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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 3576

J. Laybourn-Parry, K. Jones, and J.P. Holdich; Grazing by Mayorella sp. (Protozoa: Sarcodina) on cyanobacteria. Functional Ecology 1:99-104, 1987

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The feeding selectively and reproductive rates of a Mayorella sp., an amoeba isolated from a salt marsh in Morecambe Bay, Lancashire, UK and fed on the cyanobacteria Anabaena cylindrica Hemmermann, Anabaena sp., Nostoc sp. and Calothrix sp. and the green alga Chlorella, were investigated at 26 degrees C. Different rates of plaque extension and, in the case of cyanobacteria, reduced nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction), occurred with different food species. Calothrix was not observed inside food vacuoles; its morphology prevented it from being ingested. When Calothrix was fragmented by an ultrasonic disintegrator, Mayorella was observed ingesting the fragments which were retained and digested in the food vacuoles. As expected, amoeba reproductive rates varied in relation to diet, with generation times ranging between 41.6 hr and 100 hr, but the rates of reproduction did not relate to the rates of plaque extension or acetylene reduction on any given diet, thus suggesting varying degrees of digestive efficiency on different algal and blue-green diets. The ecological implications of feeding selectively are discussed.