In older classifications, flagellated
protozoa were grouped in
Flagellata (=
Mastigophora), sometimes divided into Phytoflagellata (= Phytomastigina, mostly autotrophic) and Zooflagellata (= Zoomastigina, heterotrophic). They were sometimes grouped with
Sarcodina (ameboids) in the group
Sarcomastigophora. The autotrophic flagellates were grouped similarly to the botanical schemes used for the corresponding algae groups. The
colourless flagellates were customarily grouped in three groups, highly artificial: • Protomastigineae, in which absorption of food-particles in holozoic nutrition occurs at a localised point of the cell surface, often at a cytostome, although many groups were merely saprophytes; it included the majority of colourless flagellates, and even many "apochlorotic" algae; • Pantostomatineae (or Rhizomastigineae), in which the absorption takes place at any point on the cell surface; roughly corresponds to "amoeboflagellates"; • Distomatineae, a group of binucleate "double individuals" with symmetrically distributed flagella and, in many species, two symmetrical mouths; roughly corresponds to current
Diplomonadida. Presently, these groups are known to be highly
polyphyletic. In modern classifications of the protists, the principal flagellated taxa are placed in the following eukaryote groups, which include also non-flagellated forms (where "A", "F", "P" and "S" stands for autotrophic, free-living heterotrophic, parasitic and symbiotic, respectively): •
Archaeplastida:
volvocids (A/F),
prasinophytes (A),
glaucophytes (A) •
Stramenopiles:
bicosoecids (F),
proteromonads (F),
opalines (F), most
chrysophytes (A/F), part of
xanthophytes (A),
raphidophytes/chloromonads (A),
silicoflagellates (A),
ciliophryids (F),
pedinellids (A/F) •
Alveolata:
dinoflagellates (A/F),
Colpodella (F) •
Rhizaria •
Cercozoa:
cercomonads (F),
spongomonads (F),
thaumatomonads (F),
glissomonads (F),
cryomonads (F),
heliomonads/dimorphids (F),
ebriids (F) •
Amoebozoa:
Multicilia (F),
phalansteriids (F), some
archamoebae (F/S) •
Opisthokonta:
choanoflagellates (F) •
Excavata •
Discoba:
jakobids (F),
kinetoplastids (
bodonids, F/P,
trypanosomatids, P),
euglenids (F/A), some
heteroloboseans (P/F/S) •
Metamonada:
diplomonads (P/F),
retortamonads (S),
Preaxostyla/anaeromonads (
oxymonads, S,
Trimastix, F,
Paratrimastix, F),
parabasalids (
trichomonads, P/S,
hypermastigids, S) •
Eukaryota incertae sedis :
haptophytes (F/A),
cryptophytes (F/A),
kathablepharids (F),
Apusozoa (
apusomondas, F,
ancyromonads, F,
spironemids/hemimastigids, F),
collodictyonids/diphylleids (F),
Phyllomonas (F), and about a hundred genera Although the taxonomic group Flagellata was abandoned, the term "flagellate" is still used as the description of a
level of organization and also as an
ecological functional group. Another term used is "monadoid", from
monad. as in
Monas, and
Cryptomonas and in the groups as listed above. The amoeboflagellates (e.g., the rhizarian genus
Cercomonas, some amoebozoan
Archamoebae, some excavate
Heterolobosea) have a peculiar type of flagellate/
amoeboid organization, in which cells may present flagella and
pseudopods, simultaneously or sequentially, while the helioflagellates (e.g., the cercozoan
heliomonads/dimorphids, the stramenopile
pedinellids and
ciliophryids) have a flagellate/
heliozoan organization. ==References==