korpuskulids
Korpuskulids are a provisional grouping used in some protozoological and paleobiogeographic literature to describe a set of small, often microscopic eukaryotes encountered in aquatic sediments and waters. The term is not consistently applied and does not correspond to a single, formal taxon in modern classifications; as a result, korpuskulids are considered an informal, paraphyletic assemblage or a catchall for several unrelated lineages described in the past.
Organisms described as korpuskulids show substantial morphological diversity; some are flexible, amoeboid forms; others are more
They occupy freshwater, brackish and marine environments; often associated with sediments, detrital films, or phytoplankton; they
Most korpuskulids are presumed to reproduce asexually by fission; cyst or resting stages have been reported
The concept emerged in the late 19th to mid-20th century; later analyses using molecular data have not
Further study, particularly with modern molecular methods and careful morphometrics, is needed to clarify their diversity