Chroomonadaceae is a family of cryptomonads first recognized by Clay et al in 1999 as including genera Chroomonas, Falcomonas, and Komma.[1] Following a molecular phylogenic study in 2002, Hemiselmis was also placed within the Chroomonadaceae.[2] Today, the family is generally recognized as sister to the Pyrenomonadaceae.
They are one of only two groups of cryptomonads (alongside Rhinomonas) to lack a rhizostyle. They are also distinguished by the lack of a cleavage furrow and the presence of several phycocyanins and phycoerythrins not observed in any other cryptomonad taxa.[3]
^Deane, et al. (2002), "Cryptomonad Evolution: Nuclear 18S rDNA phylogeny versus cell morphology and pigmentation", Journal of Phycology, 38 (6): 1236โ1244, doi:10.1046/j.1529-8817.2002.01250.x
^ abLaza-Martinez A (2012), "Urgorri Complanatus Gen. Et Sp. Nov. (Cryptophyceae) A Red-Tide-Forming Species in Brackish Waters", Journal of Phycology, 48 (2): 423โ435, doi:10.1111/j.1529-8817.2012.01130.x, PMID27009732