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stramenopiles

Stramenopiles, also known as heterokonts, are a broad and diverse clade of eukaryotes within the SAR supergroup. They include both photosynthetic groups, such as diatoms and brown algae, and heterotrophic lineages, notably the water molds (oomycetes). A unifying feature of many stramenopiles is their motile stage bearing two differently shaped flagella: a longer, hairy flagellum with mastigonemes and a shorter smooth flagellum. In photosynthetic stramenopiles, chloroplasts are derived from secondary endosymbiosis with red algae, and pigments such as fucoxanthin give a brown to olive color in many lineages.

Within Stramenopiles, Ochrophyta encompasses most photosynthetic taxa, including diatoms (Bacillariophyta) with ornate silica cell walls, and

Ecologically, stramenopiles are major contributors to global photosynthesis, nutrient cycling, and aquatic food webs. The group

brown
algae
(Phaeophyceae),
large
multicellular
seaweeds
rich
in
fucoxanthin.
Golden
algae
(Chrysophyceae)
and
related
chrysophyte
groups
are
predominantly
unicellular
or
colonial
and
typically
pigment-rich.
Oomycetes
(water
molds)
form
a
distinct,
mostly
terrestrial
and
aquatic
group
of
fungus-like
organisms
with
cellulose-based
cell
walls
and
coenocytic
hyphae;
they
produce
motile
zoospores
with
two
unequal
flagella
and
include
several
important
plant
pathogens.
is
diverse
in
morphology
and
life
cycles,
ranging
from
unicellular
diatoms
to
complex
multicellular
brown
algae,
and
molecular
data
continue
to
refine
their
relationships
within
the
SAR
clade.