Acanthamoeba polyphaga
Introduction
Acanthamoeba polyphaga is a free-living amoeba found in many environments including soil, dust, air, seawater, tap water, and swimming pools. [1]
A. polyphaga receives nutrition by consuming bacteria, algae, and yeast via phagocytosis. The amoeba ingests liquids through the process of pinocytosis. A. polyphaga acts as a secondary decomposer to remineralize soil with carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous by consuming bacterial primary decomposers. Primary decomposers decompose organic material into minerals, but can not release these minerals from their own mass. After A. polyphaga digests the primary decomposers, the amoeba uses contractile vacuoles to release the environmentally useful bacterial nutrients from its food vacuole into the soil. [1]
A. polyphaga, like the rest of the Acanthamoeba species, is divided into two lifecyles: the active trophozoite stage which reproduces via binary fission and the dormant, non-dividing cyst stage. Acanthamoeba polyphaga trophozoites contain one or more contractile vacuoles, lysosomes, digestive vacuoles, glycogen-containing vacuoles, a Golgi complex, smooth and rough endoplasmic reticulum, free ribosomes, microtubules, large numbers of mitochondria, and a single nucleus. [1, 2] The cysts of A. polyphaga contain durable double walls for protection in harsh conditions. The trophozoite turns into a cyst under adverse environmental conditions such as during food deprivation, desiccation, and changes in temperature and pH. [1]
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Subscript: H2O
Superscript: Fe3+
Section 1
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Section 2
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Section 3
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Conclusion
Overall paper length should be 3,000 words, with at least 3 figures.
References
Edited by (your name here), a student of Nora Sullivan in BIOL187S (Microbial Life) in The Keck Science Department of the Claremont Colleges Spring 2013.