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Pedinellales () or Pedinellida () is a group of single-celled found in both marine environments and freshwater.

(2018). 9781107555655, Cambridge University Press.

These are found in both freshwater and marine environments, and most genera are sessile, attached by posterior stalks. The flagellum is at the anterior of the cell, and the tentacles surround it, often capturing small prey drawn in by its current. The colored genera are , , , and . Several more genera have lost their chloroplasts and feed entirely by . These are , , and .

It also appears that certain are actually derived pedinellids. Ciliophrys alternates between a mobile flagellate stage and a heliozoan feeding stage, where the body is contracted with extended axopods all over its surface, and the flagellum is curled up into a tight figure eight. The , Actinophrys and Actinosphaerium, exist only in a heliozoan form with no flagellum and with more elaborate bundles of microtubules supporting their axopods. Their inclusion was argued by Mikrjukov and Patterson, who coined the term actinodine to refer specifically to this extended group.

Pedinellids were classified as by some authors. The colored pedinellids were originally treated as a family of in the order Ochromonadales, promoted to an order Pedinellales by Zimmerman in 1984. Their relationship to the silicoflagellates became apparent some time later, and Patterson defined this rankless group for the two in 1994. Moestrup treated it as the class Dictyochophyceae, previously restricted to the silicoflagellates, while Cavalier-Smith defined a new class Actinochrysophyceae for them.


Systematics

Taxonomic history
Pedinellids have been known since the 19th century, but were classified as either or due to the absence of in some species. Before the taxonomic revisions that took place in the late 20th century, pedinellids were treated as a single family Pedinellaceae, described in 1910 by Pascher. Some authors classified pedinellids within the order , together with a variety of unrelated such as and , as part of the class or golden algae. In 1985, phycologists Birthe Zimmermann, Øjvind Moestrup and Guy Hällfors classified them as an independent order, Pedinellales. The same year, John J. Lee and coauthors segregated the (i.e. without chloroplasts) pedinellids as a different order Ciliophryida under the class . Other authors, such as Thomas Cavalier-Smith, went a step further and proposed treating pedinellids as a separate class, under the name of Pedinellea (spelt Pedinellophyceae under botanical nomenclature).
(1995). 9780521462600, Cambridge University Press. .

In 1995, Charles J. O'Kelly and Daniel E. Wujek classified the in three orders: Rhizochromulinales (containing the sole genus ), Pedinellales (containing all pedinellids) and (), separating them from golden algae.

(1995). 9780521462600, Cambridge University Press. .
Simultaneously, Cavalier-Smith proposed a slightly different classification where he created a new class to embrace these three groups, avoiding the usage of Dictyochophyceae as a name. He considered pedinellids as subclass Pedinellidae, with two orders: Pedinellales (with chloroplasts), containing the families Pedinellaceae and Apedinellaceae; and Ciliophryales (without chloroplasts), containing Actinomonadaceae and Ciliophryaceae. The remaining two groups, Rhizochromulinales and Dictyochales, were transferred to a separate subclass Dictyochidae. The next year, Cavalier-Smith and Ema E. Chao recognized that the chloroplast losses were , and the family Actinomonadaceae was transferred to Pedinellales on the basis of a molecular phylogenetic analysis.

In 2006, Cavalier-Smith once again rearranged the classification. He lowered Actinochrysea to a subclass Actinochrysia within a new class , which also included as subclass Pelagophycia. He lumped together all pedinellid genera in the family Actinomonadaceae and new suborder Actinomonadineae, with the exception of Ciliophrys, which he included with the non-pedinellid Rhizochromulina in two families of a new suborder Ciliophryineae. He maintained this classification in later years. In 2018, he finally recognized class , and created the subclass Pedinellia or Pedinellophycidae (equivalent to his earlier Actinochrysea/Actinochrysia) to lump together pedinellids and silicoflagellates. Pelagophytes remained under the subclass Pelagophycidae, and two genera of more uncertain placement under a third subclass Sulcophycidae: and .

Cavalier-Smith's taxonomic scheme is not accepted by the scientific community. Instead, Moestrup's 1995 classification is more commonly supported, where pedinellids are all contained in the order Pedinellales, rendering Ciliophryales a . They are considered part of , along with orders Dictyochales (silicoflagellates), Rhizochromulinales ( Rhizochromulina), and a more recent fourth order . In addition, pelagophytes are rejected as members of Dictyochophyceae, and instead form an independent class . Within pedinellids, there have been several attempts to establish different families according to morphological data such as the presence or absence of stalks and chloroplasts. However, molecular analyses do not support these internal divisions. Consequently, all pedinellids have been grouped into a single family, Actinomonadaceae, which has taxonomic preference due to being the earliest described, and all other proposed families (Pedinellaceae, Apedinellaceae, etc.) have become junior synonyms.

+History of pedinellid classification ! colspan="3"Cavalier-Smith (1995) ! colspan="3"Cavalier-Smith (2006) ! colspan="2"Present !Includes
PedinellidaePedinellalesPedinellaceaePedinellalesActinomonadineaeActinomonadaceaePedinellalesActinomonadaceae
Apedinellaceae
CiliophryalesActinomonadaceae
CiliophryaceaeCiliophryineaeCiliophryaceaeexcluded
excludedRhizochromulinaceae


Classification
Pedinellids currently sum the following genera:


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