-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Left side view of Saprodinium dentatum (Lauterborn,1901) Lauterborn,1908. Odontostome ciliate with laterally compressed complex rigid pellicle. 8 posterior spines with needle-thin tips. Curved anterior spine projecting to left. Spinous projection adjacent to cytostome. Anterior ciliature and sharp posterior spines respectively distinguish this genus from Atopodinium and Epalxella. Polysaprobic. Macronucleus in three rounded parts. From stagnant freshwater pond with decaying leaves near Boise, Idaho. Brightfield.
-
Left side view of Saprodinium dentatum (Lauterborn,1901) Lauterborn,1908. Odontostome ciliate with laterally compressed complex rigid pellicle. 8 posterior spines with needle-thin tips. Curved anterior spine projecting to left. Spinous projection adjacent to cytostome. Anterior ciliature and sharp posterior spines respectively distinguish this genus from Atopodinium and Epalxella. Polysaprobic. Macronucleus in three rounded parts (third part slightly out of focus here). From stagnant freshwater pond with decaying leaves near Boise, Idaho. Brightfield.
-
Right side view of Saprodinium dentatum (Lauterborn,1901) Lauterborn,1908. Odontostome ciliate with laterally compressed complex rigid pellicle. 8 posterior spines with needle-thin tips. Curved anterior spine projecting to left. Spinous projection adjacent to cytostome. Anterior ciliature and sharp posterior spines respectively distinguish this genus from Atopodinium and Epalxella. Polysaprobic. Macronucleus in three rounded parts (not seen in this view). From stagnant freshwater pond with decaying leaves near Boise, Idaho. Brightfield.
-
Portrait (left side) of the small Odontostome ciliate, Mylestoma pusillum (Kahl,1932). M. pusillum has a rigid armored pellicle typical of the Odontostomes. The cell is laterally compressed. The truncate posterior lacks spines, distinguishing Mylestoma pusillum from Epalxa, Saprodinium and Atopodinium. The dorsum is broadly convex and the ventral surface flattened. There is a deep longitudinal pellicular groove on the left side (seen well in this image). The tooth-like projections anterior and posterior to the cytostome are seen in this image. The adoral zone of membranelles is seen in this image as an area of transverse striation. The somatic ciliature is strongly reduced to a few perizonal kineties anterior to the cytostome and two sparse groups of long cirri posteriorly, one on either side of the longitudinal pellicular groove. There is a single elliptical macronucleus. There is a single posterior contractile vacuole. Yellow-brown refractile granules are seen in the cytoplasm. Like other Odontostomes, Mylestoma is sapropelic. Collected from bottom sediment of a freshwater aquaculture tank at a Koi farm near Boise, Idaho December 2003. DIC optics.
-
Portrait (right side) of the small Odontostome ciliate, Mylestoma pusillum (Kahl,1932). M. pusillum has a rigid armored pellicle typical of the Odontostomes. The cell is laterally compressed. The truncate posterior lacks spines, distinguishing Mylestoma pusillum from Epalxa, Saprodinium and Atopodinium. The dorsum is broadly convex and the ventral surface flattened. There is a deep longitudinal pellicular groove on the left side (seen well in this image). The tooth-like projections anterior and posterior to the cytostome are seen in this image. The adoral zone of membranelles is seen in this image as an area of transverse striation. The somatic ciliature is strongly reduced to a few perizonal kineties anterior to the cytostome (seen in this image) and two sparse groups of long cirri posteriorly, one on either side of the longitudinal pellicular groove. There is a single elliptical macronucleus. There is a single posterior contractile vacuole (seen well in this image). Yellow-brown refractile granules are seen in the cytoplasm. Like other Odontostomes, Mylestoma is sapropelic. Collected from bottom sediment of a freshwater aquaculture tank at a Koi farm near Boise, Idaho December 2003. DIC optics.
-
Epalxella (ee-palk-sell-a) is an odontostome ciliate. This is a small group of small flattened and sparsely ciliated ciliates which are most usually found in anoxic habitats. They have a small group of ciliary organelles associated with the mouth - the clear area at about 4 o clock. Differential interference contrast.
-
Portrait (right side) of the sapropelic odontostome ciliate, Epalxella antiquorum (Penard, 1922) Corliss, 1960 (synonymous with the preoccupied Epalxis). The cell has a clear rigid pellicle with a broad lenticular outline. The body is strongly laterally compressed. The dorsum is broadly rounded. The right side is broadly truncate posteriorly with a blunt spine on the ventral margin. The posterior side on the left terminates in 5-7 blunt spines. The spines do not terminate in needle-like processes seen in the similar genus, Saprodinium. The right and left surfaces of the pellicle bear longitudinal folds and ridges. A perizonal ciliary complex with 5 kineties and two shorter kineties runs across the ventral surface for a short distance onto the left and a longer distance onto the right surface anterior to the cytostome. The cytostome and adoral zone of membranelles is in the middle of the ventral surface. There is a prominent tooth-like spine at the anterior edge of the cytostome. The longitudinal somatic kineties are located on the pellicular ridges of the left surface and the dorsal and ventral edge of the right side. They do not extend more than 1/3 body length. The single contractile vacuole is located posteriorly. There are either two or four macronuclei. The cytoplasm contains methanogenic bacteria. Refractile brown cytoplasmic granules accumulate anteriorly. Collected from hydrogen sulfide- rich bottom sediments of slow-flowing freshwater stream near Boise, Idaho March 2004. DIC.