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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4381

Shi Fa Zou and Stephen F. NG; Anomalous Cases of Conjugation and Spontaneous Autogamy in Stylonychia mytilus: A Note on the Asexuality of Early Conjugants. J.Protozool. 38(3):201-210, 1991

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Four types of anomalous conjugation were documented in Stylonychia mytilus. Type I pairs were formed between mates of different sizes. These pairs exhibited an abnormal site of fusion in at least one of the mates, and the mates might face each other ventrally throughout conjugation instead of the normal side-by-side position. Type I pairs underwent sexual nuclear development and proceeded with the first cortical reorganization as in normal conjugants. Type II involved pairing at the anterior ends of mates with ventral surfaces facing the same direction. These pairs also underwent sexual nuclear development. Hence, aberrant orientation of the mates, and also ectopic sites of cytoplasmic fusion, if extensive, would permit sexual development. Type III pairs were united ventral-to-ventral with their anterior-left sides at the adoral zone of membranelles, and remained as such throughout conjugation. In these pairs, nuclear and cortical events were typical of the asexual development of physiological reorganization. In type IV pairs, one mate of the pair possessed a fission furrow and developed two sets of ciliature typical of binary fission, while the other mate might undergo physiological reorganization or binary fission. Type III and Type IV pairs thus reveal the asexual state of early conjugants, which can pursue either one of the two modes of asexual cortical reorganization; these cases reinforce the notion of overlap of asexual and sexual cycles during conjugation of hypotrichs. Spontaneous autogamy was documented for the first time for this genus. The autogamonts proceeded with nuclear development and with the first cortical reorganization. Some probably underwent second and third reorganizations, as in conjugants, but accompanied by abnormalities, particularly in the stages beyond fertilization. Post-autogamous clones were nonviable except for one dubious case.