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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4236

Stephen C. Landers; Studies of the Phoront of Hyalophysa chattoni (Ciliophora, Apostomatida) Encysted on Grass Shrimp. J.Protozool. 33(4):546-552, 1986

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The apostomatous ciliate Hyalophysa chattoni, an ectosymbiont of the grass shrimp Palaemonetes pugio, encysts and dedifferentiates within 48 hr from the migratory tomite to a phoretic stage devoid of complex ciliary fields. The presettlement crawling and pivoting of the tomite may play a role in its initial attachment to the shrimp. Metamorphosis of exuviotrophic apostomes has been previously observed to take place immediately prior to host ecdysis. The study has found that Hyalophysa's metamorphosis to the feeding stage on grass shrimp is initiated by a cue from the premolt host and begins during earlier stages of the molt cycle (Do and D1). Due to the long premolt stage of the host's diecdysic molt cycle, metamorphosis is initiated well before ecdysis (over six days). Hyalophysa was able to encyst and metamorphose within 4+1/4 hr when exposed to shrimp in a late premolt stage, indicating that the control of apostome metamorphosis is solely host-dependent.