NextPrevious

Bacteria, Viruses, and Protists

Protists

How many species are in protist phyla, and what are some of their effects?

Biologists estimate that millions of species of protists could exist. The following lists, to date, the protist phyla, the estimated number of species, and some examples of the protists, such as in human disease (note: as more protists—and numbers of species in the various phyla—are found each year, these numbers will no doubt change):

Phylum

Number of Species

Some Examples

Rhizopoda

Hundreds

Amoebas (intestinal parasite Entamoeba histolytica; can cause amoebic dysentery)

Foraminifera

>4,000

Mostly oceans, for example, plankton

Actinopoda

Hundreds

Radiolarians

Chlorophyta

7,000

Green algae

Rhodophyta

2,500–6,000

Red algae

Phaeophyta
Macrocystis

1,500–2,000

Brown algae; for example, a kelp called

Chrysophyta

11,500

Diatoms

Pyrrhophyta

2,100

Dinoflagellates

Euglenophyta

1,000

Mostly single-celled aquatic algae

Zoomastigophora (also called Zooflagellates)

Thousands

 

Apicomplexa

>4,500

Plasmodium (malaria); Toxoplasma gondii (toxoplasmosis)

Ciliophora

8,000

Fresh or saltwater protozoa; paramecium

Oomycota

580

Water molds; downy mildew (for example, of grapes, Plasmopara viticola)

Slime molds:

 

 

Dictyosteliomycota (or in part, Acrasiomycota)

>70

Cellular slime molds

Myxogastria

500

Plasmodial slime molds



Close

This is a web preview of the "The Handy Biology Answer Book" app. Many features only work on your mobile device. If you like what you see, we hope you will consider buying. Get the App