The SAR supergroup encompasses a variety of morphologies and ecological niches, from microscopic
zoo- and
phytoplankton to massive
kelp forests. The group includes both photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic forms. Photosynthesis arose independently across various
stramenopile and
alveolate lineages through secondary or higher-order
endosymbiosis events, acquiring plastids of
red algal origin, while
chlorarachniophyte rhizarians captured plastids from
green algae, retaining vestigial
nucleomorphs. It has been estimated that SAR encompasses up to half of all eukaryotic diversity. Owing to the clade's discovery through
phylogenomics, there are no known synapomorphies uniting its various members. This was already the case for its subclade Rhizaria, established earlier through similar means. On the other hand, Stramenopiles is well-defined morphologically, characterized by an anterior flagellum with tripartite bristles (
mastigonemes), while Alveolata is united by the presence of
cortical alveoli. Nonetheless, studies of
telonemids have revealed characteristics such as tripartite hair and peripheral vacuoles, potentially homologous to similar structures in stramenopiles and alveolates. This brings into light the possibility of these structures being ancestrally shared by the clade, with cortical alveoli originating from peripheral vacuoles under this hypothesis.
Internal phylogeny A 2021 analysis places Alveolata and Stramenopiles in
Halvaria, as sister to Rhizaria. }} }} == See also ==