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ISEP XIV |
Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Program in Evolutionary Biology, Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada B3H 4J1
Correspondence
Alastair G. B. Simpson
asimpso2{at}dal.ca
An overview of the controversial proposal for the major eukaryote taxon Excavata is presented. Excavata is predicted to include at least ten distinct groups: jakobids, Malawimonas, Trimastix, Carpediemonas, retortamonads, diplomonads, Heterolobosea, oxymonads, parabasalids and Euglenozoa. These excavates' have broadly similar flagellar apparatus organizations, for which a universal terminology is provided. Most, but not all, of these organisms share a distinctive suspension-feeding groove, as well as some or all of a set of seven other proposed cytoskeletal apomorphies. Cladistic analyses of morphological data do not resolve high-level relationships within Excavata. Excavate-rich molecular phylogenies recover some robust clades, but do not support or strongly refute the monophyly of Excavata. A partial classification for excavates is presented, with phylogenetic diagnoses for Excavata and for two novel taxon names, Fornicata (Carpediemonas, retortamonads, diplomonads) and Preaxostyla (Trimastix, oxymonads).
This paper was presented at the XIVth meeting of the International Society for Evolutionary Protistology in Vancouver, Canada, 1924 June 2002.
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