The genus
Microheliella was described from an organism discovered contaminating a
culture of the amoeba
Cochliopodium from the
Ebro Delta,
Spain, collected in 2003 by Alexey Smirnov. This organism was subsequently transferred into a pure culture through
serial dilution and maintained at
Oxford for nine years in a
growth medium of 50% artificial seawater, with naturally occurring bacteria as its food. Initially, it was given the informal name 'marine microheliozoan', and a phylogenetic analysis using
18S and
28S rRNA sequences placed it close to
centrohelids. Later, the same organism was examined under
electron microscopy and its
Hsp90 gene was sequenced. Combining the newly obtained morphological and genetic data, it was formally described by
Thomas Cavalier-Smith and Ema E. Chao in 2012 as the novel species
Microheliella maris. Its
type culture, CCAP 1945/1, is kept in the Culture Collection of Algae and Protozoa at
Oban, in Scotland. ==Evolution==