Sporozoa move through a process known as flexion. Sporozoa move a part of the cell called gyloqiterior back and forth to enable them to move. It produces more of a slithering effect than getting up and moving.
They reproduce sexually in one host and asexually in the second host.
Paramecium is located in the phylum ciliophora.
They at some point in their life produce spores and they have no locomotion.
Kingdom Protozoa posses: Ciliaphora, Sarcomastigophora, and sporozoa Sarcomastigophora are pseudopods or flagellates and contain superclass sarcodina and mastigophora...mastigophora contains the class zoomastigophora basically the obvious commonality is that they are all PROTOZOANS...look at a phylum tree or a dichotomy tree you will be able to find commonalities amongst them...
Phylum Phaeophyta and Phylum Rhodophya
Sub-phylum is a taxonomic group. A phylum can contain many sub-phylums which contain a huge diversity of species.
Protozoa is a diverse group of single-celled organisms. They belong to the kingdom Protista, phylum Protozoa. Within this phylum, there are different classes such as Sarcodina (amoebas), Ciliophora (ciliates), Flagellata (flagellates), and Sporozoa (sporozoans). Each class further contains various orders, families, genera, and species.
chordata, I belive.
Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: ReptiliaOrder: SquamataFamily: ColubridaeGenus: Elaphespecies: guttata
Protista.
Sporozoa is a species of obligate intracellular protozoan parasites. These are the causing agent of malaria in humans and animals, transmitted by female mosquitoes.