Main Content

The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 7481

Nicola Ricci, Ketty Cionini, Rosalba Banchetti, and Fabrizio Erra; Rheotaxis in Uronychia setigera (Ciliata, Hypotrichida). J.Eukaryot.Microbiol. 46(3):268-277, 1999

Reprint

In File

Notes

The behavior of populations of Uronychia setigera (Ciliata, Hypotrichida) exposed to water corrents flowing at increasing velocities (300, 400, 500, 900, 1,700 µm/sec) was analyzed using two techniques: 1) the ethogram and 2) the numerical indices recently proposed to measure the development in space and time of tracks of ciliates. Beyond a certain threshold value of the water velocity (~300 µm/sec), this species shows a definite positive rheotaxis, only if it moves in a more or less direct contact with the substrate. No rheotactic swimming ever occurs. Rheotaxis is a gradual, adaptive behavior; the higher the velocity of the current, the stronger the degree of the rheotactic response, as demonstrated by the increasing significance of the polar distribution of the tracks. Beyond 500 µm/sec the water flow is so strong that it affects the locomotion of U. setigera continuously and strongly inducing this species of perform a new behavioral pattern, the Fast Backward Bidimensional Swimming. Under stressing water currents it reacts at first by creeping along straighter trajectories and then with faster locomotion, in such a way that its reaction is to a certain extent proportional to the drag of the currents. The rheotaxis of U. setigera is discussed as an adaptive response.