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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4195

Nancy G. Rawlinson and Michael A. Gates; The Excystment Process in the Ciliate Euplotes muscicola: An integrated Light and Scanning Electron Microscopic Study. J.Protozool. 32(4):729-735, 1985

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Resting cysts and the excystment process in the freshwater ciliate Euplotes muscicola were studied by both light and scanning electron microscopy. Groups of distinctly crested resting cysts adhere to the substrate. Silver-stained preparations reveal surface conservation of dorsal kinetosomes and dorsal argyrome while ventral organelles are directed inward. Excystment involves the development of an expanding excystment vacuole concurrent with a localized thinning on the dorsal cyst wall surface. Cells exit through the pre-formed ostiole, mid-dorsal region first, initially by the force of cytoplasmic streaming, but later aided by cirral movement. Newly emerged cells retain the excystment vacuole and show no dorsal ridging. As the cell expels its excystment vacuole and partially unfolds, normal trophont morphology is re-established. Both cyst structure and cyst typology have implications for hypotrich taxonomy.