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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4114

O. Roger Anderson, N.R. Swanberg, and P. Bennett; Fine Structure of Yellow-Brown Symbionts (Prymnesiida) in Solitary Radiolaria and their Comparison with Similar Acantharian Symbionts. J.Protozool. 30(4):718-722, 1983

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Yellow-brown, algal symbionts varying in diameter from approximately 5 µm to 20 µm, associated with solitary Radiolaria with spongiose skeletons (i.e. Spongodrymus sp.), exhibit fine structural features resembling the Prymnesiida (botanical class, Prymnesiophyceae). A large central vacuole is surrounded by a thin layer of cytoplasm containing plastids with lamellae composed of three thylakoids and granular pyrenoids with internal tubules immersed between the thylakoids. The pyrenoids lack internal thylakoid membranes. The nucleus is surrounded by a dilated cisterna of the nuclear envelope that also encloses the plastids and gives rise to saccules of the endoplasmic reticulum. The algal symbionts appear coccoid; hence no flagella nor surface scales were observed. The symbiont fine structure is compared to similar yellow-brown symbionts associated with Acantharia. Thus far, three kinds of algal symbionts have been observed to be associated with solitary Radiolaria: dinoflagellate, prasinomonad, and this apparent prymnesiomonad.