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most common group of living pteridophytes
veliger stage of gastropod
M. jannaschii is a well-studied euryarcheote
formerly classified as protist, now it's an animal!
fairly typical modern foraminiferan
best-known of the basal angiosperms
appendicularian urochordate
mantodean exopterygote
not even a virus--just RNA
dinoflagellate alveolate
P. pubis--a anopluran insect
tardigrade ecdysozoan
an oligotrich ciliate alveolate
S. typhimurium (this is a special holiday-gram for Thanksgiving)
"multicellular" cyanobacterium
sandfly-borne kinetoplastid
(sometimes) pandemic-causing RNA virus
very small, blood-borne DNA virus
amitochondrial diplomonad
glomeromycete symbiont with a cyanobacterium
free-swimming opisthokont
planktonic chromist with a "test"
tiny bilaterian with a "hairy belly"--guess my phylum
blood-borne agent of disease
ulcerating proteobacterium
pathogenic unicellular basidiomycete
carnivorous "poriferan" (affinity subject to debate)
upside-down swimming crustacean
fungal mutualist of plants
parthenogenic hemipteran (or is it homopteran?)