboly, paramylon bodies and chloroplasts
  • ''Euglena sanguinea''
  • Red Euglena sp.
  • Euglenoid movement, known as metaboly
  • O.F. Müller]]'s ''Animalcula Infusoria''. 1786

euglena         
[ju:'gli:n?]
¦ noun Biology a single-celled freshwater flagellate organism, sometimes forming a green scum on stagnant water. [Genus Euglena.]
Derivatives
euglenoid noun & adjective
Origin
mod. L., from eu- + Gk glene 'eyeball, socket of joint'.
Euglena         
Euglena is a genus of single cell flagellate eukaryotes. It is the best known and most widely studied member of the class Euglenoidea, a diverse group containing some 54 genera and at least 800 species.

Wikipédia

Euglena

Euglena is a genus of single cell flagellate eukaryotes. It is the best known and most widely studied member of the class Euglenoidea, a diverse group containing some 54 genera and at least 200 species. Species of Euglena are found in fresh water and salt water. They are often abundant in quiet inland waters where they may bloom in numbers sufficient to color the surface of ponds and ditches green (E. viridis) or red (E. sanguinea).

The species Euglena gracilis has been used extensively in the laboratory as a model organism.

Most species of Euglena have photosynthesizing chloroplasts within the body of the cell, which enable them to feed by autotrophy, like plants. However, they can also take nourishment heterotrophically, like animals. Since Euglena have features of both animals and plants, early taxonomists, working within the Linnaean two-kingdom system of biological classification, found them difficult to classify. It was the question of where to put such "unclassifiable" creatures that prompted Ernst Haeckel to add a third living kingdom (a fourth kingdom in toto) to the Animale, Vegetabile (and Lapideum meaning Mineral) of Linnaeus: the Kingdom Protista.