Holophrya seyrli Foissner, 1997
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/002229300299598 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C687FC-FFE7-FFE3-FE0C-8EE2FE25FCFB |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Holophrya seyrli Foissner, 1997 |
status |
|
Holophrya seyrli Foissner, 1997 View in CoL (®gures 12, 13)
Ciliates of the genus Prorodon are common predators in freshwater, brackish, and marine habitats. The ciliates are cylindrical or ovoid, with bipolar somatic kineties, and the shape and size of the cell are frequently modi®ed by the amount of food the ciliate has ingested (®gure 13). The buccal aperture is apical or subapical. The main morphological characteristic within the genus Prorodon is the presence of a`brosse’ (®gure 12), a structure formed by three (straight or oblique) rows of basal bodies ( Hiller and Bardele, 1988) located in the ®rst quarter of the cell’s anterior end. In some species it extends from the cell anterior (in the vicinity of the oral aperture) to the cell equator ( Esteban and Finlay, 1996).
Prorodon discolor View in CoL is a cosmopolitan organism reported from fresh-, brackish, and sea waters throughout the world (e.g. Fenchel et al, 1995; Esteban and Finlay, 1996). It has also been described recently as a new species, i.e. Holophrya seyrli ( Foissner, 1997) View in CoL . The organisms from Australia were 85±135 m m long, and 75± 110 m m wide, and presented 43±53 somatic kineties. The structure of the brosse was variable, formed by three or four oblique rows of kinetosomes that do not reach the cell equator (®gure 12). The number of nuclei is also variable. We found specimens with one macronucleus and no micronucleus, and specimens with one macronucleus and two micronuclei.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.