Difference between revisions of "Protozoa Life Cycle"
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*Facultatively heteroxenous | *Facultatively heteroxenous | ||
**Parasite '''may''' use more than one host during its life cycle but this is not essential | **Parasite '''may''' use more than one host during its life cycle but this is not essential | ||
− | **E.g. ''Toxoplasma gondii'' | + | **E.g. ''[[Toxoplasma gondii|Toxoplasma gondii]]'' |
===Example of a Protozoal Life Cycle=== | ===Example of a Protozoal Life Cycle=== | ||
See [[Coccidia Life Cycle]] | See [[Coccidia Life Cycle]] | ||
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+ | ==Test yourself with the Protozoa Flashcards== | ||
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+ | [[Protozoa_Flashcards#Protozoa|Protozoa Flashcards]] | ||
[[Category:Protozoa]] | [[Category:Protozoa]] | ||
[[Category:To_Do_-_Parasites]] | [[Category:To_Do_-_Parasites]] |
Latest revision as of 17:12, 13 February 2019
Protozoa multiply sexually, asexually and can also use a combination of both, as seen in the coccidia class. Replication can be by binary or multiple fission. Different protozoa use different forms of motility, including flagella, cilia, pseudopodia and gliding.
- Most protozoal reproduction is asexual via binary fission, schizogony and sporogony
- Some protozoa also use sexual reproduction called gametogony
- In some species, sexual and asexual reproduction occurs in the same host, whilst in others asexual reproduction occurs in the vertebrate host and sexual reproduction in the arthropod vector
- Homoxenous
- Parasite uses a single host species during its life cycle (direct)
- E.g. Eimeria
- Heteroxenous
- Parasite uses more than one host during its life cycle (indirect)
- E.g. Trypanosomes
- Facultatively heteroxenous
- Parasite may use more than one host during its life cycle but this is not essential
- E.g. Toxoplasma gondii