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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Lepidotrachelophyllum

Lepidotrachelophyllum Nicholls & Lynn, 1984 (ref. ID; 4124 original paper)

[ref. ID; 4124]
Elongate, flattened, or leaf-like ciliates with some degree of flexibility; anterior 1/3-1/2 of body is contractile; ciliated on both somatic surfaces; in extended state, oral region narrow and flat; longitudinal kineties course from anterior to posterior pole; body surface covered by a "foam" composed of scales forming a layer several micrometers thick; contractile vacuole(s) at posterior end. (ref. ID; 4124)
Type species; Lepidotrachelophyllum fornicis (ref. ID; 4124)
  1. Lepidotrachelophyllum fornicis Nicholls & Lynn, 1984 (ref. ID; 4124 original paper)
    See; Lepidotrachelophyllum lineare (Lepsi, 1960) Foissner, 1994 (ref. ID; 4613)
  2. Lepidotrachelophyllum lineare (Lepsi, 1960) Foissner, 1994 (ref. ID; 4613)
    Syn; Lepidotrachelophyllum fornicis Nicholls & Lynn, 1984 (ref. ID; 4613); Trachelophyllum lineare Lepsi, 1960 (ref. ID; 4613)

Lepidotrachelophyllum fornicis Nicholls & Lynn, 1984 (ref. ID; 4124 original paper)

See

Lepidotrachelophyllum lineare (Lepsi, 1960) Foissner, 1994 (ref. ID; 4613)

Diagnosis

Cells 40-350 um long; approx. 30 somatic kineties with two rows having clavate cilia in their anterior 1/3; narrow oral region 8-20 um wide when ciliate is extended; oral ciliature not distinctly different from adjacent somatic cilia; scale layer 3-6 um thick surrounding in the entire cell; scales of 2-5 by 4-8 um are composed of microfilamentous structures arranged in a tightly reticular baseplate and a loosely reticular superstructure; 1-2 macronuclei 20-33 um in length by 13-25 um in width; usually 2 micronuclei, approx. 3-4 um in diameter, associated with each macronucleus; a cold water stenotherm, only found during the late winter months. (ref. ID; 4124)

Descriptions

Comments

There is no doubt that the scaled ciliate discovered in White Lake during late winter belongs to the Trachelophyllidae as presently diagnosed by Small & Lynn (1984). The flattened flask-shape of the cell, the number and organization of nuclei, and the position and structure of the oral region indicate that it is related to species in the genus Trachelophyllum; however, the presence of the sale layer is distinct enough, in our opinion, to diagnose a new genus in the family Trachelophyllidae, the genus Lepidotrachelophyllum n. g. from lepidos Gr. -scale, trachelos Gr. -neck and phyllon Gr. -leaf. The White Lake ciliates are placed in this genus as the type species Lepidotrachelophyllum fornicis n. sp. from fornix Gr. -arched, which refers to the arched or vaulted superstructure of the scales. In fact, there are two species of Trachelophyllum that have been described as having a "mucilage" or "gelationus" covering; these are Trachelophyllum vestitum Stokes, 1884 and Trachelophyllum sigmoides Kahl, 1926. Of the two, the White Lake ciliates resemble Trachelophyllum sigmoides: there is a slight asymmetry to the anterior end, there is no distinct oral dome; the "gelatinous" covering (= scale layer?) is thick and conspicuous moreover, of the two species, Kahl (1930) noted that T. sigmoides can also be found in winter. Recently Foissner (1983) has redescribed T. vestitum, illustrating the distinct oral dome, the symmetrical body shape, reniform macronuclei, and spindle-shaped micronuclei. Unlike T. sigmoides and T. vestitum, however, the White Lake ciliates have two rounded macronuclei, which were never observed to be joined by a funiculus, have at least two ovoid micronuclei associated with each macronucleus, were never observed to carry zoocholorellae, and were only collected in February over a period of five years. For these reasons, the White Lake ciliates are considered to belong to a different species and, because of the scale layer, to a different genus. When T. sigmoides or T. vestitum are examined using electron microscopy, the "gelatinous" covering might reveal scales of similar structure to those of Lepidotrachelophyllum. In this event, these two species should be transferred to the genus Lepidotrochelophyllum. Kahl (1930) also described one species in the genus Enchelys with a "gelatinous" (= scaly?) covering, Enchelys vestita Kahl, 1927. Thus among, the haptorids, this characteristic is probably a convergent feature whose adaptive significance, at present, is not known. (ref. ID; 4124)

Type locality

At the dam outflow of white Lake, Ontario, Canada at 44 degrees 50'N, 78 degrees 29'W. (ref. ID; 4124)

Deposited specimens

Holotype slide: The "type-specimen", USNM Slide no. 31205, has been deposited in the ciliate type-collection in the Invertebrate Zoology Division, Smithsonian Institution, Washington. D.C., U.S.A. (ref. ID; 4124)