Protistology

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Protistology is a scientific discipline devoted to the study of protists, a highly diverse group of eukaryotic organisms. All eukaryotes apart from animals, plants and fungi are considered protists. Its field of study therefore overlaps with the more traditional disciplines of phycology, mycology, and protozoology, just as protists embrace mostly unicellular organisms described as algae, some organisms regarded previously as primitive fungi, and protozoa ("animal" motile protists lacking chloroplasts). They are a paraphyletic group with very diverse morphologies and lifestyles. Their sizes range from unicellular picoeukaryotes only a few micrometres in diameter to multicellular marine algae several metres long.

History

The history of the study of protists has its origins in the 17th century. Since the beginning, the study of protists has been intimately linked to developments in microscopy, which have allowed important advances in the understanding of these organisms due to their generally microscopic nature. Among the pioneers was Anton van Leeuwenhoek, who observed a variety of free-living protists and in 1674 named them “very little animalcules”. During the 18th century studies on the Infusoria were dominated by Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg and Félix Dujardin. The term "protozoology" has become dated as understanding of the evolutionary relationships of the eukaryotes has improved, and is frequently replaced by the term "protistology". For example, the Society of Protozoologists, founded in 1947, was renamed International Society of Protistologists in 2005. However, the older term is retained in some cases (e.g., the Polish journal Acta Protozoologica).

Journals and societies

Dedicated academic journals include: Other less specialized journals, important to protistology before the appearance of the more specialized: Some societies:

Notable protistologists (sorted by alphabetical order of surnames)

The field of protistology was idealized by Haeckel, but its widespread recognition is more recent. In fact, many of the researchers cited below considered themselves as protozoologists, phycologists, mycologists, microbiologists, microscopists, parasitologists, limnologists, biologists, naturalists, zoologists, botanists, etc., but made significant contributions to the field. • Carl Agardh • William Archer • Anton de Bary • Karl Bělař • Harold C. Bold • Alexander Braun • Otto Bütschli • Thomas Cavalier-Smith • • Carlos Chagas • Édouard Chatton • Tyge Ahrengot Christensen • Lev Tsenkovsky (Cienkowski) • Herbert Copeland • Pierre Dangeard • Yves Delage • Karl Moriz Diesing • Clifford Dobell • Franz Theodor Doflein • Valentin Dogiel • Félix Dujardin • C.G. Ehrenberg • • Fauré-Fremiet • • • Felix Eugen Fritsch • Wendy Gibson • Édouard de Fromentel • Pierre-Paul Grassé • Battista Grassi • Karl Gottlieb Grell • • Ernst Haeckel • Max Hartmann • Edgard Hérouard • Richard Hertwig • Bronislaw M. Honigberg • • Alfred Kahl • Patrick John Keeling • Georg Klebs • C. A. Kofoid • • Friedrich Traugott Kützing • Ray Lankester • • • Ernst Lemmermann • Rudolf Leuckart • Gustav Lindau • Alfred R. Loeblich Jr • André Lwoff • Lynn Margulis • Émile Maupas • Michael Melkonian • Konstantin Mereschkowski • Walter Migula • Edward Alfred Minchin • Øjvind Moestrup • O.F. Müller • Carl Nägeli • • Alcide d'Orbigny • • Adolf Pascher • David J. Patterson • Eugène Penard • Maximilian Perty • • Ernst Pringsheim Jr. • Andrew Pritchard • S. von Prowazek • Gottlob Ludwig Rabenhorst • Eduard Reichenow • Muriel Robertson • Julius von Sachs • William Saville-Kent • • Fritz Schaudinn • Joseph Schröter • Max Schultze • F. E. Schulze • Vladimir Shevyakov (Schewiakoff) • C. von Siebold • P.C. Silva • Heinrich Leonhards Skuja • • Gilbert Morgan Smith • Frederick Kroeber Sparrow • Friedrich von Stein • Helen Tappan • • C. M. Wenyon • George Stephen West • Robert Whittaker • Heinrich Georg Winter • Otto Zacharias • Friedrich Wilhelm Zopf

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