Axodine
The
axodines are a group of unicellular
heterokont algae. They typically have one emergent flagellum, extended into a peculiar wing-like form supported by an internal rod, which lacks the root structure found in most other heterokont groups. They also have tentacles or axopods supported by bundles of
microtubules, which arise from the surface of the
nucleus. Most forms have
chloroplasts, pigmented similarly to those of other heterokonts, but some are colorless and feed by
phagocytosis. There are three groups included here:
- Silicoflagellates, marine algae with produce siliceous skeletons
- Actinodines, including various algae (pedinellids) and heliozoa (ciliophryids and actinophryids)
- Rhizochromulina marina, a colored amoeboid
The axodines were originally defined by Patterson in 1994. Moestrup treated them as the class Dictyochophyceae, formerly restricted to the silicoflagellates, while Cavalier-Smith proposed the new class Actinochrysophyceae for them.