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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 4338

Genoveva Esteban, Carmen Tellez, and Amparo Munoz; Infraciliature, Morphologenesis and Life Cycle of Endosphaera terebrans (Suctoria, Tokophridae). J.Protozool. 38(5):483-488, 1991

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The morphology, infraciliature, and life cycle of Endosphaera terebrans, a suctorian endocommensal of peritrichs, have been studied with the aid of silver impregnation. The life cycle of Endosphaera terebrans begins with infection of the host cell by a small larva. The swarmer has a pointed needle-like cellular projection and two rings of cilia. The swarmer penetrates the peritrich, loses the cilia, and then matures into an adult. The infraciliature of the adult form has four rows of barren kinetosomes that lack kinetodesmal fibers. By endogenous budding, a migratory larva is produced that leaves the host cell through the peristomial disc and that can infect other peritrichs.