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  • Rotifer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    The rotifers make up a phylum of microscopic and near-microscopic pseudocoelomate animals. They were first described by John Harris in 1696 (Hudson and Gosse, 1886). [citation ...

  • rotifer - Definitions from Dictionary.com

    Definitions of rotifer at Dictionary.com. ... any microscopic animal of the phylum (or class) Rotifera, found in fresh and salt waters, having one or more rings of cilia on the ...

  • *rotifer

    official website of Robert Rotifer ... July 25th, Acoustic Lakeside Festival, Sonneggersee, Kärtnen, Austria, see www.acousticlakeside.com

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Rotifer

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Rotifer, any of a phylum of multicellular, generally microscopic, aquatic animals that are abundant worldwide, and are most frequently found in freshwater bogs, ponds, and puddles. Rotifers vary in shape but always have retractable, hairlike crowns of cilia that, in motion, resemble turning wheels. (Among the first microscopic life forms to be studied, they were commonly known as wheel animalcules.) The animals can attach themselves temporarily to surfaces by means of a cementing secretion from the “foot” of the body. They reproduce sexually, but males are rare; except under severe conditions, the eggs develop parthenogenetically. Rotifers feed on other microorganisms; a few species are parasitic.

Scientific classification: Rotifers make up the phylum Rotifera.



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