Carpediemonas | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Phylum: | Metamonada |
Subphylum: | Fornicata |
Superclass: | Carpediemonadia Cavalier-Smith |
Class: | Carpediemonadea Cavalier-Smith |
Order: | Carpediemonadida Cavalier-Smith |
Family: | Carpediemonadidae |
Genus: | Carpediemonas Ekebom, Patterson & Vørs, 1996[1] |
Type species | |
Carpediemonas membranifera (Larsen & Patterson 1990) Ekebom, Patterson & Vørs 1996
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Species | |
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Carpediemonas is genus of Metamonada, and belongs to the group Excavata. This organism is a unicellular flagellated eukaryote that was first discovered in substrate samples from the Great Barrier Reef.[2] Carpediemonas can be found in anaerobic intertidal sediment, where it feeds on bacteria. A feature of this species is the presence of a feeding groove, a characteristic of the excavates. Like most other metamonads, Carpediemonas does not rely on an aerobic mitochondrion to produce energy. Instead, it contains hydrogenosomes that are used to produce ATP.[3] This organism has two flagella:[3] a posterior one used for feeding on the substrate, and an anterior one that moves in a slower sweeping motion.[2] Carpediemonas is assigned to the fornicates, where similar Carpediemonas-like organisms are used in researching the evolution within excavates.[4] Although Carpediemonas is a member of the metamonads, it is unusual in the sense that it is free-living and has three basal bodies.[5]