Minorisa
Minorisa is a monotypic genus of marine heterotrophic flagellates that is heavily featured in the eukaryotic picoplankton of coastal ecosystems. It is part of the supergroup Rhizaria, at the base of the class Chlorarachniophyceae.
Etymology
The name Minorisa comes from the town Manresa, the birthplace of Javier del Campo, who first described the genus in 2013. Minuta, latin for tiny, refers to the small size of the organism.History of knowledge
Culturing bias is the tendency to study organisms that are easily cultured and this bias was rampant in the past study of protist phylogeny, ecology, and evolution. There are a myriad of reasons why organisms may be reluctant to culturing. Heterotrophic protists are particularly difficult to culture because culturing a heterotroph necessitates knowing its prey and culturing it consecutively. Another reason why organisms may be reluctant to culturing is due to size. Organisms that are only micrometers long tend to pass through the plankton nets that are typically used by oceanographers to survey they microscopic organisms living in bodies of water.One way that scientists attempt to overcome culturing bias is by using environmental sequencing, a method that determines the genetic sequence everything found in a sample of water, rather than only the cells scooped up by a plankton net. Environmental sequencing aims to isolate organisms that are reluctant to being cultured but are abundant in the environment. One such environmental sequencing study captured an unknown rhizarian when attempting to culture ecologically relevant heterotrophic flagellates off the coast of Spain. The rhizarian isolate was genetically distant from any described species, but it matched environmental sequences from the Mediterranean Sea, the Sargasso Sea, and the English Channel. This rhizarian was named Minorisa minuta and thus the genus Minorisa was born.