The genus
Padaungiella was described by
protistologists Enrique Lara and Milcho Todorov in 2012, as part of a study that used
DNA sequences to investigate the
phylogenetic relationships of amoebae that were traditionally assigned to the genus
Nebela. This genus was found to be
paraphyletic, and three
species (
N. lageniformis,
N. wailesi and
N. nebeloides) clustered in the same
monophyletic lineage, separated from the "core"
Nebela species by other genera such as
Quadrulella and
Certesella. These authors noticed that in 1942 Jung had described the genus
Schaudinnia to accommodate some
Nebela species with distinctively long necks and bottle-shaped shells:
N. lageniformis,
N. tubulata and
N. wailesi. This genus was invalid, and consequently these species remained in the genus
Nebela. Because of the paraphyly of
Nebela found by the 2012 study, the authors transferred
N. lageniformis and the closely related species
N. nebeloides and
N. wailesi to the new genus
Padaungiella, which was validated with
P. lageniformis as the
type species. Both
N. tubulata and
N. wetekampi, who were not genetically sequenced, were also transferred to this genus. In her PhD thesis published in 2014, protistologist Anush Kosakyan included another six species:
P. cordiformis,
P. himalayana,
P. longicollis,
P. longitubulata,
P. pulcherrima and
P. varia, transferred from
Nebela. However, she assigned them to the authors from the 2012 study, which did not mention any of these species. Additionally,
P. longicollis would later be transferred to a new genus
Alabasta in 2018. As a result, only five species are currently accepted within
Padaungiella: •
Padaungiella lageniformis • :=
Nebela lageniformis •
Padaungiella nebeloides • :=
Difflugia lageniformis • :=
Nebela nebeloides •
Padaungiella tubulata • :=
Nebela tubulata •
Padaungiella wailesi • :=
Nebela wailesi •
Padaungiella wetekampi • :=
Nebela wetekampi == Notes ==