Hatena arenicola | |
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Scientific classification | |
Class: | Leucocryptea |
Order: | Katablepharida |
Genus: | Hatena |
Species: | H. arenicola
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Binomial name | |
Hatena arenicola Okamoto and Inouye, 2006
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Hatena arenicola is a species of single-celled eukaryotes discovered in 2000, and first reported in 2005.[1] It was discovered by Japanese biologists Noriko Okamoto and Isao Inouye at the University of Tsukuba, and they gave the scientific description and formal name in 2006.[2] The species is a flagellate, and can resemble a plant at one stage of its life, in which it carries a photosynthesizing alga inside itself,[3] or an animal, acting as predator in another stage of its life. Researchers believe that this organism is in the process of secondary endosymbiosis, in which one organism is incorporated into another, resulting in a completely new life form.