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Radiolaria

Catalogue / Nature / Vie / Protoctists (Protoctistae) / Single Celled Eukaryotes (Protista) / Radiolaria
Catalogue / Nature / Vie / Protoctists (Protoctistae) / Single Celled Eukaryotes (Protista) / Rhizopoda / Radiolaria
Catalogue / Nature / Vie / Protoctists (Protoctistae) / Single Celled Eukaryotes (Protista) / Actinopoda / Radiolaria

Acantharea  [47]

Phaeodaria  [61]

Polycystina  [153]


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Ernst Haeckel: Kunstformen der Natur
Diese elektronische Ausgabe wurde erstellt mit Hilfe einer Original-Ausgabe des Haeckel'schen Werkes, das freundlicherweise von Prof. Dr. v. Sengbusch zur Verfügung gestellt wurde. Alle Tafeln wurden mit einer Auflösung von 300 dpi und 16 Millionen Farben eingescannt. Das Einscannen wurde mit großer Sorgfalt durchgeführt, um das gebundene Original nicht zu beschädigen. [deu]
Haeckel, Ernst
Report on the SCIENTIFIC RESULTS of the Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger during the years 1873-1876 [eng]
Ernst Haeckel: Die Radiolarien (1862)
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Introduction to the Radiolaria
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Radiolaria - Wikipedia
The radiolaria comprise three groups of amoeboids protists which form intricate mineral skeletons. They feed and move by means of axopods, and have a frothy ectoplasm often including symbiotic zooxanthellae, which is separated by a central capsule. Among the Polycystinea and Phaeodarea, the skeleton is made of silica and sometimes organic materials, but among the less common Acantharea it is made of strontium sulfate. [eng]
Species list of the Radiolaria
as prepared by Dr. Gerhard Keuck (1999) [eng]
Radiolaria.org
Radiolaria are holoplanktonic protozoa widely distributed in the oceans. They occur throughout the water column from near surface to hundreds of meters depth. As with many planktonic organisms, their abundance in a geographical region is related to quality of the water mass, including such variables as temperature, salinity, productivity, and available nutrients. [eng]
Radiolaria
The Radiolaria are a group of unicellular organisms perhaps more commonly met with as prepared slides, rather than in life. As living creatures they can be encountered in the great oceans but more commonly in the Central Pacific. They were discovered in strange and beautiful forms by the research ship Challenger as a huge deposit of ooze on the ocean bed. [eng]
IMAGE GALLERY: RADIOLARIA
In contrast to heliozoa, radiolaria exhibit a "central capsule" which separates the intra- from the extracapsular cytoplasm. Nucleus or nuclei are always located in the intracypsular cytoplasm. Most radiolaria possess a species' specific skeleton , mostly with star-like appearance, which is made out of silicic acid or strontium sulfate. Most radiolaria are found in the deeper planktonic strata of warm-water seas. Acantharia are found mainly in the upper plankton. Famous are the radiolarian sediments of Barbados. [eng]
Fossil Record of the Radiolaria
There are three distinct transitions in the evolution of Radiolaria, corresponding to three transitions in the geologic time scale, the Permo-Triassic, Cretaceous-Tertiary, and Paleogene-Neogene. Each phase includes extinction of families at the transition between periods, and a subsequent increase in the number of families as the new period progressed. [eng]
Radiolaria, Foraminifera, Paramecium's, Amebas, Protophyta: Pictures, Photographs, Images
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Interactive Glossary definition for 'Radiolaria'
Radiolaria -- Microscopic, unicellular planktonic and benthic animals that possess siliceous (SiO2) tests [eng]
Stratigraphic distribution of Mesozoic Radiolaria from the Tethys
These data include the year 2000 version of the Jurassic/Cretaceous Radiolaira database compiled by Taniel Danielian (Universite Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris 6) and Ken Johnson (Scripps Institution of Oceanography). The data are extracted from an Tethyan radiolarian atlas and biozonation scheme (Baumgartner et al., 1995) compiled by the Jurassic-Cretaceous Working Group of the International Association of Radiolarian Palaeontologists (INTERRAD). [eng]
Mesozoic Radiolaria
Radiolaria are the most abundant fossils in Mesozoic eugeoclinal terranes along the Circum-Pacific margin. They are often present and well-preserved where most other fossils are absent. During the last fifteen years radiolarian biostratigraphy has had a great impact on unraveling the stratigraphy and in turn the structure of many eugeoclinal terranes in Western North America and elsewhere in the world. In addition, it is now apparent from recent investigations in North America that Radiolaria can be utilized in paleobiogeographic reconstructions and to document the presence of Mesozoic displaced terranes. [eng]
Systematic tree of organisms: Radiolaria
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CLASSIFICATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF SOUTH ATLANTIC RECENT POLYCYSTINE RADIOLARIA
Demetrio Boltovskoy [eng]
ÔÐÀÊÒÀËÛ ÆÈÂÎÉ ÏÐÈÐÎÄÛ
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NMNH - Research and Collections - Databases
Smithsonian Institution has a large collection of radiolarians, but shows no links or pictures on their web site. [eng]
Elliott Sharp and Orchestra Carbon - Radiolaria
Radiolaria is an algorithmic composition modeled on biological paradigms of growth and reproduction. Among other operations within the score, the musicians may imitate and transform each others' parts in a way analogous to the replication process for many organisms such as "radiolaria," a kind of aquatic, single-celled protozoa. [eng]
Ceratoikiscum herkommeri - a radiolaria
A Radiolaria from the Arbuckle Mountains and Criner Hills Upper Devonian and Mississippian [eng]
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