The vast majority of the more than 450 described species of Parabasalia are intestinal symbionts or parasites of animals. This endobiotic life-history is presumably ancestral although the root of Parabasalia still needs to be robustly established. The half-dozen putatively free-living species thus far described are likely independently derived from endobiotic ancestors and represent the most neglected ecological group of parabasalids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe genus HypotrichomonasLee, 1960 belongs to the small parabasalian class Hypotrichomonadea. Although five Hypotrichomonas species have been described from intestines of lizards and birds, some descriptions were brief and incomplete. Only the type species H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrastructural and molecular phylogenetic evidence indicate that the Parabasalia consists of seven main subgroups: the Trichomonadida, Honigbergiellida, Hypotrichomonadida, Tritrichomonadida, Cristamonadida, Spirotrichonymphida, and Trichonymphida. Only five species of free-living parabasalids are known: Monotrichomonas carabina, Ditrichomonas honigbergii, Honigbergiella sp., Tetratrichomonas undula, and Pseudotrichomonas keilini.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF