Literature DB >> 19297137

Morphology and ciliary pattern of some rare haptorid ciliates, with a description of the new family Kamburophryidae (Protists, Haptoria).

Wilhelm Foissner1, Anke Oertel.   

Abstract

We investigated three rare haptorid ciliates, viz., Lagynophrya gibba Kahl (1935), Enchelys lajacola nov. spec., and Spathidium implicatum Kahl (1930), using live observation, silver impregnation, morphometry, and scanning electron microscopy. Lagynophrya gibba, which was rediscovered in peatland soil from Iceland, is referred to a new genus, Kamburophrys, and a new family, Kamburophryidae, based on a unique organelle, the brush membranoid. This structure is near the dorsal brush and composed of very narrowly spaced cilia, about 5microm long. The genus Kamburophrys has a unique combination of features, viz., an oral cone on the oral bulge, an oblique circumoral kinety, and a subapical hump carrying the three-rowed dorsal brush and the brush membranoid. The Kamburophryidae possibly belong to the order Spathidiida. Enchelys lajacola was discovered in mud from granitic rock-pools (Lajas) in Venezuela, South America. The new species is characterized by a bottle-like shape, a macronucleus with the shape of a curved strand, a heterostichad dorsal brush, and rod-shaped toxicysts. Spathidium implicatum, which was rediscovered in an ephemeral meadow puddle near Salzburg city centre, is neotypified and referred to the genus Apertospathula because it has an open circumoral kinety.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19297137     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejop.2008.11.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Protistol        ISSN: 0932-4739            Impact factor:   3.020


  1 in total

1.  Conservation of Protists: The Krauthügel Pond in Austria.

Authors:  Fenton P D Cotterill; Hannes Augustin; Reinhard Medicus; Wilhelm Foissner
Journal:  Diversity (Basel)       Date:  2013-06
  1 in total

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