Skoliomonads are
flagellates,
unicellular protists (a type of
eukaryote) that use
flagella for movement. Their cells are rounded at their anterior end and pointy at their posterior, with a flattened ventral side and a dorsal hump. The ventral side contains a major groove, which is characteristic of other basal eukaryotes such as
excavates. The cells are asymmetrical: the left side of the cell contains the majority of the
cytoplasm, including the
nucleus and various large
vacuoles for digestion, often containing
bacteria which constitute their
prey. The right side is occupied almost entirely by the right edge of the groove. The type isolate, TZLM3-RCL, has been observed forming complex
cysts with two walls and a conspicuous plugged pore, something unique among metamonads. Each cell has two flagella of different lengths, inserted sub-apically and facing the ventral side of the cell. A conspicuous "lip" structure extends from the flagellar insertion along the right side of the ventral groove to the base of the posterior pointy end. The anterior flagellum is around the same length as the cell, and it is pointed forward. The posterior flagellum is twice as long, and features a conspicuously broad flagellar vane around 1 μm wide along the length of the groove, directed away from the cell body. The ventral groove curves gently to the right as it extends down the cell, and its posterior end has a large opening that gives way to a large
cytopharynx underneath its right edge. The cytopharynx, supported by a robust intracellular structure, extends along the dorsal side toward the cell's anterior apex. This is unique to skoliomonads and
barthelonids, since the cytopharynx of most known
metamonads (
Carpediemonas-like organisms) is short, discrete and points toward the left side of the cells. Skoliomonads are similar to most other metamonads in their big flagellar vane, which barthelonids lack. == Ecology ==